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One Bad Apple (An Orchard Mystery)

(Book #1 in the Orchard Mystery Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

There's a killer in the orchard-and he's rotten to the core. INCLUDES RECIPES Meg Corey has come to the quaint New England town of Granford, Massachusetts, to sell her mother's old colonial home and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Just what I needed

The perfect cozy mystery to whisk me away from the crazy that is 2020. Thank you for making my evenings and lunch breaks so much more enjoyable.

One Good Apple Book

This is the most charming and cozy book I've read in a while! I thoroughly enjoyed this book from start to finish. Five stars are not enough. After Meg is laid off, she moves into an old family house that her mother owned, and she now co-owns with her mother. She intends to fix it up and sell it for her mother. The house is very old, historical, charming, and beautiful, but it does need a lot of work. There is an apple orchard on the property, which means it is now Meg's. It is a lovely grove, and it produces several different types of apples. Soon after she moves in, her ex-boyfriend shows up. (Who wants to see an ex?) She also meets and makes friends with a very nice man named Seth. A dead body is found. I will not say who it is or where they are found. I do not want to give away that part of the storyline. Meg makes some wonderful vegetable soup. While she is determined to solve the murder mystery, the cozy home and cozy food make this book one cozy, good book. If the home is this cozy while it is torn apart being remodeled, can you imagine how cozy it will be when it is finished? I have always been an "apple" person. I'm also a cozy mystery person. So when I found an apple cozy mystery, I couldn't resist it. To me, there's something, warm, cozy, and homey about apples. I've always loved just plain raw apples, cooked apples, caramel apples, witch's brew (apple cider), apple muffins, apple stuffing, apple butter, apple tarts, apple pie, etc. I love all of them - the reds, greens, yellows, speckles. I love all varieties of apples. Autumn is my favorite season. And since apples are an autumn fruit, I get the best of both worlds together! (This book does not take place in autumn - I merely mentioned the fact that apples are an autumn fruit.) And I haven't even mentioned the health benefits of apples. But I won't talk about that - that discussion can be saved for health books and medical books. (A cozy mystery with a healthy component!) You get everything in this book - superb writing, a good plot, a cozy atmosphere, enjoyment, and also . . . apples. And coffee. There is plenty of coffee to go around in this exceptional cozy mystery. There are some interesting apple facts and delectable apple recipes at the end of this book. Apples aside, the writing and style is immaculate, magnificent, and professional. Highly recommended.

An Apple a Day Keeps the Corpses Away

Meg Corey has fallen on hard times. In the past few months, she's been downsized out of her job at a Boston banking firm, forced to leave her apartment, and dumped by her boyfriend, Chandler Hale. When Meg's mother decides to sell a rental property she inherited, Meg jumps at the chance for a new start. She moves into the historical home in the small town of Granford, Massachusetts, intending to renovate the home for a quick sale. Meg soon finds that she's in over her head. She's a city girl, not a do-it-yourself weekend warrior, and she's overwhelmed by the seemingly endless home repairs. To make matters worse, her ex-boyfriend unexpectedly turns up on her doorstep. Chandler Hale is working on a real estate development deal in Granford, and he asks Meg to give him inside information about her new neighbors. The development deal would provide a much-needed boost to the local economy, but it would also put a parking lot over the historic orchard on Meg's property. Meg refuses to help Chandler and assumes that's the end of it - that is, until his body is found floating in her newly-installed septic tank. Suddenly Meg and her plumber, Seth Chapin, are the prime suspects in Chandler's murder. Seth is a prominent land owner in Granford as well as Meg's closest neighbor. Of the local residents, Seth and Meg would be most affected by the land deal. Both of them have motives to want Chandler out of the way, but they're not the only ones. The looming development deal has created a lot of controversy in Granford, with the community evenly divided among those who oppose the deal and those who favor it. Meg slowly finds herself falling in love with small town life, but she will have to prove her innocence before she can truly enjoy what Granford has to offer. One Bad Apple is a charming start to Sheila Connolly's Orchard Mysteries series. Meg is an endearing amateur sleuth, surrounded by a colorful cast of supporting characters. Connolly effectively captures the feel of a small New England town -- after reading One Bad Apple, I felt as though I'd spent the afternoon in rural Massachusetts. The apple-centric recipes in the back of the book are a great addition to the story. (I can't wait to try the apple muffins and fresh apple cake.) With such a promising start, I'm eagerly awaiting the next book in the Orchard Mysteries series.

One Bad Apple is one terrific mystery!

Curl up with a slice of apple cake and a glass of cider, and settle down for a delectable read! One Bad Apple has it all--likeable characters, a cozy setting, and a plot that grows more intriguing with every page. The protagonist, Meg Corey, wormed her way into my heart right from the get-go. I'm looking forward to the next book in this very promising series.

Sweet as Cider

Meg Corey just can't catch a break. First her boyfriend dumps her, then she loses her job to downsizing and then she becomes a suspect in a murder. Once she loses her job in Boston, Meg moves Granford Massachusetts with the idea of fixing up and selling an old home that her mother inherited years ago. Naturally the house was in much worse shape than she had expected and the work was furiously draining her bank account. Just when she thinks that things can't get any worse her sewer system backs up and requires a complete overhaul but she does catch a break when the nice guy local plumber can get started on the work right away. Her relief is short lived however when her ex-boyfriend shows up, not to ask her forgiveness but to make a business proposition. She turns the jerk down and is pretty sure that things can't get any worse until the next morning when her new sewer system backs up yet again. That's bad enough but when the plumber comes to check for the problem he finds the body of Meg's ex-boyfriend in the brand new septic tank. As it turns out the ex-boyfriend was involved in a development project that would have taken most of the plumber's land and also the lovely orchard that Meg had just learned was on her property. With that in mind the state investigator soon considers both Meg and her plumber friend, as prime suspects and Meg can't see that he is trying very hard to find any other suspects. Because of that she starts to investigate on her own and she finally gets out of her crumbling house and meets the people of Granford. Pretty soon Meg starts to make friends and finds that she likes the locals very much, making her wonder if she really wants to sell the house or not. Before she makes that decision though she has to find the killer or she may be a guest of the state for the next few years. I just love it when I come across the first book in a possible series that is this good because I know that I have some excellent reading to look forward to. The author has a very enjoyable writing style and the setting for this series is as realistic as any I have come across, yet it still manages to be just loads of fun. I have read books that were funnier and I have read books that were more realistic but I have seldom come across a cozy that balances the two so well. Meg herself is delightfully full of sarcastic wit but at the same time she is a very sympathetic character. Despite the emphases on the characters the mystery itself is never allowed to stray far from the reader's attention and a well-constructed mystery it is. The solution is not so obvious that it can be solved half way through the book but it also isn't so obscure as to stretch credibility. This is definitely a welcome and tasty arrival on the cozy scene.

delightful charming small town regional cozy

Months after her boyfriend dumped her, Meg Corey's job is made redundant when her bank merges with a larger one. Her mother comes up with a solution that will occupy Meg for the next few months. They own property in Grandford, New England that includes a house and an apple orchard. If Meg fixes up the house, she will earn half the profits from the sale. Neither Meg nor her mom is aware that the house needs enormous structural and cosmetic repair. The plumping needs immediate attention so she calls Seth Chapin who informs Meg the septic tank needs replacing. The day after it is fixed, her sink is stuffed, Seth inspects what is clogging the system only to find the corpse of Meg's ex boyfriend inside. He was in town to sell the concept of a strip mall and had many enemies with a motive to kill him. There is a delightful charm to this small town regional cozy. The protagonist works the homicide because the police officer leading the investigation considers her the prime person of interest. Sheila Connolly provides a fascinating whodunit filled with surprises especially red herrings as the amateur competes with the cop to prove she is innocent by uncovering the identity of the guilty person. Harriet Klausner
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