The Cozy Mystery List Blog

Cozy Mystery (and Other Favorite) Books, Movies, and TV

British Television Mystery Series: Murder in Provence

May 5, 2023

Murder in Provence is another terrific Cozy Mystery television series. The series is being broadcast on BritBox, and stars Endeavor‘s Roger Allam and Father Brown‘s Nancy Carroll. They are terrific together – he’s a sort of investigating judge (Chief Magistrate) and she’s a police consultant. They are partners – both in solving crimes and in love. Keala Settle stars as a detective, and Rumpole of the Bailey‘s Phyllida Erskine-Brown as Carroll’s very opinionated mom. All of them are terrific!

This is another series with beautiful scenery. We get to enjoy “city architecture” and lovely countryside. I enjoyed both the plots and writing, and am already awaiting the second season.

Some people may object to very-British actors with very-British accents playing very-French characters. That does not bother me at all. (Murder in Provence is, after all, a fictitious television mystery show, not a documentary!) Another thing that I can overlook is some of the language… The mystery plots unfold at a leisurely, enjoyable pace, with two over-fifty sleuths. As I said it’s a Cozy Mystery Series.

Murder in Provence is based on the Verlague and Bonnet Provencal Mystery Series by M.L. Longworth. The first book in that series is Death at the Chateau Bremont. I haven’t tried this series, but the shows sure do make me want to try it! The shows are a great introduction to Longworth’s series.

The TV series is available on Britbox.

I recommend this Cozy Mystery television series.

Also, if you’re interested in taking a look at some other good mystery shows, make sure to go to my Cozy Mystery TV and Movies page.

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May 1 to May 7, 2023

May 2, 2023

Here is the list of new releases for May 1 to May 7!

Kate Carlisle: Dressed to Drill (This is the 10th in the Fixer-Upper Mystery Series.)

Cleo Coyle (aka Alice Kimberly): The Ghost Goes to the Dogs (9th in the Haunted Bookshop Mysteries)

Ellen Crosby: Blow Up (3rd in the Sophie Medina Mysteries)

 

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Cozy Mystery Book Recommendations – April 2023

April 28, 2023

April is almost over, so it’s time to discuss our favorite Cozies that we read this month!

If you read a Cozy mystery this month and want to recommend it to the rest of us, be sure to post it here! For this month, I read the first entry of Susan Wittig Albert’s China Bayles Mysterey Series. For the reasons I want to recommend it, be sure to check out the blog entry!

So, what have you been reading that you can recommend in April? Please be sure to tell us why you liked these Cozies so much. I know we’re all always on the lookout for more particularly good Cozy Mystery authors! (If you have a lot of Cozies you think are great, please post the ones you like the most at the top of the list.)

As always, please do not tell us about the Cozy Mysteries you did not like.

What really good Cozy Mystery did you read April 2023 that you want the rest of us to know about, and why did you enjoy it?

Susan Wittig Albert: China Bayles Mystery Series

V.M. Burns: Mystery Bookshop Mystery Series

Ellen Byron (aka Maria DiRico): Cajun Country Mystery Series

Lynn Cahoon: Kitchen Witch Mystery Series

Deborah Crombie: Kincaid & James Mystery Series

Emmeline Duncan: Ground Rules Mystery Series (first entry Fresh Brewed Murder)

Joanne Fluke: Hannah Swensen Mystery Series

Dianne Freeman: Countess Harleigh Mystery Series (first entry A Lady’s Guide to Etiquette and Murder)

Daryl Wood Gerber (aka Avery Aames): Cookbook Nook Mystery Series

Stephanie Graves: Olive Bright Mystery Series (first entry Olive Bright, Pigeoneer)

Margaret Mayhew: Village Mysteries (first entry Old Soldiers Never Die)

Richard Osman: Thursday Murder Club Mystery Series (first entry The Thursday Murder Club)

Peter Robinson: Inspector Banks Mystery Series

Eryn Scott: Whiskers and Words Mystery Series (first entry Littered with Trouble)

Paige Shelton: Scottish Bookshop Mystery Series

Victoria Thompson: Gaslight Mystery Series

Diana Xarissa: Isle of Man Cozy Mystery Series (first entry Aunt Bessie Assumes)

I will list the authors and series that have been recommended, but I urge you to read the comments below so you can see the reasons other Cozy Mystery readers thought these were their best reads of the month.

♦To access more Cozy Mystery Books Recommendations, click on this link♦

P.S. I usually don’t comment on your recommendations since they speak for themselves.

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Susan Wittig Albert: China Bayles Mystery Series

April 26, 2023

Thyme of Death (China Bayles 1) Today I’ll be featuring another classic Cozy, one that has been recommended many times and, in this case, one that I have read before myself, though years ago at this point, titled Thyme of Death. This is the first book in Susan Wittig Albert‘s China Bayles Mystery Series, which has grown to not only be one of the longest-running mystery series on the site, but also one of the most influential regarding modern Cozies.

Published in 1992, this is definitely the precursor to what I would consider the modern Cozy Mystery. The protagonist, China Bayles, is a former lawyer from the “big city” – in this case, Houston. Hitting a midlife crisis in her late thirties, China decided to give up her law career and follow her old passion of herbal botany, moving to the small (fictional) town of Pecan Springs midway between San Antonio and Austin. Naturally, having made this move a few years ago, she’s already close friends with many of her eccentric neighbors.

All of this might be very standard in modern Cozies, but it wasn’t anywhere near as widespread back when this was released in the early ’90s. I would go so far as to say that this is one of the cornerstones of modern Cozies in general. There are some modern elements missing – a modern Cozy usually features a zany/free-spirited older relative, and I don’t think China ever spent childhood summers in Pecan Springs that she has come to idealize during her breakneck city career – but you can definitely see the blueprint of the modern Cozy quite clearly despite these variations.

One element from many modern Cozies that I don’t miss is that this particular novel gets to the crime very quickly, while many modern mysteries tend to move much more slowly into the crime element. One of the previously mentioned eccentric neighbors is discovered dead by her daughter and China is one of the first people she calls for consolation. Naturally, it turns out that there are plenty of people who might have wanted the dead woman gone, and serious questions about whether she committed suicide.

Despite having so many familiar modern elements, it also has its old-fashioned parts, at least by modern sensibilities. First, I will warn those who prefer their Cozies perfectly “clean” that this does include significantly more profanity than I would consider normal in a modern Cozy. There are also some relatively uncomfortable “real-life” influences that might be a bit less likely to be brought up in modern Cozies. In this case, the primary victim is currently undergoing depression due to her bad prognosis for her breast cancer, which causes the initial ruling of suicide that the police reach seem more plausible. Many of these elements would be less likely to be present in a modern Cozy – none of them bother me, but I did think I should bring it up for my more sensitive readers.

I will also say that I normally link Kindles in my image links because that is how I read books these days, but that is not what I would recommend here. The Kindle isn’t a particularly good transfer, with numerous formatting issues and errors in punctuation and other minor issues that I doubt are present in the paperback. So I would recommend against the Kindle version.

All told, I would strongly recommend this novel to anyone looking for an older Cozy, though be warned that compared to more modern, more sanitized Cozies, this is going to be a bit closer to “reality” than most of the comfort-food sort of Cozies of today.

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