Book Review: Donna Andrews’ The Twelve Jays of Christmas
This intrigue-filled Christmas mystery takes readers home to Caerphilly to join in Meg’s family’s holiday celebration—including, of course, another baffling mystery.
This intrigue-filled Christmas mystery takes readers home to Caerphilly to join in Meg’s family’s holiday celebration—including, of course, another baffling mystery.
Meg’s hopes for a relatively peaceful (if busy) Christmas vanish when the she’s assigned to help a hoarder.
Meg’s grandmother’s Renaisssance Faire is full of passion with a prankster, abused falcons, ambitious actors, and a saboteur — one of whom ends up dead with Faulk one of the suspects.
Away in a manger, asleep on the hay, Meg Langslow finds a little gift with a note implicating her brother Rob. His fiancée is not amused, and Meg must uncover the truth.
Ashes disturbed, a Trinity curmudgeon murdered, and a ruby ring left behind raises all sorts of old memories with Meg Langslow having all the right reasons to investigate.
The benefit production of Dickens’ A Christmas Carol hopes to boost sales with a famous—slightly over-the-hill—actor to star. Only he’s brought a ton of baggage.
Cordelia opened a craft center, and Meg and family jumps to help. But acts of vandalism and the escalation that make them wonder if it’s pressure to make her sell?
It’s an eye-opening experience when Meg and Michael volunteer to help their twin sons’ youth baseball team, and Meg is tangling with Biff Brown on two fronts.
It’s Mother’s fault no one has enough time to design their room, and its Meg’s bargain that finds her pitching in to deal with flamboyant personalities and massive egos.
A suspicious Halloween fire burns the museum and all too soon a real body mars the town’s creepy fun, and it’s up to Meg to save Halloween.