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DEADLY WINDS by Susan Hanafee

DEADLY WINDS

From the Leslie Elliott Mysteries series, volume 4

by Susan Hanafee

Pub Date: Jan. 2nd, 2023
ISBN: 9781732489431
Publisher: BookBaby

In Hanafee’s latest series mystery, a Florida amateur investigator and aspiring novelist gets entangled in another murder investigation—this time one with ties to her local church.

This fourth outing featuring former public relations executive Leslie Elliott relocates her to Anibonie Island, Florida, where she teams up with her friend and local reporter Wes Avery to solve mysteries involving members of the small island community. After an unseasonable windstorm apparently results in a church bell falling onto and killing elderly church member Alice Gerkin, the amateur detective starts to wonder if foul play may have been involved. Specifically, she launches an investigation into the church’s pastor and the leaders of an expensive church-renovation project, which Alice opposed. Meanwhile, Leslie’s mother, Ruth, expedites her planned wedding to Gale Gammon; Leslie’s daughter, Meredith, and Gale’s son, Val (whom Gale mysteriously calls “unusual”), are pulled into the wedding planning as well, resulting in family drama. As things become more complicated at home, additional deaths appear to be connected to the renovation project. Leslie’s investigation causes her to run afoul of the church board and the island police. At the same time, Wes heads to Panama to investigate a strange, cultlike retreat that comes up in the investigation. Over the course of this complex novel, Hanafee presents Leslie’s primary interests as solving mysteries, watching her weight, and bemoaning the choices of young people. Indeed, many readers of this novel are likely to have some trouble relating to the younger characters, as they mostly seem to be included only so that older characters can criticize “needy” vegan millennials who don’t go to church. However, readers who share the opinions of the latter will find clear representation in these pages.

A conservative cozy whodunit that’s most likely to appeal to those who share the protagonist’s complaints about younger generations.