education pathways

Home » Book Review » Pinned 4 Murder–mystery in the bowling alley

Pinned 4 Murder–mystery in the bowling alley

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Goodreads

Pinned 4 Murder

By J.C. Eaton

Sophie Kimball, an accountant for an investigative firm, is now Sophie Kimball Gregory as she and private detective Marshall Gregory are now married. An informal sleuth, Sophie excels at listening in on conversations and passing along information to her husband and the local authorities. Most of the time what she does is legal, but she did step over the line once in this book. It’s one of those cases of suspending reality and judgement because it is, after all, fiction. Sophie’s mother and her friends have some hilarious responses when a crime occurs or someone tries to put through a policy in their community that they don’t agree with. They always turn to Sophie to solve the crime or straighten out the situation.

In my review of #12 (Revved up 4 Murder), I explained that I had loved this series, but #12 just fell flat for me. The humor was down, and the emphasis on the foods the characters ate was just too repetitious. Pinned 4 Murder was the chance I gave to the Sophie Kimball Mystery series before I decided to abandon it or stick around for more of the cozy mysteries. My judgement of Pinned 4 Murder is that the husband and wife writing team has somewhat redeemed themselves, and I will continue on to the next book they publish in this series. This recommendation, however, comes with a caveat. The humor level is back up in this book with the chiweenie Streetman on top of his game and the Sun City West Book Club ladies and the Pinochle Crew of men creating gossip and mayhem as usual. The crafting of the mysteries (murder, vandalism, and cyber-crime) is excellent. Where Pinned 4 Murder lets me down is the focus again on all the foods they consume—takeouts or deliveries from restaurants and coffee and pastries to share. Those repetitive passages do not entertain or move the plot forward. 

I received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

Rating: 4/5

Category: Humor, Mystery

Notes: #13 in the Sophie Kimball Mystery series. I think it is too far into the series to be enjoyed as a stand alone, but the authors do include a very helpful “Cast of Characters” at the beginning of the book. 

Publication: July 16,  2024—Beyond the Page Publishing

Memorable Lines:

“That’s where nosing around comes in.”…“Please don’t suggest the dog park. You have no idea how stressful it is to take Streetman there. He doesn’t listen. He rolls in smelly stuff on the ground, pees in the water bowls, and worst of all, goes after female dogs like a sailor who hasn’t been to port in a year!”

Too bad my mother forgot that her dog had selective hearing and a total disregard for obeying commands. I looked on in horror as that sneaky little chiweenie raced after the bowling ball, only to find himself slipping and sliding on the freshly oiled lane. Still, it didn’t prevent him from following the ball and knocking down all the pins.

Within seconds, people scrambled to spread the rumor like hair lice in a kindergarten, and I knew if it reached my mother’s table, the book club ladies would waste little time circulating and embellishing it.


7 Comments

  1. This sounds pretty cut to me!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Cozynookbks's avatar Cozynookbks says:

    I’m glad the series picked up again for you, Linda. Sorry about the over-emphasis on food. Maybe the author is a foodie??

    Nice review. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    • lghiggins's avatar lghiggins says:

      Good suggestion, Laurie. This writing couple has another series set in a winery which is understandable because that is the husband’s previous career. It has some food references but not to the extent of this series. The seniors and dogs made up for the overuse of food references in this book.

      Like

  3. Carla's avatar Carla says:

    I’m glad this book somewhat redeemed the series for you Linda. I enjoy humour in a cozy mystery. There was another series (Knit and Nibble) that I stopped reading because of the overlong descriptions of the food and activity around eating. It does get boring after awhile.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Jeanie M's avatar Jeanie M says:

    Great review! Sounds like Sophie’s always got her hands full with mysteries and maybe a little mayhem, which I can totally relate to. Just wrapped up a huge basement cleanout myself – honestly, sometimes I think finding the source of all that clutter is its own kind of mystery! Good thing I had a dumpster rental to haul away all the ‘evidence.’ Might have to pick this one up for some post-cleanout relaxation!

    Like

Leave a comment

Archives