February is a good month to snuggle up and read the newest title in your favorite mystery series. Or, if you are lucky enough to travel south, take one to the beach with you!
Death of a Nurse by
M.C. Beaton is the thirty-first title in the
Hamish MacBeth mystery series, following
Death of a Liar. James Harrison has recently moved to a restored hunting lodge in
Sutherland with his gorgeous private nurse Gloria Dainty. When Hamish
visits Mr. Harrison to welcome him to the neighborhood, the old man
treats him very rudely. Gloria apologizes for her employer's behavior,
and Hamish takes the plunge and invites her out for dinner. On the
appointed evening, Hamish waits for Gloria at the restaurant. And
waits. Gloria never shows up. Four days later, Gloria's body washes up
on the beach near Braikie. Now without a date and without his former
policeman Dick Fraser (who left the force to buy a bakery), Hamish must
find out who killed the beautiful new resident of Sutherland, and why,
before the murderer strikes again.

The nineteenth title in the
Hannah Swenson mystery series by
Joanne Fluke is
Wedding Cake Murder. It follows
Double Fudge Brownie Murder. Hannah
Swenson is thrilled to be marrying Ross Barton, her college crush. And her
excitement only grows when she learns he’ll be able to join her on her
trip to New York City for the Food Channel’s dessert chef contest. They
get a taste of the Big Apple before Hannah wins the Hometown Challenge
and the producers bring all the contestants to Lake Eden to tape the
remainder of the show. It’s nerve-wracking enough being judged by Alain
Duquesne, a celebrity chef with a nasty reputation. But it’s even more
chilling to find him stabbed to death in the Lake Eden Inn’s walk-in
cooler—before he’s even had a chance to taste Hannah’s Butterscotch
Sugar Cookies! Now Hannah has not only lost her advantage, she’ll have
to solve a mystery with more layers than a five-tiered wedding cake.
A Whisker of Trouble by
Sofie Ryan is the third title in the
Second Chance Cat mystery series, following
Buy a Whisker. Spring has come to charming North Harbor, Maine, and with the new season comes a new haul for Second Chance, the shop where Sarah Grayson sells
lovingly refurbished and repurposed items. Sarah is turning her keen eye
to the estate of collector Edison Hall, hoping for fabulous finds for
Second Chance—but when her rescue cat Elvis discovers a body in the
kitchen, everything goes paws up. The body belongs to an
appraiser who had been hired to check out Edison’s wine collection. When
Edison’s sister shows up at Second Chance, she hires Sarah’s
friends—the kooky and charismatic trio of ladies who call themselves
Charlotte’s Angels and work out of the shop—to solve the murder, Sarah
knows she and Elvis are only going to get deeper into the case.

The fourth title in the
County Cork mystery series is
A Turn for the Bad by
Sheila Connolly. It follows
An Early Wake. After calling Ireland home for six months, Boston expat Maura Donovan
still has a lot to learn about Irish ways—and Sullivan’s Pub is her
classroom. Maura didn’t only inherit a business, she inherited a
tight-knit community. And when a tragedy strikes, it’s the talk of the
pub. A local farmer, out for a stroll on the beach with his young son,
has mysteriously disappeared. Did he drown? Kill himself? The child can
say only that he saw a boat. Everyone from the local gardai to
the Coast Guard is scouring the Cork coast, but when a body is finally
brought ashore, it’s the wrong man. An accidental drowning or something
more sinister? Trusting the words of the boy and listening to the
suspicions of her employee Mick that the missing farmer might have run
afoul of smugglers, Maura decides to investigate the deserted coves and
isolated inlets for herself. But this time she may be getting in over
her head.
The Lavender Lane Lothario is the eleventh title in the
Berger and Mitry mystery series by
David Handler. It follows
The Coal Black Asphalt Tomb. Every year, the Gant family performs an
annual ritual desecrating the tomb of Aurora Bing. The Gants have held a
grudge against the legendary silent film star for almost eighty years,
but for Sherm Gant and his son, things have become personal. Aurora's
only grandchild, Hubie Swope, has shut down Sherm's notoriously rowdy
beachfront bar, and refuses to allow The Pit to reopen until Shem
undertakes expensive upgrades. This means war. And when The Pit catches
fire and Hubie Swope's charred remains are found in the rubble, it
also means murder. Who killed Hubie Swope? Crime-fighting duo
Mitch and Des have no idea. Not only are Sherm and his son prime
suspects, but so are the women in Hubie's life. To their surprise,
Mitch and Des discover that Dorset's building inspector, a quiet
widower who repaired cuckoo clocks in his little house on Lavender
Lane, was secretly juggling four girlfriends at once. And then there's
Gaylord Holland, a builder who had a beef of his own with Hubie. Dorset
is in turmoil, and only New York City film critic Mitch Berger and
Connecticut State Police Resident Trooper Des Mitry can put it back
together.

Book seven in the Candy Halliday mystery series is Town in a Cinnamon Toast" by B.B. Haywood. It follows "Town in a Sweet Pickle". The much-anticipated wedding of local resident Maggie Tremont and popular baker Herr Georg has stirred up the usually quiet coastal town
of Cape Willington. To make sure the wedding of the year goes off
without a hitch, the participants gather at a pre-wedding
dinner—everyone, that is, except the best man. Worried,
Candy, the maid of honor, goes looking for him, finally tracking him
down to the upstairs archive rooms at the English Point Lighthouse and
Museum. There’s only one problem: he’s dead, struck over the head with a
bottle of champagne, the same exclusive brand that was ordered for the
dinner. Before the wedding plans fall flat, Candy rushes to find the
murderer, unearthing a conspiracy that could spill over into the whole
town.

"Fogged In" by Barbara Ross the fourth in the Maine Clambake mystery series following "Musseled Out". An autumn chill has settled over Busman's Harbor, Maine, but Julia
Snowden is warming up the town by offering lobster stew at the local
diner. When her landlord discovers a dead body in the walk-in
refrigerator, Julia must figure out who ordered up a side of murder. Nothing's
colder than a corpse--especially one stashed inside a sub-zero fridge.
The victim spent his last night on earth dining at the restaurant bar,
so naturally Julia finds herself at the center of the ensuing
investigation. Lost in the November fog, however, is who'd want to kill
the unidentified stranger--and why. It might have something to do with a
suspicious group of retirees and a decades-old tragedy to which they're
all connected. One thing's for sure: Julia's going to make solving this
mystery her early bird special.
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