A Simple Deduction by Kristi Holl is part of the Amish Inn Mystery series published by Annie’s Fiction.
The series is written by different authors but features the same characters and location.
Description:
Liz is offering something new, A Sherlock Holmes weekend. She asks for help from a magician to pickpocket the participants and then give the items to Liz for safekeeping. But more possessions start to disappear even with people locking their doors. Liz needs the help of all her sidekicks to solves this mystery.
My thoughts:
I have read two other books in the series before this one and when I started this one, I wasn’t sure I was going to like it as well as the other two books written by Rachael O’Phillips. Once I got into it, though, I was swept up in the mystery and wanted to know what had happened.
In this book, Liz Eckhardt, the main character, hosts a mystery weekend at her Amish-themed inn. Liz isn’t Amish herself but her mother was before leaving the order and her friends are as well.
Her friends Sadie and Mary Ann own a sewing supply shop that they run out of the other side of the inn, renting the space from Liz.
In this story, Liz is caught up in her planned mystery and also some thefts that happen that are unrelated to the mystery weekend.
She has six guests staying at her inn and thinks that they will have a nice weekend but when personalities clash and possessions of the guests start disappearing, she has a bad feeling things aren’t going to go as well as she hoped.
I felt like I was able to get to know Liz and her friends better in the other two books. In this book her character felt very flat for the majority of the book. I wanted to know a little bit more about her as a person – her likes and dislikes, etc. but I didn’t really get that until halfway through.
It turned out to be fine, though, because I became more interested in the mystery itself and still found Liz and her friends likable. I would have liked there to have been more of Sadie and Mary Ann like there were in previous books, but again, I still enjoyed the book.
This was a very clean cozy mystery with some prayer mentioned, but no faith message at all other than some mention of forgiveness.
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Well, you had me at Amish. I really just cannot resist. I haven’t read this author before but it sounds like she’s okay. Given that you liked the other two books better, maybe I should read some other books in the series as well.
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I’m hopping around in the series to see which authors I like but so far each one is pretty consistent with how they write the characters.
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Sounds good. I will have to check that out.
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One of the things I like about reading a series is getting to know all the characters better. I think that’s one of the reasons I really like the Louise Penny books.
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I need to start that Louise Penny book I have. I always feel so behind.
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That does sound like a fun little mystery! Sometimes I like when books in the series focus on secondary characters that I only sort of “knew” from the first book and other times they really fall flat for me but I guess it depends on the characters themselves and how likeable they are.
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Sometimes the secondary characters can be the most interesting. Ha!
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