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Olivia Blacke

Autor von Killer Content

6 Werke 192 Mitglieder 24 Rezensionen

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Werke von Olivia Blacke

Killer Content (2021) 71 Exemplare
Vinyl Resting Place (2022) 66 Exemplare
A Fatal Groove (2023) 25 Exemplare
Rhythm and Clues (2024) 15 Exemplare
No Memes of Escape (2021) 14 Exemplare

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female
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USA

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Rhythm and Clues is an entertaining cozy mystery by Olivia Blake. Although it’s the third in The Record Shop Mysteries and there are a few references to the previous books, I had no trouble following along. Set in small town Texas, Juni and her two sisters own a small and struggling record and coffee shop which has attracted the attention of predatory investors. When one of the investors is killed during a major storm, Juni is asked by his partner to investigate. She agrees and soon discovers there are a number of small business owners who have good reasons to dislike the investor but enough to want him dead? Juni and her sisters decide to set a trap for the killer but it may prove to be a lot more dangerous than they could have anticipated.

I quite enjoyed this book. The mystery was interesting, Juni is a very likable protagonist, and there’s a nice touch of humour throughout. I especially liked the punny names Juni gives to the coffee drinks she creates for the store. This is a fun fast read perfect for a lazy afternoon.

I received a copy of this book from Netgalley and St Martin’s Press in exchange for an honest review
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lostinalibrary | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 7, 2024 |
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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WHAT'S RHYTHM AND CLUES ABOUT?
An old college acquaintance of Juni Jessup has approached her and her sisters with a proposition—he and his partner will invest in Sip & Spin Records, help it succeed—and take a good portion of the profits. Juni and her old (and maybe future) boyfriend, Beau, attend a hockey game with them for a little wining and dining (or beering and snacking) along with the pitch. It's not the beginning of a Record Shop Mystery that you'd expect, but it's pretty fun.

The fun goes away later that night when a monster storm hits their area, knocking out power to the entire town, and threatening to flood buildings as well. Juni and her older sister dash to their store to try to mitigate the damage there. Before you know it, the event readers were waiting for happens—one of the investors is dead outside their shop and Juni is the one who discovers the body.

The police warn her off—but the surviving partner has heard of Juni's previous adventures and asks for her help. Which is convenient—because she wanted to look into the murder anyway.

The storm has made leaving—or entering—Cedar River impossible for a few days, so the murderer is definitely still around. This could be a problem because it seems that everywhere Juni looks, she finds another suspect with plenty of reasons to want that investor gone. Will she be able to find them before they can get out of town?

THE INVESTORS
For various and sundry reasons (starting with all the roads being washed out), Juni ends up spending a lot of time with the dead man's business partner and gets to know their business practices much better than she did during their pitch to Juni (or her sisters).

While they don't do anything illegal, and probably not strictly unethical either, there's something about their methods that just don't sit right with me (or several others in the novel). As a mystery reader, we get to encounter all sorts of unsavory characters and actions that aren't necessarily illegal, but sure aren't good. Very often you wonder how realistic they are while hoping some fiendish writer made it all up out of whole cloth (but secretly knowing they didn't). I suspect that Blacke is sharing something that came up in her research—or something that people she knows have run into for their own small business.

I truly hope the latter isn't the case, because I'm sure people like this exist and people suffer because of them. It makes me glad to not own a business and have to worry about it.

JUNI'S GROWTH
She's been on her own for several years, and until an economic hit at her company led to her coming home, seems to have found some sort of success in life. So you'd think she'd come back to town as an adult—and she does, but she also seems to be largely treated as pretty much the same kid she's always been. And maybe part of that is just coming back to the place where everyone knows you as that kid you were when you went to college and aren't ready to accept that you've grown up.

But she's been coming into her own, little by little, over the course of the series—and arguably arrives in this book. Maybe she's just more comfortable in her own skin and her old hometown. Maybe it's the way others see her. Probably a little bit of both. It certainly doesn't hurt things at all the way she keeps finding herself in the middle of murder cases.

The important thing is that it'd be easy for Blacke to freeze all the characters so that they're who we met in Vinyl Resting Place for the rest of the series. But she doesn't do that—Juni's the most notable example of this, but there are others, too. I'm so glad that Blacke has taken this path, it opens the door up for more changes, more development—and will keep readers like me engaged with the characters and the stories they find themselves in.

In my post about the last book, I said, "I do worry that at some point the residents of Cedar River are going to decide that Juni's the Angel of Death having brought so many murders to town with her." They still might do that—but so far, they've gone in another direction. Particularly the first responders in town. There's a moment involving them and Juni that got me to laugh out loud. And I don't know how to say more about it than that.

JUNI'S DRINKS
Blacke's music pun-inspired coffee drink names are as good here as they've ever been, if not better. Now, I understand why she doesn't give us too many per novel. But I think she could give her fans some supplemental material—bonus tracks, if you will—just give us some of the seasonal menus from the time between books. Just throwing that out there as an idea.

THAT MOMENT
When it comes to a lot of procedurals or other mystery shows on TV there's a moment where the detective sees something or hears something that a friend/coworker says, they get this look in their eye and they dash out of the room, they've got the whole thing solved now. Gregory House was great at these—Temperance Brennan is the other prime example that jumps to mind (but I know there are many others).

It's hard to depict those moments in novels, however. But you can still see them happening—Juni has one of those here. Well, she starts to anyway, and something comes along to take her out of the moment. For most/all readers, we won't get taken out of the moment—if anything, we'll keep going with it and solve the mystery (or at least get a lot closer to it). Blacke really handled that well—a trick I wish she'd teach others.

While commending her for this, her creation got on my nerves because of it. Juni took forever to circle back to that breakthrough moment and finish her thought. I was so relieved when it happened without me having to climb into the book and shake her by her shoulders until she'd focus.

SO, WHAT DID I THINK ABOUT RHYTHM AND CLUES?
Blacke is really onto something with these books—this is her best yet, and she shows no signs of slowing down (I hope she gets to keep going). The writing was sharp here, the characterizations—particularly of the investors, and the new people Juni encounters during the case—were on point and vivid, the mystery was her best and twistiest yet. The herrings were a bright and lively red—practically vermillion. The resolution was so, so gratifying.

This series is quickly becoming a solid favorite of mine—I'm never going to be a giant cozy mystery fan, but when I read one that works as well as this one does, I want to go find more. It's a very clever and fast read, with some heartfelt emotional moments and it brings a lot of smiles to my face.

I honestly don't know of a better way to put it or a better reason to commend it to your attention. Rhythm and Clues was as satisfying a read as you're going to find. You can jump on here or you can get the first two books in the series and have a good time with them first. Either way, I encourage you to track it down.
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½
 
Gekennzeichnet
hcnewton | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 19, 2024 |
Juni Jessup and her two older sisters own Sip & Spin - a coffee shop and a vinyl record shop - in a small Texas town near Austin. They have recently opened and are wondering if they will be able to make it as small business owners.

They are the target of predatory investors. One of the investors is Zackary Fjord. Juni and he went to college together but didn't really know each other. Now he and his partner Samantha are pressuring Juni and her sisters to take his company as a partner.

However, when Zack dies in a car wreck in front of Sip & Spin during a raging thunderstorm, Juni and her sisters want to know who killed him. It turns out that there are a number of suspects right in town. Zack and his partner Samantha have their fingers in a number of local businesses. The owner of the local music store isn't happy with the partnership. The owner of a clothing shop is also on the side of the haters since he blames them for his store going out of business. Only the owner of the local consignment/thrift shop seems happy with the bargain she made.

All the while Juni is investigating, she is also dealing with her two love interests. It has become time to stop juggling them and deciding which one she really wants to be with. Beau Russell was her first love, but he broke up with her when she left Texas to take her dream job in the Pacific Northwest. Beau, who is now a police detective, wants to rekindle their romance. Teddy Garza, the local postman, was a childhood friend but the friendship is shifting to romance now that Juni is back in town.

This was a fun cozy mystery. I enjoy Juni who is just now getting into "adulting." I liked the terrific puns for the coffee drinks that Juni creates at Sip & Spin. This is the third book in an enjoyable series.
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kmartin802 | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 4, 2024 |
This third book in the Record Shop series is another outstanding installment in the series.

This is a fun cozy series set in small town Texas, near Austin, at Sip and Spin, a vinyl record shop and coffee bar owned by three sisters, Juni, Tansey, and Maggie. Also playing a prominent role are Juni's two boyfriends, the cop (who was her high school sweetheart) and also her best friend (who is the town's mailman and also a farmer).

Here, the shop is struggling financially and help, in the form of predatory investors firm, is offered to them. In trying to solve the murder, of a person involved with the investors, Juni sees both the positives and the negatives involved with the predatory investors firm.

All in all, a great plot, wonderful characters and just an overall charming mystery. I hope there are many more to come.

(I received a copy of this book from the publisher, via Net Galley, in exchange for a fair and honest review.)
… (mehr)
½
 
Gekennzeichnet
lindapanzo | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 7, 2024 |

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6
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192
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#113,797
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24
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17
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