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Mastering the art of French murder / Colleen Cambridge.

Cambridge, Colleen, (author.).

Summary:

While staying in post-World War II Paris with her grandfather, Tabitha Knight becomes friends with her neighbor and fellow American, Julia Child, and must clear both their names when a woman they both knew is murdered with a knife from Julia's kitchen anda note from Tabitha in her pocket.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781496739599
  • ISBN: 1496739590
  • Physical Description: 262 pages ; 24 cm.
  • Edition: First Kensington hardcover edition.
  • Publisher: New York, NY : Kensington Publishing Corp., 2023.
Subject: Child, Julia > Fiction.
Americans > France > Paris > Fiction.
Cooking > Fiction.
Murder > Fiction.
Paris (France) > History > 1944- > Fiction.
Genre: Theatrical fiction.
Historical fiction.
Detective and mystery fiction.
Novels.

Available copies

  • 19 of 26 copies available at Missouri Evergreen. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Ste. Genevieve County. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Ste. Genevieve County Library.

Holds

  • 1 current hold with 26 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Ste. Genevieve County Library FIC Cambridge (Text) 33358000336951 Adult Fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 9781496739599
Mastering the Art of French Murder : A Charming New Parisian Historical Mystery
Mastering the Art of French Murder : A Charming New Parisian Historical Mystery
by Cambridge, Colleen
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Library Journal Review

Mastering the Art of French Murder : A Charming New Parisian Historical Mystery

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Thanks to Tabitha Knight's grand-père and uncle, she has a free place to stay in the best city in the world, Paris. Even better, her best friend, Julia Child, lives across the street. Thank heavens, because Julia is teaching her how to cook the most basic of dishes, much to the relief of her messieurs. After a beautiful morning spent gossiping and shopping at the market, Julia and Tabitha walk into Julia's apartment building and hear Mathilde, one of the other tenants, scream. Quick to investigate, Tabitha is determined to discover who has killed Therese Lognon, before Inspector Etienne Merveille, pins the murder on her best friend. It doesn't help that the weapon was one of Julia's prized knives or that Tabitha rode in the elevator to the lobby with Therese at 2 a.m. Even worse, the party was in Julia's apartment, so one of the attendees must be the murderer. Much to the inspector's consternation, Tabitha gathers clues until another murder occurs. VERDICT Agatha Christie meets cozy mystery in this fun tale from Cambridge ("Phyllida Bright" mysteries). Historical fiction readers and fans of cozy suspense will want to add this mystery to their to-be-read pile.--Jane Blue

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9781496739599
Mastering the Art of French Murder : A Charming New Parisian Historical Mystery
Mastering the Art of French Murder : A Charming New Parisian Historical Mystery
by Cambridge, Colleen
Rate this title:
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Publishers Weekly Review

Mastering the Art of French Murder : A Charming New Parisian Historical Mystery

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

This enchanting series launch from Cambridge (A Trace of Poison) pairs a fictional amateur sleuth with Julia Child for a murder investigation in postwar Paris. The night after Child's sister, Dort, hosts a party at Child's apartment, a guest is found dead in the basement--and the murder weapon is one of Child's knives. Tabitha Knight, a hopeless cook and fellow American expat who's befriended Child in hopes some of her culinary skills might rub off on her, takes interest in the crime. Tabitha's investigation leads her to a local English-language theater where Dort worked with the victim, and where most of the suspects are rehearsing an Agatha Christie play. While Tabitha serves as a competent narrator for this spry, sturdy whodunit, Cambridge captures Child's distinct voice and energy so perfectly--especially as she prepares meals like Madame Poulet and Monsieur Jambon--that readers will wish the chef played a larger role. Still, expect to leave this vacation hoping for a return trip. Agent: Maura Kye-Casella, Don Congdon Assoc. (May)

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9781496739599
Mastering the Art of French Murder : A Charming New Parisian Historical Mystery
Mastering the Art of French Murder : A Charming New Parisian Historical Mystery
by Cambridge, Colleen
Rate this title:
vote data
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Kirkus Review

Mastering the Art of French Murder : A Charming New Parisian Historical Mystery

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Murder complicates the lives of future cookbook writer Julia Child's friends in 1949 Paris. Julia has a mayonnaise problem. Although her cuisine runs rings around that of her half-French friend Tabitha Knight, who's left her work at an American bomber plant to give French lessons to relocated fellow citizens, her mayonnaise remains stubbornly on-again, off-again. She and Tabitha are distracted from this existential dilemma by the discovery of a corpse stabbed to death in their building's cellar. To her considerable discomfort, Tabitha recognizes the body as that of Thérèse Lognon, an attendee at a party given the night before by Julia's younger sister, Dorothy, for her colleagues in the American Club Theater, whose current production of And Then There Were None at the Théâtre Monceau featured Thérèse checking garments in the cloakroom. The leading suspects all have more prominent roles in the production: Thad Whiting as sound and lighting designer, Johnny Cantrell as stage manager and set designer, and Neil Kingsley as ill-fated character Philip Lombard. Tabitha's informal but highly irregular investigations, which motivate a near-fatal collision between her bicycle and a car that speeds away, bring her up so often against Inspecteur Étienne Merveille that it's a wonder she's still walking around free when the killer claims a second victim. Though she's no great shakes as a detective, Tabitha is miles ahead of Merveille in tying the two deaths to a timely but unconvincing Russian spy ring. Throughout it all, Child remains as serenely marginal and undeveloped a character as Agatha Christie was in Cambridge's A Trace of Poison (2022), though she does eventually solve that mayonnaise problem. A subdued period piece that never lives up to its promising title. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


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