Double Fudge Brownie Murder (A Hannah Swensen Mystery with Recipes), by Joanne Fluke
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Double Fudge Brownie Murder (A Hannah Swensen Mystery with Recipes), by Joanne Fluke
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A New York Times Bestselling Author Life in tiny Lake Eden, Minnesota, is usually pleasantly uneventful. Lately, though, it seems everyone has more than their fair share of drama ― especially the Swensen family. Hannah is nervous about the upcoming trial for her involvement in a tragic accident. She's eager to clear her name once and for all, but her troubles only double when she finds the judge bludgeoned to death with his own gavel ― and Hannah becomes the number one suspect.
Double Fudge Brownie Murder (A Hannah Swensen Mystery with Recipes), by Joanne Fluke- Amazon Sales Rank: #2399124 in Books
- Published on: 2015-03-04
- Format: Large Print
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 1.10" h x 5.70" w x 8.70" l, .0 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 523 pages
Review Indulge In Joanne Fluke's Criminally Delicious Hannah Swensen Mysteries! Blackberry Pie Murder"Witty. . .tempting recipes at the end of most chapters, including one for fresh blackberry cookies, will appeal to anyone who loves to bake." --Publishers Weekly"Fluke offers a new twist to the series. . .the cookie-shop owner's character gains depth. . .but there's still room for recipes and for Hannah to move toward an overdue decision on the question of which of her two boyfriends she prefers. Readers will be eager for the next installment." --Booklist"Lake Eden's favorite baker, Hannah Swensen finds herself on the wrong end of a police investigation. . .in Fluke's good-natured 19th [installment]." --Kirkus Reviews Red Velvet Cupcake Murder"Culinary cozies don't get any tastier than this winning series." --Library Journal"If your reading habits alternate between curling up with a good mystery or with a good cookbook, you ought to know about Joanne Fluke." --The Charlotte Observer Cinnamon Roll Murder"Fans of this wildly popular series will not be disappointed. Fluke has kept this series strong for a long time, and there is still plenty to enjoy for foodie crime fans." --Booklist Devil's Food Cake Murder"Fabulous." --Publishers Weekly
About the Author Like Hannah Swensen, Joanne Fluke was born and raised in a small town in rural Minnesota, but now lives in sunny Southern California. She is currently working on her next Hannah Swensen mystery and readers are welcome to contact her at the following e-mail address, Gr8Clues@JoanneFluke.com, or by visiting her website at www.JoanneFluke.com.
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Most helpful customer reviews
104 of 110 people found the following review helpful. Possibly A Ghostwriter... By PageTurner I just finished this up last night and it just left me confused. The last book ended with a trial looming and this one picks up in Vegas?! And where is the Hannah of the past 17 books? It's like she's a different person. I really think Fluke had a ghostwriter on this. There was none of the condescending grammatical corrections that Hannah has done in ALL the previous books and her personality in general was just...off. The mindless recipe filler talk and ridiculous "feet up" cat chase was still there though.SPOILER ALERT...How is Ross even back in the picture? And the entire family has kept in touch with him? And Doc knows him well enough to be his best man? Come on!! In 3 days slow-and-steady-in-love Hannah is ready to marry him?! Another reason I think ghost-writer is Hannah seems a bit more "ready" for love - a good but unusual characteristic. I'm sooo disappointed that after all the time invested in this series (and being team Norman) that she basically chooses a resurrected character to marry.And the trip to New York that she won from Michelle entering her recipe? Fiction, I know, but shouldn't LISA be the one to accompany Hannah on this trip? Guess the next book will be set in NYC.I'll keep reading the series just to see where it ends. The ridiculousness is still entertaining. Oh, I just realized I didn't mention the murder at all. That's a clue as to how big a role it plays in this latest installment.
59 of 61 people found the following review helpful. Deserves a negative one By Beth D This is without a doubt the worst of the Hannah Swenson mysteries, and may be one of the worst mysteries I've ever read. I bought this book with the Blackberry Pie mystery which I thought was pretty bad, but it's a masterpiece next to this book.At the end of the last book we were waiting for Hannah's trial for running over and killing a man.But at the beginning of this book we are forced to endure Delores's Las Vegas wedding to Doc for the first 7 chapters. When Doc's best man can't make it - the substitute best man is Ross Barton (from the Cherry Cheesecake mystery - Didn't like him there, don't like him here). The old college friend of Hannah's.After the wedding, Hannah returns home only to have her judge beaten to death while she sat outside his office on the morning her trial is supposed to begin. Her attorney just happens to pick that moment to step outside the waiting room for a call, so she doesn't have an alibi.Of course, no one actually investigates the crime except for Hannah, as she goes it alone once again to save herself from a murder charge.:)Highlights:Norman, Moishe the cat.:)Lowlights:Moishe the cat - The repetitive descriptions of some of his actions - Rushing the door when she comes home or when he and Cuddles chase each other around the table get's old after the 3 or 4th time telling "In The Same Book."Ross Barton - Check out my spoiler alerts below if you've read the book, otherwise come back after you've read the book.The mystery. What mystery? Of course, Hannah would be suspected, after all isn't that what a killer does, wait to be escorted to the waiting room with her lawyer and then burst in and kill her judge?The solution. Hi, I'm some person they bring in on the last chapter of the book, me and my situation never mentioned before so they could end this farce of a mystery.Everyone keeps saying how ridiculous the charges are. Maybe over charged, but Hannah was speeding, without her lights, unable to see clearly because of the heavy rain on a back road, going around a bend where a tree blocked the road. If she had been driving for the conditions and had a car that worked properly, she might have been able to see it before she had to slam on her brakes and run over and kill some guy.The recipes. I love a good recipe, but when you start groaning at the mention of any food mentioned in the storyline because you know you're going to get a recipe for it, it's too many, some of them take 2 or 3 pages and this is just a 356 page book with 29 recipes.All the 5 star reviews, until I realized 90 percent of them don't describe anything in this book, just I love it. Best Book. Great Mystery, in about a sentence. That's why I don't read the reviews until I read the book, mainly to see if I'm crazy or not when I dislike something.SPOILER ALERTS:) :) :) :)SPOILER ALERTS:) :) :) :)The mystery is so badly written that it doesn't even look like Joanne Fluke wrote it.Although Hannah has insisted that Norman and Mike give her space to make up her mind and they oblige her, even staying friends, suddenly she's upset over that. It appears what she really wanted was for them to punch each other out to win her affections.Hannah falls madly in love with Ross from the time she hears his voice at the chapel until she makes it to the end of the aisle with him. (it would appear that everyone, including her mother, has kept in touch with him over all these years and were hiding it from her that he was going to be the best man) It seems they are matchmaking? Why, has she ever given any indication that she was in love with him? Is this part of the secret conversations that go on outside the books, so we the readers are surprised. In the three days they spend in Las Vegas, suddenly he wasn't really interested in his old girlfriend, was in love with Hannah - but didn't do anything in the dozen years since they were out of college. Wants to give up his Hollywood career to work at a radio station in Lake Eden. Right.You can't just conjour things out of thin air without some back story. I though the whole Norman and Dr. Bev story along with Mike basically showing up to eat was heading towards a good solution, but this ending at the airport is a nightmare - I've never wished for a plane crash in a book so much.
119 of 129 people found the following review helpful. I Apologize, Ms. Fluke. Really. By Ouija I would like to formally apologize to Ms. Fluke for calling Sugar Cookie Murder her worst ever. In my defense, there's no way I could have seen Double Fudge Brownie Murder coming. Because in the long and well-documented history of Fluke fiascos, Double Fudge takes the cake. (See what I did there?)If you remove all the extraneous goings-on - the excruciatingly long and boring trip to Las Vegas for her mother's wedding, the painfully long and boring description of meal preparations, including an epic play-by-play of a pork chop dinner, and a ridiculous long and boring sub-plot about Moishe stealing random crap - the actual "mystery" part would be about 30 pages long. If, in fact, there were an actual mystery.The various rock bottom elements in this book? A murderer that we've never even heard of or heard about until the final 5 pages or so. That's cheating, Joanne. And Hannah seems to have abandoned the Cookie Shop completely. She now has 3 men who want to marry her, which is just laughable. Does this ever happen in real life? Ever? Be honest, now. And then there's what seemed like an entire chapter devoted to the different types of peppers - green, yellow, orange, red - their health benefits and various flavor profiles. Who writes like this?We go through the customary and yawn-inducing process of interviewing various suspects who are never mentioned again. And the tiresome description of Moishe and Cuddles racing through the room while people are trying to eat. Twice. Hilarity ensures. Which reminds me - what kind of a man names his cat Cuddles? Just asking.
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