Antiques fire sale

Barbara Allan

Book - 2020

"That local theater diva of a certain age, Vivian Borne--a.k.a. Brandy's mother--is sheriff of Serenity County now, but still hot on the trail of precious antiques. On a tour of the historic Wentworth Mansion, the two dedicated dealers are aglow at the treasure trove of priceless objects ... never dreaming everything will turn to ashes, hours later. A charred corpse in the ruins is identified as the mansion's caretaker, a one-time flame of Vivian's. But Tony Cassato--Brandy's beau and Serenity's Chief of Police--throws cold water on Sheriff Vivian's suspicions of murder. Then Brandy spots a certain familiar item for sale on the internet, and Mother suspects the fire was just a smoke screen. When their dogg...ie detective, Sushi the Shih Tzu, sniffs out a second body in the woods, Mother and Brandy turn up the heat on a homicidal torcher. Because any killer who takes on the Borne girls is playing with fire"--

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Subjects
Genres
Mystery fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Cozy mysteries
Published
New York, NY : Kensington Books [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Barbara Allan (author)
Edition
First Kensington hardcover edition
Item Description
Sequel to: Antiques ravin'.
Physical Description
226 pages : map ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781496711434
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Seventysomething, bipolar former actress Vivian Borne--elected by a fluke--is the new county sheriff in Serenity, Iowa. When the Wentworth mansion goes up in flames, killing the caretaker, James Sutter, Vivian is determined to help the town's police chief solve the crime. Her role becomes official when a second murder occurs, this time in her jurisdiction. Assisted reluctantly by her long-suffering daughter and driver, Brandy, and enthusiastically by her 14-year-old grandson, Jake, Vivian investigates. Complicating matters, Vivian and Brandy run Trash 'n' Treasures, an antiques store, and Vivian is in charge of the upcoming production at the local community theater, where she decides to alter a well-known play, changing it into a musical and writing the songs herself. Although her unorthodox investigatory methods mystify and annoy law-enforcement officials, she gets the job done and solves the murders. This humorous cozy, filled with plot twists, is told in a warm, first-person, conversational style from Vivian's, Brandy's, and Jake's points of view. Tips on buying and selling antiques online conclude each chapter.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Allan's delightfully quirky 15th whodunit featuring septuagenarian antiques expert Vivian Borne and her dutiful sidekick and daughter, Brandy Borne (after 2019s Antique Ravin'), opens with the duo going to the courthouse in Serenity, Iowa, to "answer questions regarding some 'unorthodox' actions" newly elected county sheriff Vivian used a few weeks earlier on her first case. Vivian and Brandy later tour the historic Wentworth mansion, which is filled with valuable antiques. When the house burns down with all its highly insured contents, it appears to be a case of arson. A charred body found amid the ruins turns out to be the mansion's owner, James Sutter, an old boyfriend of Vivian's. Vivian suspects James was murdered, and won't let Serenity police chief Tony Cassato, Brandy's boyfriend, tell her otherwise. Two more murders raise the ante. Vivian and other characters who occasionally share narrative duties with Brandy provide fresh viewpoints on the investigation. For those fond of feel-good cozies, Allan (the pseudonym of Barbara and Max Allan Collins) delivers. Agent: Dominick Abel, Dominick Abel Literary. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A new sheriff makes her mark with some decidedly unorthodox crime-fighting techniques. Somehow Vivian Borne, antiques dealer, thespian, amateur detective, and all-around diva, has been elected sheriff of Serenity County on the banks of the Mississippi River. Her Prozac-popping daughter, Brandy Borne, and Brandy's diabetic Shih Tzu, Sushi, have long been her partners in detective work as well as antiquing (Antiques Ravin', 2019, etc.). When Brandy and Vivian visit James Sutter, owner of the Wentworth Mansion, which is being slowly restored to its former glory, a short tour reveals many valuable antiques, including a Tiffany lava vase. Oddly, though Jimmy owns the house, the Wentworth family still owns the furniture. When Vivian rushes into the house that night to save Jimmy--and the vase--from a fire, she finds that the Tiffany vase is gone. Brandy's boyfriend, police chief Tony Cassato, suggests that Vivian stay out of his investigation, but soon she's holding court in the hospital, insisting that she's ready for the following night, when tryouts begin for the play she's directing. Releasing herself from the hospital, she goes directly to the coroner just in time to save the already badly burned body that everyone assumes is Jimmy from cremation so that an autopsy can be performed. Her appearance makes her unpopular with both the coroner and Jimmy's stepson, Gavin Sutter. Vivian's hunch pays off when the autopsy indicates that the man was murdered by a blunt instrument. Insurance agent Cliff Reed meets with Sutter and Benjamin Wentworth, heir to the collection, who are shocked to learn that the insurance on the house has lapsed and some of the antiques may be missing. Something odd is going on that may be a motive for murder. Vivian, busy illegally rewriting the play as a musical, is flabbergasted when Sushi digs up a body, readily identifiable as that of Jimmy Sutter, not far from the playhouse garage and the trailer of missing janitor Leon Jones. Is the unidentified body that of Jones? And what could be his involvement with the Wentworth mansion? The usual mix of humor, detection, and flamboyant personalities adds sparkle to an otherwise mundane mystery. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.