Review by Booklist Review
Fashionista travel agent Cyd Redondo travels to Tasmania on a cruise in an attempt to locate her ex-husband's parents, who previously disappeared from the same ship. The trip has the added benefit of getting her out of town as she is widely believed in her Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, neighborhood to be responsible for her Uncle Ray's incarceration--and her large, close-knit family is being shunned as a result. On boarding the ship, via helicopter, Cyd finds her friend Harriet, a representative of the cruise line, murdered in the cabin they were to share, with Cyd vowing to catch Harriet's killer as well as find her former in-laws. The staff insists Harriet 's death was an accident--she must have fallen and hit her head--forcing Cyd to gather evidence and investigate on her own. The handsome ship's doctor, a stowaway, and an activist protecting a highly endangered species complicate Cyd's investigation in a humorous series that will appeal to fans of Janet Evanovich.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In Wendall's zany sequel to 2017's Lost Luggage, Brooklyn travel agent Cyd Redondo, whose Balenciaga handbag has a Mary Poppinsesque capacity for holding everything from tampons to Tasmanian tiger cubs, is asked by Barry Manzoni, her ex-husband, to look into the disappearance of his elderly parents, who have not been heard from since they booked a cruise on the Tasmanian Dream from Sydney, Australia, to Hobart, Tasmania. Eager to get out of Brooklyn and avoid a stressful Christmas holiday, Cyd agrees to investigate. She books herself on the Tasmanian Dream and sets off on a wild adventure that includes being lowered from a helicopter to the ship, finding a dead body in her cabin, running into her former grade school teacher dancing with a bow-legged gigolo, and stopping villains with one well-aimed kick of her Stuart Weitzman patent stiletto heels. Fans of Janet Evanovich's Stephanie Plum will cotton to Cyd. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A Brooklyn travel agent headed Down Under to learn what's happened to her ex-husband's parents finds that the friend who accompanied her has been murdered at sea aboard a ship full of suspects.Even though their divorce is comfortably remote in her rearview mirror, Cyd Redondo can't refuse when her ex, Barry Manzoni, begs for help finding his missing parents. Sandra and Fredo left their home to go on a cruise on the Tasmanian Dream, and now Barry's repeated calls to their cellphones are going unanswered. Given the connections Cyd has through her agency, Redondo Travel, she's the natural sleuth for this mission, and she calls her cruise connection and friend Harriet Archer to make arrangements for the two of them to investigate aboard the ship and maybe enjoy a few days of vacation themselves. After an adventurous air-drop onto the ship, Cyd prepares to get down to business only to find that Harriet's been murdered in her cabin. Now the stakes are much higher for Cyd, who can't let her late friend down. Aided by her well-tipped cabin steward, Jeff "Koozer" Koeze, and her new friend Dr. Mathis, who's simultaneously the ship's doctor and a trained veterinarian, Cyd investigates Harriet's death while the ship's other employees try to gaslight her into thinking the murder was some sort of accident. And that's not the only trouble Cyd takes on. She realizes that her former schoolteacher Sister Ellery Magdalene Malcomb, who's also aboard, is about to get taken advantage of by, and even married to, one of the gigolos unofficially employed by the cruise line. Add a return from former nemesis Grey Hazelnut (Lost Luggage, 2017), an endangered marsupial, and a stowaway in the ship's morgue, and that covers maybe half the complications that await Cyd.The fingering of the fiend is forgettable, lost in the sea plots and subplots, though its drowning appears to be entirely intentional. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.