Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Comedian Moore follows up Death and Croissants with another witty cozy featuring hapless former film professor Richard Ainsworth, who now operates a bed and breakfast in France's sleepy Vallée de Follet, and his daring amateur investigator friend, Madame Valérie d'Orçay. At the outset, Richard and Valérie take a trip to a local Michelin-starred restaurant as guests of a lauded food critic. Dissatisfied with the meal, the critic revokes one of the restaurant's stars, leading to local scandal and the suspicious suicide of the restaurant's main supplier of goat cheese. Valérie smells a rat, and she once again ropes Richard into her unsolicited investigation. Suspects include two ego-swollen chefs and a local cheesemaker who is trying to enlarge his market share by producing vegan goat cheese. Added to the mix is the sudden appearance of Richard's estranged wife, who has come to France to haul her wayward husband back home to England. The pacing is brisk, the jokes are plentiful, and the mystery is complex enough to satisfy diehard whodunit fans. It's a generous helping of good fun, with authentic Gallic flavor. (Mar.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
Darkly comic doings in rustic France. Proving that Paris doesn't have a monopoly on great French cuisine, tiny Saint-Sauver in the Loire Valley boasts not one but two Michelin-starred chefs. Guy Garçon is the future, explains food critic Auguste Tatillon. Tonight, however, belongs to three-starred Sébastien Grosmallard, owner of Les Gens Qui Mangent, who's celebrating his return to his hometown by hosting a tasting menu soirée. Although Tatillon believes Grosmallard's day has passed, patrons look forward eagerly to his signature dessert, parfait de fromage de chèvre de Grosmallard. But when the dish arrives, disaster! Grosmallard's son, Antonin, has made the fabled confection with vegan goat cheese! Grosmallard is livid, Tatillon pans the event, and the next day cheesemaker Fabrice Ménard is found dead is his own fermentation tank. Normally, Richard Ainsworth would simply shake his head and sigh at the passions these events ignite among his French neighbors. Richard, who owns a bed and breakfast, is known in Saint-Sauver for his quiet demeanor, his love of American cinema, and his passing resemblance to Downton Abbey's Lord Grantham. Egged on by his adventurous dinner partner, lovely Valérie d'Orçay, he decides that there's something suspicious about Ménard's death and agrees to help her investigate. Before their inquiry is complete, he'll be joined by his estranged wife, his daughter, her husband, three laying hens, the chief of police (who's Valérie's ex-husband), the Liebowitz brothers (three Jewish movers from New Jersey), and Passepartout, Valérie's omnipresent chihuahua. More corpses turn up en route to a labyrinthine solution, but Richard's diffidence in the face of Valérie's kineticism is the force that powers this madcap farce. A movie-buff hero replays the Marx Brothers. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.