Dominoes, danzón, and death

Raquel V. Reyes

Book - 2024

"It's been three years since food anthropologist and cooking show star Miriam Quiñones-Smith had her last brush with death. Her Spanglish culinary show, Abuela Approved, is topping the charts. Her parents are back in Miami and living with her in Coral Shores. And her kids are great. But when bones start popping up in unexpected places, Miriam's idyllic life is threatened. Her husband Robert's much-delayed hotel project screeches to a halt when human bones are unearthed. Tribal representatives, forensic archaeologists, and a pompous professor rain down on the possibly ancient site. Then a fake skeleton with the name "Smith" etched into it is found floating in the bay with an ominous note. Is it a threat to Miri...am's husband or her inlaws? And when Miriam's boss Delvis is seen going off on a tour guide who marched through the crew-only area on set and is later found dead, Delvis is declared the main suspect. To protect her family and friends, Miriam must dig up the truth that has been hiding in plain sight."--Dust jacket flap.

Saved in:
1 being processed

1st Floor New Shelf Show me where

MYSTERY/Reyes Raquel
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor New Shelf MYSTERY/Reyes Raquel (NEW SHELF) Due Mar 17, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Cozy mysteries
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Crooked Lane Books 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Raquel V. Reyes (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes recipes.
Physical Description
310 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781639109043
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A trio of threats disrupts a food anthropologist's "beautifully chaotic" life. Miriam Quiñones has developed several ways of meeting the challenges of living in a multicultural, multigenerational household. The "Spanish to Mami--English to Papi" rule helps ensure her children will grow up bilingual. Treats like cream cheese and guava pancakes give Manny and Sirena access to Caribbean foodways, and playing dominoes with Abuelo helps them learn Caribbean games. But juggling her job at UnMundo television network with the demands of her family can be a stretch, particularly when friends depend on her skills to solve a variety of puzzles. Within weeks, her husband, Robert, needs her help uncovering the source of a cache of bones unearthed at his country club construction site, her sister-in-law wants to know why a skeleton in board shorts washed up near a friend's house, and her mother-in-law needs help identifying the anonymous party who's sending her threatening letters. Worse, Delvis Ferrer, the director of Miriam's television show, is accused of killing a tour guide who tries to interfere with their taping. To cope with these multiple demands, Miriam adopts a strategy highly unusual among amateur sleuths: She turfs the murder investigation to the police, makes perfunctory jabs at the skeleton puzzle, and dodges her mother-in-law repeatedly. Her most concerted effort is unraveling the enigma of the bones, but even there, she devotes as much energy to fending off microaggressions as she does to solving the crime. A hodgepodge of history and mystery that leaves crime-solving in clear second place. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.