Professional advice columnist turned café manager and amateur sleuth Sissy Yoder is adjusting to life in her parents’ small but not-so-sleepy former hometown of Yoder, Kansas, where family is plentiful, the tomatoes are “to die for”—and murder is often in season . . .
Twenty-something Sissy Yoder never imagined herself running her Aunt Bethel’s café, but her help is needed, so she’s making a go of it. And she must admit that life in tiny Yoder has been anything but dull–she’s already solved one homicide—after being named the prime suspect in the case!
Enjoying a peaceful respite after all that excitement, Sissy just wants to write her advice column, hang out with her loyal Yorkie, Duke, and procure some of local farmer Walt Summers’ scrumptious “To Die For” tomatoes for the Sunshine Café’s menu. But when the unsavory Summers–resented by just about everyone in town–turns up murdered in his garden shed, it’s up to Sissy to roll up her sleeves, dig for some clues, and weed out the culprit . . .
This is the second book in Lillard’s A
Sunflower Cafe Mystery series. Sissy Yoder and her Aunt Bethel is trying to
solve another murder in their small Amish community. There is humor in the tale
with some aggravating remarks and uncaring investigation by the Yoder Sheriff’s
department for the actual offender of the murder of Walt Summers. One thing for
sure the residents of Yoder, Kansas know each other business and so many
relatives that you wonder why and how they could think one of their own was the
offender.
I received a complimentary ARC of this book
without any obligation to write a positive review. I have expressed my own
thoughts.
This is the second book in Lillard’s A
Sunflower Cafe Mystery series. Sissy Yoder and her Aunt Bethel is trying to
solve another murder in their small Amish community. There is humor in the tale
with some aggravating remarks and uncaring investigation by the Yoder Sheriff’s
department for the actual offender of the murder of Walt Summers. One thing for
sure the residents of Yoder, Kansas know each other business and so many
relatives that you wonder why and how they could think one of their own was the
offender.
I received a complimentary ARC of this book
without any obligation to write a positive review. I have expressed my own
thoughts.
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