How Do You Voodoo, by Janice Horton

How Do You Voodoo, by Janice Horton

Nola Nichols started life as a pretty baby from the wrong side of Glasgow, her future as a model mapped out as soon as it became clear that her face was her fortune. Now she has money, clothes, a series of fabulously rich men squiring her around — and...
Princess Elizabeth’s Spy, by Susan Elia MacNeal

Princess Elizabeth’s Spy, by Susan Elia MacNeal

First, check out Susan Elia MacNeal’s Pinterest board for Princess Elizabeth’s Spy. Then put it on your reading list for next week — it hits the shelves on October 16th. Maggie Hope, heroine of Mr. Churchill’s Secretary, is training to be a...
Hiss and Hers, by M.C. Beaton

Hiss and Hers, by M.C. Beaton

Agatha Raisin is a shrewd, successful businesswoman. She has plenty of money, people who care about her, and the cottage in the Cotswolds that she dreamed of all her life. Unfortunately, Agatha is not a happy woman. She obsesses about her fading looks, her reputation...
Shoes to Die For, by Laura Levine

Shoes to Die For, by Laura Levine

Jaine Austen (no relation) is not exactly a member of the L.A. fashion scene. When she joins her neighbor Lance — shoe salesman to the stars — for lunch in a chichi little cafe that requires a better wardrobe than her elastic-waist pants, the last thing...
The Countertenor Wore Garlic, by Mark Schweizer

The Countertenor Wore Garlic, by Mark Schweizer

Mark Schweizer’s Liturgical Mystery series is fun, funny, and even a little bit goofy. This particular book seems like an ideal choice for October, but the whole series is fun at any time. There are several threads in these books. First, Hayden Konig is a church...

September Fair, by Jess Lourey

Mira James has left the big city for the small town of Battle Lake, Minnesota. She’s a librarian and a part-time reporter for the local paper, and the newspaper’s offer to put her up in an Airstream for a week at the State Fair sounds like something very...