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The Christmas Cookie Killer: A Fresh-Baked Mystery | 
enlarge | Author: Livia J. Washburn Publisher: NAL Trade Category: Book
List Price: $14.00 Buy New: $7.95 You Save: $6.05 (43%)
New (27) Used (10) from $7.95
Rating: 5 reviews
Media: Paperback Pages: 304 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.2 x 0.8
ISBN: 0451225341 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780451225344
Publication Date: September 30, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: B20081130225628T
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Christmas comes to Weatherford, Texas, in this delicious new entry in the national bestselling series.
Yuletide is here and retired teacher cum amateur sleuth Phyllis Newsom looks forward to finishing up this unlucky year. But she won t be hanging up her apron just yet because this year s Christmas bake-off is going to be cutthroat.
Phyllis would like to think she s entering the Christmas cookie contest for the fun of it but that s not exactly true. She can t imagine anyone beating her snowflake-shaped lime sugar cookies. Then, during her annual Christmas cookie exchange, Phyllis heads over to the elderly Mrs. Simmons s home and finds her dead, in a pile of lime sugar cookies. But with a number of names on Santa s naughty list, this case may be a hard cookie to crumble.
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| Customer Reviews:
Totally unlikeable characters!!! November 19, 2008 Sheryl T (USA) 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
I love cozy mysteries but I have to like the main characters to enjoy any book. That said, I can't stand the main character of this series. Like a fool I bought all three books in the series and after the first one was ready to kill the old busy body and her "new boyfriend" Sam myself. I'm an avid reader but I will never read a book from this series again.
The Christmas Cookie Killer November 11, 2008 Ginger L Hobbs (Universal City, Texas United States) 1 out of 5 found this review helpful
The best part of this book were the recipes at the end. It was an easy read, but not nearly as interesting as I had hoped.
delicious whodunit November 4, 2008 Harriet Klausner 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
In Weatherford, Texas, Phyllis Newsome is hosting the annual Christmas Cookie Exchange party, which is a chance for people to relax with others who they rarely if ever socialize with during the year. Mrs. Simmons is unable to attend due to injuries so Phyllis brings a batch of cookies to her. When Mrs. Simmons asks Phyllis to lend her cookie cutters so she can bake some cookie, the host runs home to get them. She returns to find Mrs. Simmons dead; the rope from her robe tied around her neck. As Phyllis struggles to remove the rope, someone comes up behind her and knocks her unconscious. After a short stint at the hospital, Phyllis returns to the Simmons' house to bring the mourning relatives some cookies, but nobody answers her knock. She notices someone peaking from one of the windows so she enters. She meets Mrs. Simmons' grandson Randal who was in the attic. The police arrest him for skipping bail on a charge of possession with intent to sell. The homicide evidence points to him also, but Phyllis has doubts he killed his grandma and begins to question the neighbors while the culprit watches her every move. If anyone assumes life slows down at sixty, they need to look at Phyllis to change their mind. She has more energy than the Energizer Bunny has. Livia J. Washburn always provides a delicious whodunit with her latest Fresh Baked Mystery a delicious holiday treat as the audience knows what the heroine feels. Harriet Klausner
great series October 24, 2008 azure skies (King of Prussia, PA) 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
I agree with the armchair interview for this selection. I have read all three of these fresh baked mystery series. They are well-written and even have an underlying spirituality to them. The only thing is that it might be taking a slightly different direction in the next outing in dealing with the four personalities in the series. Hopefully, there is not too much of change in the dynamics. I just love this series, it's my favorite cozy mystery.
Yummy and most entertaining October 1, 2008 armchairinterviews.com (Minnesota) 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
Livia Washburn has won the Private Eye Writers of America award and the American Mystery award. She has been nominated for the Spur award (western novels). The first thing that will draw you to The Christmas Cookie Killer is the cover. It's delightful and begs potential readers to pick up the book. And I suspect that once the book is in the hands of said potential reader and they read the blurb, well, it will leave the store with the reader. Weatherford, Texas resident and widow, Phyllis Newsom started taking in borders following the death of her husband Kenny. She didn't really need the money-it's that the house was just too big for one person. And Phyllis loves the smell of freshly baked cookies. And she loves to bake. She's entered the Christmas cookie contest and would love to win. She doesn't consider herself competitive, but would love to beat Carolyn, who often wins the contest. And really, her snowflake-shaped lime sugar cookies are simply scrumptious. Phyllis' neighbor, Agnes, sent her gingerdoodle cookies to the neighborhood Christmas cookie exchange as she was unable to attend due to a broken hip. When Phyllis goes to Agnes' house following the cookie exchange, she finds Agnes dead, strangled by her bathrobe belt. There was no doubt about it--Agnes was murdered. But why? It's up to Phyllis to sift through the list of potential suspects and solve the case. Christmas and murder. It's a combination that doesn't seem to go together, yet Washburn pulls it off in a delightfully entertaining manner. The plot is fun, the characters are delightful; some you'll love and some you'll dislike, a lot. And if you're into baking, the recipes at the back of the book are a bonus. Armchair Interviews says: A little bit of murder served up for Christmas. Enjoy!
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