Ratings3
Average rating4
If there's one thing that Corinna Chapman, baker extraordinaire and proprietor of the Earthly Delights Bakery, can't abide, it's people not eating well, particularly when there are delights like her very own, just-baked, freshly buttered sourdough bread to enjoy. So when a strange cult which denies the flesh and eats only famine bread turns up, along with a malnourished body, Corinna is very disturbed indeed. On top of that, her hippie mother, Starshine, has turned up out of the blue, hysterical that Sunlight, Corinna's father, has absconded to Melbourne with all their money and a desire for a new young lover. Someone is poisoning people with weight loss herbal teas, and then odd things are happening at the nearby Cafe Vlad Tepes, which attracts a very strange clientele indeed. It's a delicious recipe for murder, mayhem, and mystery. "The Chapman novels take the best elements of the author's more popular 1920s-era Phryne Fisher series-strong female protagonist, solid mystery, offbeat humor-and transport them to the present day...Corinna shows every indication of sticking around for a good long time." -Booklist Kerry Greenwood has written more than 20 novels and a number of plays, is an award-winning children's writer, has edited and contributed to several anthologies, and is the creator of the Phryne Fisher series. Devil's Food is fourth in her newest series featuring the irrepressible baker-cum-sleuth Corinna Chapman.
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This review is for the audio book version. Seems the author can't go without using the ‘c' word in her stories. Such a shame because, without it, I would be giving her stories 5 stars. Other that that, the story and characters were enjoyable. I love how the characters deal with three or so mysteries of varying degrees of severity as they go on with their lives, and the humour (intentional or not) that happens throughout. I look forward to listening to the next book.
Featured Series
7 primary booksCorinna Chapman is a 7-book series with 7 primary works first released in 2004 with contributions by Kerry Greenwood.