3.0 

Mud Season

By Sarah Stewart Taylor
Mud Season by Sarah Stewart Taylor digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

Enter the world of 1960s Bethany, Vermont in this suspenseful short story featuring characters from the forthcoming Agony Hill.

It's mud season in Bethany, Vermont. As spring nears, the thawing ground and melting snow-pack have created muddy, impassable roads. It's not unusual to see a driver pushing their car or going for help. But a car with Pennsylvania plates has been completely abandoned, still stuck in the mud.

Alice Bellows, an inquisitive widow who seems to know everything going on in town, can't help but wonder what would lead someone to abandon their car like that. All that's left in the car are two suitcases sitting in the trunk, no registration or keys. The police aren't too concerned about the abandoned car, but Alice thinks there's more to the story. Not sure what she'll find or who may get hurt, she takes it upon herself to find the car's owner and what they're hiding in her small town.

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Mud Season Reviews

3.0
“the prose was quirky but i honestly just ended up staying for the preview of the actual book. the actual short story itself didn’t seem to tie into that so im just a little confused i guess”
“I discovered this series last year and didn’t realize there was a prequel until I read the first installment. That story focused on former Boston cop, Frank Warren, moving to Bethany, VT for a fresh start and is a detective in the Bethany police department. The story also introduced Alice, who ends up being Frank’s neighbor. Alice is a HUGE town busybody, who runs around sticking her nose in everyone’s business while keeping a tight lid on her own life and secrets. This prequel is in the days before Frank’s arrival and is just more of Alice running around town invading other people’s privacy in an effort to find out who owns the abandoned car that got stuck in the mud and what happened to them. While no one, not even the police chief, makes any attempt to reign in this nosy body’s nonsense. I do recall that Frank had a way of keeping her at arm’s length to protect his own privacy. Good thing too because he’s going to need it. For the record, I’m not a fan of Alice; she’s an unlikeable character. She’s not at all like those elderly, widow characters in cozies that are cute and funny; she’s judgmental and annoying and a terrible character. At the time I read Agony Hill, the series was named Frank Warren Mysteries and now the publisher’s have added Alice to the title. Uuuggghhh!!! I REALLY hope the stories focus more on Frank than Alice. Guess I’ll see soon enough because I have the second installment coming up soon. The story was all about Alice and the character development was well done. If Taylor set out to portray Alice in a very unflattering light as the annoying woman that she is, she absolutely succeeded. The pacing for this short story was steady to fast. The storyline and writing were good. I'm looking at an overall rating of 3.5 that I'm not really feeling compelled to round up. My 3star review is pretty generous.”

About Sarah Stewart Taylor

SARAH STEWART TAYLOR is the author of the Sweeney St. George series, set in New England, the Maggie D’arcy mysteries, set in Ireland and on Long Island, and Agony Hill, the first in a new series set in rural Vermont in the 1960s. Sarah has been nominated for an Agatha Award and for the Dashiell Hammett Prize and her mysteries have appeared on numerous Best of the Year lists. A former journalist and teacher, she writes and lives with her family on a farm in Vermont where they raise sheep and grow blueberries.

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