Helpful Score: 1
I loved this book.
Alissa E. (missliss87) - , reviewed Murder on the Menu (Cooking Class, Bk 2) on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
i love this series so far and will continue reading them
Cheryl C. (moondance120) reviewed Murder on the Menu (Cooking Class, Bk 2) on + 422 more book reviews
Annie and Eve are once again involved with a murder when they find the body of their friend, Sarah. The police write it off as a suicide, but the girls don;t believe it. Fine dining, an expensive dog and politics. Good afternonn read. 3.5 stars
The Cooking Class series is the perfect cozy series. It has all the ingredients that cozy lovers crazy. A mystery mixed with suspense, romance and a dash of humor. Not to mention, great recipes at the end of the book.
In book two Annie and Eve find their friend dead after an apparent suicide. But, the facts don't add up and they soon find themselves in the middle of another murder investigation. I liked Murder on the Menu even better than Cooking Up Murder. I thought the mystery was even better and I enjoyed seeing more of Jim.
In book two Annie and Eve find their friend dead after an apparent suicide. But, the facts don't add up and they soon find themselves in the middle of another murder investigation. I liked Murder on the Menu even better than Cooking Up Murder. I thought the mystery was even better and I enjoyed seeing more of Jim.
--good little "fluff" series for vacation reading
A real cozy - Annie and Eve have joined their former cooking teacher Jim - who doubles as Annie's on-again, off-again boyfriend - in running his new restaurant. A rave review makes the spot an instant success, drawing Washington's high powered elite to sample Jim's cooking ... people with both money and secrets to burn. Eerything's simmering along just fine until Annie and Eve find their friend Sarah, staffer for a powerful congressman, lying dead in her tub. The cops want to write it off as a suicide, but the girls think the facts just don't add up. These are light and breezy according to the Midwest book review.