It’s always interesting to learn something new and ‘fracking’ was
certainly a new one on me. To the brewers in Butternut Valley
the threat of a hydraulic fracturing technique to extract gas from underground
by shattering shale was a very real threat.
Hera Knightsbridge and her many of her
fellow microbrewers fear it will pollute the water, their most precious
ingredient, as well as destroy the beauty of the valley.
To add to her worries
on the eve of the big pairing event a student taking part is found dead in
Hera’s brewery. Contacting Evan Risley who was in charge of the students but
was unaccountable not present that evening far from being apologetic informs
Hera that he has been in touch with the Dean of the College and the pairings
event may be cancelled.
Confident that the Assistant
Deputy Sheriff Jake Ryan, who is also Hera’s lover, will get to the bottom of
the murder, Hera is aghast when Jake is then called away, and things for Hera
go from bad to worse. With business
problems and family secrets, Hera is beset on all sides. Although the arrival in town of an attractive
guy who is opening a restaurant specializing in Tuscan food, may take Hera’s
mind off her absent lover.
Apart from being a good mystery that kept
me guessing I enjoyed learning about pairing.
I am a wine drinker and have never drunk beer, but such is the power of
the storyteller that I found myself longing for a beer, and I enjoyed the
references to different foods being paired with beers.
The cast of characters
of Libertyville are well-fleshed out, and I
see that this book is a sequel to A
Deadly Draught which I now must read.
But I do so hope that there will be more books featuring Hera
Knightsbridge.
-----
Reviewer: Lizzie Hayes
Lesley
A. Diehl retired
from her life as a professor of psychology and reclaimed her country roots by
moving to a small cottage in the Butternut
River Valley
in upstate New York.
In the winter she migrates to old Florida--cowboys,
scrub palmetto, and open fields of grazing cattle, a place where spurs still
jingle in the post office. Back north, she devotes her afternoons to
writing and, when the sun sets, relaxing on the bank of her trout stream,
sipping tea or a local microbrew.
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