Book Review: Snow Place for Murder

Snow Place for Murder
Mountain Lodge Mystery #3
by Diane Kelly

My rating: 2 / 5
Genre: Cozy mystery

Misty Murphy, owner of a mountain lodge, becomes entangled in a murder investigation when a resort developer is found dead on her property. As suspects include the other guests in the lodge, as well as some locals, Misty takes it upon herself to dig into motives and opportunities to help the local law enforcement solve the crime.

I have not read the previous 2 books in this series, but figured if I enjoyed this one, I’d go back to them. I can safely say this is not a series I’m going to be delving into, though, as I didn’t care for the author’s style in this book. I am not used to quite so much hand-holding in a mystery book, as the narration includes every single thought the main character has about the case, large or small, sometimes repeated. As I read, I had to assume that her speculations through most of the book were all wrong because otherwise, it wouldn’t be a very engaging plot. Also, there is a lot of detail that was wholly unnecessary, including a long stretch of time before the mystery really got going. When Misty listens to conversations between others, just about every line of dialog is followed up with her thoughts about that statement—sometimes her doubting that they were telling the truth (even though she seemed to have little to no expertise in the matters they discussed most of the time), but most often bringing it back to herself with thoughts about how she would feel in that situation, how that situation reminded her of something that once happened to her, etc.

On top of all of that, Misty’s reactions to finding out the deceased man had actually been murdered, and later similar reactions to seeing a potential key piece of evidence, are over-the-top dramatic and not really what I look for in the MC of a mystery series. Finally, there were a few 1-page chapters scattered throughout the book that were from the POV of Misty’s cat Yeti. When the first of these chapters came up, it took me several minutes to understand that it was a cat’s head into which we’d just jumped, though that was probably my own fault. I thought at first that the cat’s POV would give us, the readers, some clues that would help us solve the case for ourselves, but in the end, the cat chapters provided absolutely nothing. I’m a cat person through and through, but this was unnecessary to me.

Add to that some personal preference issues, like the immediate assumption that a stranger is dangerous and could resort to violence at any moment simply because he has a gun on his hip; and the fact that the MC and her ex-husband were divorced simply because the “romance had wanted” (though he did try to romance her with a bottle of wine during this story…just saying) and they wanted different things from life. I’m really not a fan of cavalier divorce, much less celebrating it as a good thing. And I noted one glaring mistake involving characters returning from skiing twice in one day (and no, they did not leave to go skiing again in between). In the end, though I’m sure that there is an audience for this kind of cozy mystery, I am not that audience. If you think you might be, please do check out other reviews at the link below.

Thank you to Netgalley and St. Martin’s Press for providing me a copy of this book to review.
Publication date: October 24, 2023

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