The Cat Who Dropped a Bombshell
Book #28
by Lilian Jackson Braun
My rating: 2.5 / 5
Genre: Cozy mystery
The possible murder of an out-of-towner kicks off a season of deaths, as Pickax City’s summer-long sesquicentennial celebration is underway. Former crime reporter Jim Qwilleran is distracted by the various ways he’s asked to be part of the festivities, but that doesn’t stop him from noting Koko’s odd behavior.
The fact that I have almost the same thing to say about every book in this series anymore is probably telling in itself. I feel like we’re just limping to the end now, which maybe how others felt as these were being written and published. Considering Braun’s age at the time these last books came out, I can’t help but wonder if they were just pushing to get to a nice round number for the series. This book does have the benefit of including some enjoyable goings-on in Pickax, a town that practically has its own personality. I do like the way this county 400 miles north of everywhere has grown and developed over the nebulous period of time since Qwilleran first came to it, enticing other transplants from “Down Below” over time as well. That makes is all the more sad, though, when one of those transplants dies needlessly in this book. It’s not part of the mystery, and in fact, it’s sort of thrown in near the end amongst major happenings that are part of the mystery, which makes the whole thing seem completely senseless.
The mystery itself is…well, I can’t say it’s non-existent. But it’s really in the background for much of the story. It’s there if you can look for it. But to really confuse us, the first death in the book turns out to be completely unrelated to the mystery and apparently nothing more than the initial assumption made by the police. I kept expecting it to come into play again, but it doesn’t. I guess that’s kind of a spoiler, but really, I think it’s helpful for people to know what they’re getting at this point in the series. I’d say it feels like lazy writing, but it could have more to do with Braun’s advanced age. I don’t recommend jumping into any series at/near the end, especially this one, but I do still recommend the overall series to fans of mystery, especially with a somewhat old-fashioned mindset.
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