Thistle and Twigg by Mary Saums

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Synopsis

Jane Thistle was happily married to a career military officer whose job took her all around the globe. But now that he's passed, she's happy to call the quaint town of Tullulah, Alabama, her new home. Her new best friend, Phoebe Twigg, is also a widow, and has lived in Tullulah all her life. Phoebe is about as different as could be from the worldly and refined Jane. But Phoebe's warm, welcoming Southern nature wins her over, and the two women end up making quite a pair. Especially when they stumble over a dead body while on a walk in the woods…

And that's not all: Someone is threatening Jane's neighbor, a local old recluse who seems to have more interest in the land than in its inhabitants. Then a firebomb explodes in Phoebe's kitchen. And random unexplainable sounds and objects keep disrupting the peace and quiet at Jane's house. What on earth is going on in the otherwise ordinary town of Tullulah? Now it's up to the extraordinary team of Thistle and Twigg to find out….

Publishers Weekly

In this delightful first of an offbeat new series from Saums (Midnight Hour), recently widowed Jane Thistle, who has lived many places as the wife of a career military officer, moves to Tullulah, Ala., where she soon meets Phoebe Twigg, also a widow, who has lived in the small town all her life. The two women, despite their differences in outlook and personality, become close friends. When they find a dead body in the woods, and Jane's neighbor Cal Prewitt is arrested for murder, they turn detective to exonerate him. Phoebe's kitchen is firebombed, and Jane is subject to eerie happenings in her house. They persevere, despite the threats, and prove that two crafty widows are more than a match for the bad guys. Saums ably weaves humor, suspense and a dash of the supernatural in this winning twist on the Southern cozy. (Apr.)

Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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Biography

MARY SAUMS was born and raised in northern Alabama. After college, she worked as a recording engineer in Muscle Shoals on gold and platinum albums by Bob Dylan, Roy Orbison, Jimmy Buffett, Glenn Frey, and others. Her poetry has won a Tennessee Writers Alliance Award. The author of several short stories and three previous novels, she lives in Nashville, Tennessee.  Visit her Web site at marysaums.com.

Customer Reviews

fun, not scary, new age mysteryby Lucy_Mae_Braun

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November 02, 2008: This book was a good mystery with a new age twist. These two ladies are very different, but very likeable, both strong in their own way and funny, too.

Great start ends in idiocyby Anonymous

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July 26, 2007: This book was off to a promising start: A 60-something military widow retires to a small Southern town she'd passed through once and fell in love with. She meets another 60-something widow who's a local character and an 80-something crotchety widower and begins new friendships. Somewhere along the way she shares with us that she can see ghosts, a talent not unheard of even in some of the better mystery series, Carolyn Haines' Mississippi Delta series for one. Enter greedy locals and a couple of murders and we're off for what seemed to be a pretty good story. Then the book went to heck, more specifically, it went to the Land of Oh-Come-On-Now-Who's-Gonna-Buy-That. Our demure widow reveals to us at various times throughout the otherwise good plot that she is a weapons expert, a crack shot, a martial artist especially adept in hand-to-hand combat, a skilled investigator, and, oh yeah, a former CIA operative. She sets about to prove it all by solving the murders and single-handedly defeating all the armed and dangerous bad guys, including one who was a rogue marine, and another one who was really a federal undercover agent. The fight scenes she describes would be hard to buy for a large, fit, well-trained, and very lucky young man. To attribute them to a tiny woman pushing 70 is just idiotic. Winning the battle royale with the help of a Native American ghost would have been a fairly decent wrap-up if our intelligence had not been so deeply and frequently insulted before that point. Note to author: Fiction and delusion are not the same thing.


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