A Jewel of a Crime by Valerie Taylor drops readers back into Chatham Crossing with Venus Bixby, a bookseller, cat lover, former dance-studio owner, and aspiring lost-art detective whose life is already in a state of personal renovation when a celebratory visit to SAM’s Studio turns grim. The death of Margo Abbott pulls Venus into a case tangled with stolen jewelry, old loyalties, witchy shopkeeper rituals, marital secrets, and a local business community that can turn gossip into weather. What begins with green nail polish, a grand opening, and a Peace Lily becomes a nimble mystery about ownership, grief, reinvention, and the dangerous things people hide in plain sight.
I enjoyed the way Taylor lets the mystery bloom out of ordinary errands. Venus does not stumble into danger because the plot needs her to; she arrives through hair appointments, lunch plans, flowers, book club obligations, and the stubborn civic pulse of Chatham Crossing. That gives the story a lived-in texture. The town is not merely a backdrop with a cute sign out front. It has rival shopping districts, business alliances, old grudges, new storefronts, and enough social static to make every conversation feel like it might be evidence.
What I liked most was Venus herself. She is funny without being lacquered in quips, sentimental without turning syrupy, and nosy in a way that feels earned rather than performative. Her grief over Paul, her wary affection for Budd, her sisterly back-and-forth with Sherrie, and her fascination with art and memory give the book more ballast than the usual cozy puzzle. The Moonstone Guild adds a pleasingly peculiar shimmer, and the jewelry thread gives the mystery its best glint: pretty objects, ugly motives.
This book is for readers who like cozy mysteries, amateur sleuth fiction, light paranormal fiction, and crime fiction stories with humor, community, and a heroine who notices everything from a missing purse to a badly timed social media post. Fans of Joanne Fluke’s village-scale mysteries or Richard Osman’s warm ensemble sleuthing will feel at home here, though Taylor’s Venus Bixby brings her own briny New England snap. A Jewel of a Crime sparkles because its brightest gem is not the stolen emerald, it’s Venus Bixby’s sharp, bruised, and irrepressible heart.
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