| | Reviewing the best of Australian books, films, music websites and more. Home See All Reviews Free update Links Feedback Link to us
| | | Book Review: Trick or Treat, by Kerry Greenwood Reviewed by Sally Murphy
The fourth story in the Corinna Chapman series.
|
|  |
‘Gone, gone,’ mourned the young man. He seemed unaware of Meroe’s existence. He kept bumping against her in a vague way, as though she was a wall in his path. She turned him gently so that he was facing an actual wall and he continued to try to walk through it.Corinna Chapman is worried. Not only has a new bread shop opened up nearby, but her gorgeous boyfriend Daniel has an old friend staying with him – an old friend who is blonde, leggy and up to something. Perhaps most worrying of all, however, is the way that people are going mad in the proximity of Corinna’s shop after eating, of all things, bread. Surely Corinna hasn’t inadvertently poisoned them? Trick or Treat is the fourth adventure for Corinna, a reluctant amateur sleuth who has turned her back on life as an accountant to run her bakery. Whilst it is definitely a crime fiction novel, it is also something more, as Corinna’s little corner of Melbourne is brought to life with an eclectic cast of misfits, eccentrics and just plain nice people. The more one reads of this series, the more one feels that the people are real. The reader is drawn into their lives and their dramas, caring what happens to them. Good stuff. 
Trick or Treat, by Kerry Greenwood Allen & Unwin, 2007 This book can be purchased online at Fishpond. Buying through this link supports Aussiereviews. Also by Kerry Greenwood Devils’ Food (2006) Earthly Delights (2004) Urn Burial (2003)
| |
| | Sponsored by:
 Baby Monster, by Sally Murphy, illustrated by Rodger C Francis
Available NOW from Readers Eden.
 The Floatingest Frog, by Sally Murphy, illustrated by Simon Bosch
Available now from Fishpond  Pemberthy Bear, by Sally Murphy, illustrated by Jacqui Grantford
Available online from Dymocks
New! Pemberthy Bear is now a blogging bear. You can read his thoughts online at Pemberthy's Ponderings.
| |
|
|
|
|