Reviews

The Body in the Boudoir by Katherine Hall Page

kathydavie's review against another edition

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4.0

Nineteenth chronologically and twentieth in the publication order in the Faith Fairchild cooking mystery series about Faith and Tom Fairchild based outside Boston, Massachusetts.

The events here take place — in a flashback — about a month after The Body in the Big Apple (which Page ranks as tenth in the series, but I would put it at the start as it's pre-Tom and I never got the impression that it was a flashback as this story is).

My Take
How very appropriate that the twentieth installment is also a celebration of Faith and Tom's twentieth wedding anniversary! Yeah, as I wrote it, I suspected some of you might think I was being sarcastic. In truth, I thought it was a sweet idea and very appropriate for this cast of characters.

I particularly enjoyed Page's using the flight over as a time for Faith to reminisce over the events between her and Tom's engagement and their wedding day.

Page has created a nice range of characters with all the decorum and tastefulness of their created ancestry. She's managed a faith-based family with a daughter who marries a clergyman which doesn't preach at you. Instead, they display all the family values you could want with generosity that warms the heart. With all the paranormal and historical fiction I read, Faith Fairchild is a nice, homey treat. Now if only her books came with her entrees…

It's a story about beginnings. Josie's chance. Faith's wedding. Francesca's grandparents. Yes, there are some endings as well...which you'll just have to read about. Sad, but insightful.

I just loved reading about Marian's worries about Faith. Getting ready to meet her for the first time. The panic about cooking for a professional chef. The attitudes both sets of parents have about the couple. Page has written a nice blend of mostly happiness with dramatic and traumatic incidents interspersed throughout. It's rather odd reading about a Faith who freaks out at dead bodies, though. It's also a tour of New York City restaurants so eat before you read lest you start drooling.

The batterie de cuisine at Aleford gave me a giggle. As an English-speaker, it was quite easy to re-interpret Page's description of the "dented aluminum saucepans" as having been through the wars. And Tom's discomfort level with the idea that a cousin of Dad's would have the nerve to toss out a perfectly good bed simply because she got a new one...how very odd of her! The Fairchilds are after my own packrat heart.

I think Page could have done with creating more tension with the questions about Francesca's possible complicity in the subway incident.

I'm looking forward to trying out some of the recipes in the back. Be sure to read the Author's Note at the back. I always find interesting information from Page there.

The Story
We finally get the details on how Tom and Faith met and it's a whirlwind romance with Faith gaining on the one hand and losing on the other. Josie has had a change in fortune and both Josie and Faith will be leaving Have Faith. Tom cannot move from Aleford while Have Faith... Well, Faith will just have to Have Faith that life up in the wilds of Massachusetts won't be so bad. Something seems to be up with Francesca as well.

It's the bridal shower where the incidents begin. All aimed at Faith. Small, yet irritating even as Faith goes about the joyful chores of planning a wedding.

The Characters
It took awhile before Faith Sibley discovered the path she wanted to take, but once she did, she dove into it wholeheartedly and opened a successful catering company, Have Faith. I just love this name. It plays so well in so many directions.. Her sister, Hope, is a financial manager and her current boyfriend, Phelps Grant, does the same for another company. Her parents are the Reverend Sibley and Jane Lennox Sibley.

The Reverend Thomas Fairchild is a New Englander born and bred with a parish in Aleford, Massachusetts. While Faith is a New Yorker to the bone. Worse, Faith and Hope had sworn never to marry a clergyman---they've already lived that life! Tom's mother is Marian Fairchild who is quickly adored by Faith's family and friends. Dick is in real estate and Tom's father; he has a decided preference for a rather limited range of foods. They and Tom's brothers Robert and Craig all love Faith. Sister Betsey. Well, the best we can say of her is that she's married to Dennis Parker and they have a year-old son, Scotty. Sydney Jerome is an old family friend having grown up next door to the Fairchilds. It's also obvious that she's Betsey's preferred choice of sister-in-law. It certainly helps that the Fairchilds know what Betsey is like. Uncle Will is Dick's brother and owns Fairchild's Market. Tom's next door neighbors in Aleford are Pix and Sam Miller with their very broadminded approach as well as their three children: Mark, Sammy, and Danny.

Have Faith's employees include Howard, a brilliant bartender quite adept at concocting new drinks, Josie Wells who intends to open her own place one day, and Francesca Rossi who is Josie's roommate and works at the health club Josie frequents. Salvatore Rinaldi is a private detective with whom the police are rather interested in having a more in-depth chat. Gus Oliver has been missing for over sixty years and there are a number of people in Italy interested in his whereabouts.

Aunt Chat (Charity Sibley) has recently retired and moved out to New Jersey. On her mother's side, there's her grandmother, Eleanor Wayfort Lennox and Great-aunt Frances Wayfort. Their brother, Schulyer "Sky" Wayfort and his fourth? wife Tammy live at The Cliff, a truly palatial estate where Faith has always dreamed of having her wedding with Uncle Sky to give her away. Mrs. Mabel Danforth is Uncle Sky's housekeeper. She's been with him forever and tolerates no one else. A fact of which Tammy is heartily aware. Gertrude Danforth Todd is Danny's sister; Herbert is her husband. Both have "hurry" very much on their minds.

Jennifer is Hope's secretary. Chief Matt Johnson is in charge of the murder at The Cliff. The musical Marley Clarke saves Faith's life. Max's desperate need for Faith's help puts her in the right place to solve at least one of the problems in this story.

Emma Morris is an old friend of Faith's from Dalton (Body in the Big Apple) and her mother, Poppy, wants to give her a bridal shower.

The Cover and Title
The cover is appropriate! Well, in a rather gruesome way, anyway. The foreground catches the eye with its white satin pumps with their tasteful bows on the toes standing primly next to a tight little bouquet of red roses, petite white flowers, an orchid, and studded with pearls. A few red petals are sprinkled onto the cloud of white fabric leading the eye to the background with its impression of a veil. Made more visible by the dead body in the background. I'm kind of surprised there weren't a few red feathers...it would have been appropriate.

No kidding! There is The Body in the Boudoir and I can't believe no one started connecting the dots earlier!

heylook's review against another edition

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1.0

Even worse than the other book of hers I read, this reads like a romance novel. It's supposed to be a murder mystery, but the corpse doesn't even show up until literally halfway through the book. The rest of the book is more about planning a wedding than solving a murder. Garbage.

debjazzergal's review against another edition

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4.0

A retro book that takes us back to beyond the first book. As always, well done.

judyward's review against another edition

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3.0

A perfect book to grab on a summer afternoon whether sitting by the ocean, the pool, or just out in the garden. Add a glass of ice tea--sweet, of course--and enjoy.

beckyreads2's review against another edition

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3.0

I liked the story, and it was a very easy read. Faith was a likeable main character. The ending was a bit...anticlimactic. The suspense emotion wasn't there, and frankly the "who-done-it" was a bit depressing. Overall, I liked the book, but didn't like the ending.

nonna7's review against another edition

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2.0

The newest Faith Fairchild mystery was kind of odd and unsatisfying. I've been a fan of her books. In fact, I just recently read the first one in the series. This one opens with Faith and Tom flying to Italy on a vacation together. They've been married since 1990, and they are taking a sort of second honeymoon together in Italy. Faith starts remembering how she and Tom met.



In 1990, Faith was a caterer with a growing business thanks, in part, to her excellent connections. She comes from a well off family - not rich, but VERY well off. She meets Tom when she is catering a wedding of a friend of his. For him it is love at first sight,and it only takes a month for him to propose. She is astonished, but, of course, she is ALSO in love. OK - let's allow for a little romance here. Somehow I thought their "courtship" would have been a little longer and more involved myself.



Then odd things start to happen. Faith is nearly killed twice plus gets very sick at her shower. Then there is her Italian employee who is looking for the GI who wronged her Grandmother. That part didn't make a whole lot of sense to me. It just seemed as if Page couldn't quite get the story to gel.



The wedding goes on despite a pretty awful thing that happens at the end which really makes the whole thing kind of silly. Then there is the epilogue where Faith remembers all who have died. Never mind..... This was not at a part with her past books. I hope Ms. Page wasn't under such pressure to get the next book out that she just was out of ideas. It would be too bad because Faith really is such an appealing character.

aspygirlsmom_1995's review against another edition

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dark mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

jesabesblog's review against another edition

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4.0

I thoroughly enjoyed this, but if you haven't read the Faith Fairchild series you might not so much. There wasn't a mystery until page 102 and no 'body in the boudoir' until page 120 (out of 238). I didn't care, though, because I liked the rest of the story so much.

dollycas's review against another edition

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4.0

This has always been one of my favorite series and it one I plan to use for the Finishing The Series Challenge. I am also excited because Katherine Hall Page is touring with Great Escapes Book Tours in May for The Body in the Birches, the 22nd book in the series being released May 12.

In this installment we are taken back in time to how Faith and Tom started their life together. The book starts out with them on a plane for an anniversary trip to Italy and Faith spends the plane ride remembering their path to the altar hand a few bumps along the way including solving a couple of mysteries.

Another fun read from the author and one I was looking forward to reading. I enjoyed learning their back story and their original meeting of all the people we have come to love in the prior installments.

I have The Body in the Piazzaall cued up on my Kindle and will be reviewing The Body in the Birches on May 22 when the Great Escapes Book Tour stops here.

crazyoverbooks's review

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lighthearted sad medium-paced

5.0

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