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Friday, December 31, 2021

The Twelve Jays of Christmas: A Meg Langslow Mystery (Meg Langslow #30), by Donna Andrews


Listened to the audio version and loved it. Publisher #StMartinsPress. I didn't get on #NetGalley soon enough to request this one so was delighted to find it available via my library, albeit I had to wait awhile for my turn. I considered it a belated Christmas gift that my turn coincided with New Year's Eve and listened to the bulk of it that evening while cuddling with the dog and briefly watching the local fireworks from my deck. Life is good. In any case, on with a review.....

Donna Andrews' #MegLangslow series has never disappointed. Good mood, bad mood, so-so mood, bored or whatever, I always find myself rapidly losing myself in the story. Meg is amazing and despite the often bizarre things going on about her, like wombats in the basement, never seems to be flustered or overwhelmed. BTW, did you know wombats glow? Sort of like my old black light posters, I guess. In any case, that's just the beginning of the adventure. There's a cranky, demanding artist in residence in the Langslow's library, too, doing some art work for the wildlife expert grandfather's next book. In the process, someone has set free the twelve jays of the title in the house. Blue Jays are obviously not an easy catch, either.

Then the artist's ex-wives show up, angry and in at least one case, fighting mad. The long suffering assistant isn't having an easy time of it, either, facing constant ridicule and belittlement from said artist and having to run back and forth between grandfather's zoo facility for items left there when the cranky artist refused to work in the small space set up for him. You see, cranky artist couldn't simply go back to his apartment because he'd been locked out for non-payment of rent. And, oh, yeah, he smokes in the library, too, which finally forces Meg to put her foot down and threaten he'll be tossed out of there, too. And, oh, it's almost Christmas.

I doubt it comes as any surprise to you when cranky artist winds up dead. Dead with a knife in his throat. The irate ex-wives are the logical immediate suspects but, hmm, could this be far more complicated than that? How about the landlord who was cheated out of payment for use of his facility? Other artists, perhaps jealous? What happened to Delaney's mother? Is that related? Why was a PI trying to serve cranky artist? How many red heads actually live in town? Will the 9-1-1 operator ever tire of Meg's calls at all hours? What are the mothers up to? Will or won't Spike bite Meg before all is said and done? Just how cranky are wombats anyway, even young ones? When will Michael and the boys get home with Grandma? Will the community come together to find a way that allows its main homeless resident to accept their help? Will..... Oh, surely you get my drift by now. There's a great deal going on, including a desperate visit to the zoo. And that's all before Rob's big announcement at the Christmas gathering.

Bottom line, I loved every second of this audio book. Narrator Bernadette Dunne is excellent, her voice seeming changing pitch and tone effortlessly as she narrates the story. Kudos to her for capturing the various characters so well. I'm already looking forward to Meg's next adventure.

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