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Killer kung pao  Cover Image Book Book

Killer kung pao

Chien, Vivien (author.).

Summary: Lana Lee's plate is already plenty full. Running her family's Chinese restaurant in Cleveland's Asia Village is challenging on the best of days. But just when Lana thinks she might be able to catch her breath before the weekend--which she's eager to spend with her equally overworked boyfriend, Detective Adam Trudeau--Lana witnesses a car accident in the parking lot. And now she has no choice but to get involved. June Yi, of Yi's Tea and Bakery, is a serious businesswoman well-known for her heartlessness. But June meets her match when she rear-ends the Cadillac belonging to Mah Jong lover Mildred "Millie" Mao. As each woman curses--and threatens--the other, it becomes clear to Lana that trouble lies ahead. Still, who could have imagined that Millie would end up dead at the beauty salon? The evidence suggests that she was electrocuted while having a foot bath, and all eyes are on June. Can Lana find a way to solve this case before another fatality occurs in Asia Village?

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781250228307 (paperback)
  • Physical Description: regular print
    viii, 295 pages ; 18 cm
  • Publisher: New York, New York : St. Martin's Paperbacks, [2020]
Subject: Chinese restaurants -- Fiction
Beauty shops -- Fiction
Bakeries -- Fiction
Restaurateurs -- Fiction
Murder -- Investigation -- Fiction
Electrocution -- Fiction
Genre: Mystery fiction.
Cozy mysteries.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at South Central Regional Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Winkler Library PB F Chi (Text) 35864002622189 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2020 August #1
    Lana Lee, manager of her family's restaurant, Ho-Lee Noodle House in Cleveland, witnesses a minor fender bender between the disagreeable June Yi and the even more disagreeable Millie Mao outside Asia Village. The next day at the hair salon, Mao is electrocuted when a nail lamp falls into her footbath, and June is the chief suspect. When June's sister Shirley asks Lana, a veteran of previous amateur investigations, to clear her sister, Lana agrees, hoping to satisfy her own curiosity as well. After being warned off by her police-detective boyfriend, Lana persists, identifying suspects, including longtime family friends, the Mahjong Matrons, and her stylist's grandmother. Lana's suspicions annoy those around her, and she is attacked before ultimately identifying the killer. Complicating matters, Lana is asked to run the Asia Village sidewalk sale by the property manager and to modernize the restaurant's décor by her mother. Lana is a quirky but responsible young woman in this engaging cozy, nicely framed by details of running a restaurant in suburban Cleveland while living up to her family's high expectations. Copyright 2020 Booklist Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2020 July #1
    A Chinese American sleuth finds herself immersed in yet another case involving the Asian community in Fairview Park, Ohio. The Ho-Lee Noodle House, the Chinese restaurant in Asia Village that Lana Lee manages for her parents, is filled with divas competing for oxygen. A minor car accident between irritable June Yi and Mildred Mao results in an argument and threats of lawsuits. When Lana, ever willing to experiment, goes to the beauty parlor to have her hair dyed gray, she becomes one of the witnesses to an unfortunate meeting between June and Millie, and when Millie ends up electrocuted in a foot spa, Lana sees June get promoted to the most likely suspect. Lana's boyfriend, Detective Adam Trudeau, naturally catches the case. Knowing her proclivity for sleuthing, he warns her to be careful. The police realize there's no way Millie's death could have been an accident but don't have enough evidence to charge June or anyone else. With her hair only half dyed, her hands full with organizing a sidewalk sale for the plaza, and her mother suddenly asking her to redecorate the restaurant, Lana might seem to have no time for investigating. But when June's sister, Shirley, begs her to help, she can't refuse. June had plenty of enemies that supply Lana with a plethora of motives as she works to solve the mystery before she becomes the next victim. Plenty of quirky characters don't make up for the lack of pizzazz. Copyright Kirkus 2020 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2020 September

    As far as Lana Lee, manager of Ho-Lee Noodle House in Cleveland's Asia Village, is concerned, Taylor Swift and Katy Perry have nothing on her customers June Yi and Mildred Mao when it comes to holding a grudge. Tea shop and bakery owner June and Mah-Jong maven Mildred have been at odds with each other for years, and the latest salvo in their ongoing battle occurs when June's car rear-ends Millie's Cadillac in the Asia Village parking lot. Mildred threatens to take June for every penny she's got, and Lana is pretty sure that June would stop at nothing to put an end to Mildred's sue-happy ways. However, when Mildred is later electrocuted while enjoying a pedicure, Lana quickly discovers that June isn't the only person at Asia Village with a motive for murder. VERDICT Chien infuses the latest deftly crafted entry in her delectable "Noodle Shop" series (after Egg Drop Dead) with plenty of wry charm and dry wit, making this another tempting, too-good-to-miss treat for culinary cozy fans.—John Charles, formerly of Scottsdale P.L., AZ

    Copyright 2020 Library Journal.
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