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Biggie and the Meddlesome Mailman : A Mystery (Biggie)

Biggie and the Meddlesome Mailman : A Mystery (Biggie)

List Price: $22.95
Your Price: $22.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: BIGGIE rules!
Review:

This is my first Nancy Bell book, but it won't be my last. Growing up in a small town in east Texas, I recognized some of the names (Mount Vernon - Scroggins Road) and I could just close my eyes as see Biggie, her grandson J.R., their maid and voodoo priestess Willie Mae and her husband Rosebud as they went about their daily lives.

Toss in a dead mailman, a very sunburned state senator and a group of renegades ready to declare independence (again) for the sovereign state of Texas and you have a whopping good tale.

The story is told through 13 year old J.R.'s eyes and his observation skills are keen and usually right on. Other than a couple of violent moments, this would be a great book to read out loud with your children.

Nancy Bell has taken her east Texas memories and put them down on paper for everyone to enjoy. I can't believe the series isn't more popular.

Enjoy!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great book with lots of local flavor! Biggie Rules!
Review:

This is my first Nancy Bell book, but it won't be my last. Growing up in a small town in east Texas, I recognized some of the names (Mount Vernon - Scroggins Road) and I could just close my eyes as see Biggie, her grandson J.R., their maid and voodoo priestess Willie Mae and her husband Rosebud as they went about their daily lives.

Toss in a dead mailman, a very sunburned state senator and a group of renegades ready to declare independence (again) for the sovereign state of Texas and you have a whopping good tale.

The story is told through 13 year old J.R.'s eyes and his observation skills are keen and usually right on. Other than a couple of violent moments, this would be a great book to read out loud with your children.

Nancy Bell has taken her east Texas memories and put them down on paper for everyone to enjoy. There are more "Biggie" books and I intend to read them all. I can't believe the series isn't more popular.

Enjoy!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Welcome to the Time Warp
Review: I am still not sure exactly WHY I am reading these books. No stranger to the time warp of East Texas, these books capture some of that essence but are really just "too" homespun sometimes. Grandmother Biggie (about as big as a minute) is raising grandson J.R. with the help of Willa May (cook/voodoo priestess) and her husband Rosebud (handyman and teller of tall tales). In this installment, the noisy mailman sticks his nose into danger on a number of counts and before the story ends another character will bite the dust too. Corrupt politicians, a mystery pitcher, hate driven militia (roughly based on the Republic of Texas), and someone who is certainly something quite different from what it seems. The story travels all over the place with plenty of stops for down home eating, detecting, and some tension building. Light, frothy and silly; homespun and harried.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Welcome to the Time Warp
Review: I am still not sure exactly WHY I am reading these books. No stranger to the time warp of East Texas, these books capture some of that essence but are really just "too" homespun sometimes. Grandmother Biggie (about as big as a minute) is raising grandson J.R. with the help of Willa May (cook/voodoo priestess) and her husband Rosebud (handyman and teller of tall tales). In this installment, the noisy mailman sticks his nose into danger on a number of counts and before the story ends another character will bite the dust too. Corrupt politicians, a mystery pitcher, hate driven militia (roughly based on the Republic of Texas), and someone who is certainly something quite different from what it seems. The story travels all over the place with plenty of stops for down home eating, detecting, and some tension building. Light, frothy and silly; homespun and harried.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A cute read in a cozy series
Review: Job's Crossing, Texas is a small town where everyone knows one another and secrets are hard to keep. However, most residents prefer that their neighbors mind their own business. Letter carrier Luther Abernathy prefers gossip. He goes out of his way to attain information on people and disseminates his findings to anyone he meets.

However, Luther must have found one secret that its owner wanted kept buried because he is found dead by Biggie Weatherford and her grandson J.R. in what appears to be a car accident. However, Biggie and J.R. know that Luther was murdered because the killing blow to his head came from behind not in front as it would have in a vehicle crash. Biggie has a lot on her plate and has no time to investigate Luther's death. Still, whichever item she works on, somehow she and J.R. keep ending up in the middle of a murder investigation.

BIGGIE AND THE MEDDLESOME MAILMAN is a wonderful entry in a warm series. The who-done-it is obvious, but retains a cozy charm to it thanks in part due to the strong showing of the secondary players coming off the bench to propel the tale forward. Biggie and the narrating J.R. are a fabulous amateur sleuth duo whose milieu seems to always be a homicide investigation no matter how hard they try otherwise. Nancy Bell provides her audience with a comical look at small town Texas that retains the freshness of the previous three entries.

Harriet Klausner


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