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A Brew Most Bitter

The 33rd Street Roastery Cozy Mysteries Series, Book 1

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A Brew Most Bitter

By: Summer Prescott
Narrated by: Sophie Amoss
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About this listen

Trouble is brewing.

Paige Palmer spent her entire adult life studying to earn her doctorate in philosophy, only to be passed over for the job of her dreams. Escaping academia, the wounded young woman wants to leave her painful past behind and experience the real world. She takes a job as barista at a quirky and cozy shop, The Roastery on 33rd, feeling somehow drawn to the charming spot in the quaint New Hampshire town.

The wooden interior walls, worn with age and saturated with the dark, rich aroma of cappuccinos past, beckon to unsuspecting pedestrians, enticing them to enter and indulge in a sip of decadence in the form of a strong brew.

But there are secrets in the Roastery that have been percolating for decades. When a body is discovered in a secret room in the building, Paige’s impatient and tough-as-nails boss becomes increasingly convinced that an in-house investigation will be necessary to catch the culprit.

The team of would-be sleuths—Paige, and the Roastery’s eccentric owner, Margaret Hayward, along with a “starving artist” who could use a bit of distraction as he attempts to grind out the opening lines of his debut novel—team up to do some investigating without quite realizing what they’re getting themselves into.

They need to hurry. As clear as the rising hum of an espresso machine at work, the clock ticks away precious seconds as a ruthless killer lurks in the shadows, ready to strike again.

©2022 by Summer Prescott Books (P)2023 by Blackstone Publishing
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Poorly written & Odd Narration

I always give the titles in the Plus Catalogue more leeway because they are free but I couldn't finish this book. The writing is not great, to the point that it was jarring to listen to at times. The characters are not well developed and the dialogue was awkward. As a listener you don't want to feel embarrassed for the book you're listening to. The narrator also puts on a strange inflection. It's like she's trying to imbue everything with a lot of significance but she uses that same tone to deliver even the most inconsequential lines.

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