Sheryl J. Anderson
Author of Killer Heels
About the Author
Image credit: Two Handed Warriors Network
Series
Works by Sheryl J. Anderson
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1958-11-21
- Gender
- female
- Education
- College of William and Mary
- Occupations
- scriptwriter
development executive
producer
teacher of screenwriting
novelist - Organizations
- Writers Guild of America West
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Los Angeles, California, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- California, USA
Members
Reviews
This is a re-read of the first book in a series I have on my "will never part with" shelves. Probably the first murder mystery I'd read that was more "chick-lit" than cozy, I love this book. It's witty, funny, well-written and has a great mystery plot. Plus, a great start to a killer romance. :)
Molly is a journalist for a women's lifestyle magazine, writing the advice column. Of course she aspires to become a much more serious journalist, writing deep, thought provoking articles about show more things that matter, but she's not shallow "*sigh* I just know I can do better!" about it - she's working hard and looking for opportunities to advance her career in much the same way anybody in the real world would. She has her two best friends there to keep her grounded and cheer her on at the same time and doing both in the most delightfully witty, snarky way possible.
This book and the other three in the series are as much about the power of best friends than it is about anything else. I love all three of these characters and if I had to live the life of anyone in any of my books, Molly's life would be in the top three, and it would be more for her friends than for the hot detective (although there wouldn't be a huge gap between them). Although I'd have to pass on the shoes; I like my feet too much to torture them daily in 3-4 inch stilettos.
There is a fair amount of fashion and designer name dropping in this series, which annoys some people; I could take it or leave it, so I usually skim over it when it gets to be too much.
The mystery was really well done; even after multiple re-reads I don't have any plot holes screaming out at me, making the murderer unexpected. The chemistry between Molly and Kyle as she continues to investigate is sizzling without ever being graphic; this book adheres to cozy mystery conventions even if it is much more chick-lit in tone and theme.
This is one of those series I was hugely disappointed to see end. If Ms. Anderson ever self published Molly, I'd be the first in line with my e-reader in hand. I miss her and her friends quite a bit. show less
Molly is a journalist for a women's lifestyle magazine, writing the advice column. Of course she aspires to become a much more serious journalist, writing deep, thought provoking articles about show more things that matter, but she's not shallow "*sigh* I just know I can do better!" about it - she's working hard and looking for opportunities to advance her career in much the same way anybody in the real world would. She has her two best friends there to keep her grounded and cheer her on at the same time and doing both in the most delightfully witty, snarky way possible.
This book and the other three in the series are as much about the power of best friends than it is about anything else. I love all three of these characters and if I had to live the life of anyone in any of my books, Molly's life would be in the top three, and it would be more for her friends than for the hot detective (although there wouldn't be a huge gap between them). Although I'd have to pass on the shoes; I like my feet too much to torture them daily in 3-4 inch stilettos.
There is a fair amount of fashion and designer name dropping in this series, which annoys some people; I could take it or leave it, so I usually skim over it when it gets to be too much.
The mystery was really well done; even after multiple re-reads I don't have any plot holes screaming out at me, making the murderer unexpected. The chemistry between Molly and Kyle as she continues to investigate is sizzling without ever being graphic; this book adheres to cozy mystery conventions even if it is much more chick-lit in tone and theme.
This is one of those series I was hugely disappointed to see end. If Ms. Anderson ever self published Molly, I'd be the first in line with my e-reader in hand. I miss her and her friends quite a bit. show less
::sniffle:: The last book in a series cut short before it's prime.
Molly's finally gotten her promotion, much to the deep irritation of her editor. She's also had her first assignment handed to her: a profile on the daughter of a famous music producer who has recently committed suicide. Only his daughter is adamant that he didn't. Of course. Otherwise, we wouldn't have a mystery!
She's learned a lot of lessons over the course of the last three books, some of them rather painfully, and she's show more determined to apply them to this assignment (and her life), lest she lose both of the things she wants most; her job and her relationship with Kyle.
A great mystery and I think a rather well-crafted mystery. The more I read the more I remembered, and the killer eventually surfaced from the depths of my memory. But as I've said before, this series' strength isn't just the well crafted mysteries, but the really well-written characters and the solid foundations of the relationships, even when those relationships are rocky. I really, really cared what happened to these guys (and gals).
If Sheryl Anderson had any web presence at all, I'd email her to let her know how much I miss reading about Molly and her friends. As it is, I can only look forward to future re-reads. show less
Molly's finally gotten her promotion, much to the deep irritation of her editor. She's also had her first assignment handed to her: a profile on the daughter of a famous music producer who has recently committed suicide. Only his daughter is adamant that he didn't. Of course. Otherwise, we wouldn't have a mystery!
She's learned a lot of lessons over the course of the last three books, some of them rather painfully, and she's show more determined to apply them to this assignment (and her life), lest she lose both of the things she wants most; her job and her relationship with Kyle.
A great mystery and I think a rather well-crafted mystery. The more I read the more I remembered, and the killer eventually surfaced from the depths of my memory. But as I've said before, this series' strength isn't just the well crafted mysteries, but the really well-written characters and the solid foundations of the relationships, even when those relationships are rocky. I really, really cared what happened to these guys (and gals).
If Sheryl Anderson had any web presence at all, I'd email her to let her know how much I miss reading about Molly and her friends. As it is, I can only look forward to future re-reads. show less
I found this book surprisingly enjoyable. Not because I had any reason to expect that it wouldn't be, more because I've had such a hard time finding new authors I like that I'd run out of hope. I liked everything from the engaging plot to the interesting characters to the -- at times -- laugh-out-loud throwaway lines.
An example -- several of the characters run into each other at an out-of-the-way bar.
================
"What are you doing here?" [one] asked sharply as they stopped before us. show more
"Collecting signatures for a petition to stop rhetorical questions," [the other] responded.
================
And I particularly liked the relationship between the main character and her policeman boyfriend. It was believable but a much more realistic portrayal between the professional and amateur detective that keeps getting in the way.
I didn't love everything -- there were a few too many moments where the protagonist *knew* that someone was the killer only to be wrong. And then she'd *know* again several chapters later. With the writing being as good as it is, though, that was a small price to pay.
I'm happy to see that there are several other books in this series. Looking forward to reading them! show less
An example -- several of the characters run into each other at an out-of-the-way bar.
================
"What are you doing here?" [one] asked sharply as they stopped before us. show more
"Collecting signatures for a petition to stop rhetorical questions," [the other] responded.
================
And I particularly liked the relationship between the main character and her policeman boyfriend. It was believable but a much more realistic portrayal between the professional and amateur detective that keeps getting in the way.
I didn't love everything -- there were a few too many moments where the protagonist *knew* that someone was the killer only to be wrong. And then she'd *know* again several chapters later. With the writing being as good as it is, though, that was a small price to pay.
I'm happy to see that there are several other books in this series. Looking forward to reading them! show less
This second in a series of four (Boo!) was my least favourite of the bunch. I still loved it, but not as much.
Killer Cocktail finds Molly trying to please too many masters and leaving everyone unhappy. Her best friend Tricia's brother's fiancee (got that?) is murdered at their Southampton engagement party. Tricia wants Molly to find the murderer, Molly's maybe-boyfriend wants her to stay out of it, and Molly's editor wants a sensational expose about it (making Tricia regret her request).
show more
The writing continues to be really well done - these are books that suck me in and keep me there. I can read all four books back to back (which I'm doing), not burn out, and mourn that there aren't more. Snappy dialogue, characters I want for friends, and a great mystery plot with a not-at-all obvious murderer. The only writing that pulled me out of the story were the fashion commentaries that ran a bit like an emcee at a fashion show: "Cassidy entered the room wearing a gorgeous skirt by XXX and a stunning blouse by YYY and ZZZ's ABC style of stiletto's with the little black bow". If you're a fashion lover, these commentaries will add to the colour and description of the scene; but since I know only enough about fashion to recognise stupid-expensive when I hear it, I tend to skim over them.
If you like well-written murder mystery that's fun, not completely shallow, and full of the power of friendship, I'd recommend this book (if you can find it) or any of the other three in the series. The series has a definite chick-lit air about it, but it adheres to the cozy rules: no overt sex (dammit!) and very little-to-no swearing. show less
Killer Cocktail finds Molly trying to please too many masters and leaving everyone unhappy. Her best friend Tricia's brother's fiancee (got that?) is murdered at their Southampton engagement party. Tricia wants Molly to find the murderer, Molly's maybe-boyfriend wants her to stay out of it, and Molly's editor wants a sensational expose about it (making Tricia regret her request).
show more
The writing continues to be really well done - these are books that suck me in and keep me there. I can read all four books back to back (which I'm doing), not burn out, and mourn that there aren't more. Snappy dialogue, characters I want for friends, and a great mystery plot with a not-at-all obvious murderer. The only writing that pulled me out of the story were the fashion commentaries that ran a bit like an emcee at a fashion show: "Cassidy entered the room wearing a gorgeous skirt by XXX and a stunning blouse by YYY and ZZZ's ABC style of stiletto's with the little black bow". If you're a fashion lover, these commentaries will add to the colour and description of the scene; but since I know only enough about fashion to recognise stupid-expensive when I hear it, I tend to skim over them.
If you like well-written murder mystery that's fun, not completely shallow, and full of the power of friendship, I'd recommend this book (if you can find it) or any of the other three in the series. The series has a definite chick-lit air about it, but it adheres to the cozy rules: no overt sex (dammit!) and very little-to-no swearing. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 7
- Members
- 461
- Popularity
- #53,307
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 20
- ISBNs
- 33
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- 2
- Favorited
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