On This Page
Description
Chocolate-shop manager Lee McKinney has had enough of party planner Julie Singletree's cutesy e-mails. Then somebody actually kills the woman, putting everyone on her mailing list on edge. As their connections to the murder emerge, so do more attacks. Lee smells a rat-and it's not made of chocolate. And if she doesn't want to be permanently deleted, it's up to her to trap it.Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
There's an interesting premise here - this is a mild spoiler - that someone has accidentally pushed the ol' Reply To All button when they meant to just Reply, only in this case, someone is willing to kill in order to keep the contents of the email secret. If you're not a member of the target audience for this book, some of the explanations of things like "how email works" get fairly dull. But I couldn't stay focused on the story and the characters weren't all that interesting to me. Not terrible; just not all that good.
I have little to say about The Chocolate Mouse Trap. It's slightly better than the last book in the series but not as good as the first two. The title no longer bears on the actual case. Chocolate is not one of the active actors of the mystery. The romance between Joe and Lee has bloomed. They are planning their wedding, which means - and there is a clue to that as well - they are having sex at last. I must say that the murderer's intent is hazy. He seems to commit murders in panic attacks, yet it almost took the extinction of the seventh food group for the police to solve the case. The identity of the murderer was a satisfaction to realize. The book's style is similar to many cozy mysteries and it doesn't veer off in frowning show more readability, if you know what I mean. show less
This book keeps you guessing as you try to figure out who the kill is. I enjoyed the story line, but when the author has the main character trip over her tongue as she speaks, it becomes bit annoying.
This was your typical cozy mystery. The mystery wasn't too simple to solve but wasn't overly complicated either. The characters were ok but not overly interesting either. However, the book does show us that sometimes you don't really know your friends. Overall, a great way to spend a few hours.
what else could be better - chocolate and a mystery.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information
Series
Work Relationships
Is contained in
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Chocolate Mouse Trap
- Original publication date
- 2005
- People/Characters
- Lee McKinney; Nettie TenHuis; Julie Singletree; Lindy Herrrera; Jason Foster; Carolyn Rose (show all 12); Margaret Van Meter; Joe Woodyard; Hogan Jones; Mrs. Rachel Schrader; Martin Schrader; Brad Schrader
- Important places
- Warner Pier, Michigan, USA; Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA
- Dedication
- To Dave, still my special guy
- First words
- "I'm sick and tired of killing this stupid inspirational junk," I said.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)All the best stories end with a clinch.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 286
- Popularity
- 112,215
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.51)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 2

























































