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When her old friend Karen drops by with her two-year-old son, Meg Langslow reluctantly agrees to babysit. But when night falls, the toddler is still in residence, and Karen isn't answering her phone. Concerned, Meg spends the next morning retracing her friend's steps-and what she discovers makes her begin to suspect that Karen has either been killed, kidnapped, or is on the run. Since the police don't seem to care, Meg once again plays sleuth-this time with a toddler in tow and with her show more extended family, as usual, complicating everything. In this outrageous book of feathered fun, Donna Andrews once again proves her skill as one of the funniest, most entertaining mystery authors around. show lessTags
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These really are cocktail peanut books, in the best sense of the word. They're compulsively readable. They have a pleasant taste and satisfying texture. They will make you fat if you consume too many of them because you'll never rear up off your sitzfleisch long enough to do more than walk the dog. And you'll chuckle while you're doing it.
Meg's insane family has nothing on the insanity of her friends, such as the mother who drops her toddler on Meg and her newly minted husband Michael because she's fleeing the criminals and lawmen who are after her not-quite-ex-husband; the neighboring sheep farmer whose obsessive belief that everyone is out to steal his sheep leads him to hide in his own shrubbery to keep watch on them, forgetting that show more he's completely visible from the main road; and her new bestest buddy, the absentee mom's co-worker at Caerphilly College's financial aid department, whose eagerness to latch onto Meg shows she's a rare good judge of where the action is.
Of course, all the usual suspects are making Meg crazy as well: Her daft father and newly discovered grandfather are hiding six-foot snakes in her new hot tub (there goes the sexy evening of soaking cares away with the aforementioned new husband), her brother the millionaire has abandoned his furnished apartment for her third-floor bedrooms (but failed to mention it to her), her mother and her loopy New Age cousin are shopping shopping shopping for new decor for her house, and so just *can't* babysit the toddler; and he's proven to be such a handful that Meg's seriously questioning her never-very-strong desire to be a mother. Someday. Maybe never. Especially now.
It's not urgently necessary to read these books in order. I'd suggest starting out with Murder with Peacocks to get some of the background, and certainly would not have a newbie skip past Revenge of the Wrought-Iron Flamingos before tackling the rest of the series. But...and here's the big point...there is too much fun to be had for me to go all OCD and strenuously urge you to follow the chronology. You're big people now, you can figure it out, and Andrews gives very good fill-ins for all crucial relationships.
Read. Enjoy. show less
Meg's insane family has nothing on the insanity of her friends, such as the mother who drops her toddler on Meg and her newly minted husband Michael because she's fleeing the criminals and lawmen who are after her not-quite-ex-husband; the neighboring sheep farmer whose obsessive belief that everyone is out to steal his sheep leads him to hide in his own shrubbery to keep watch on them, forgetting that show more he's completely visible from the main road; and her new bestest buddy, the absentee mom's co-worker at Caerphilly College's financial aid department, whose eagerness to latch onto Meg shows she's a rare good judge of where the action is.
Of course, all the usual suspects are making Meg crazy as well: Her daft father and newly discovered grandfather are hiding six-foot snakes in her new hot tub (there goes the sexy evening of soaking cares away with the aforementioned new husband), her brother the millionaire has abandoned his furnished apartment for her third-floor bedrooms (but failed to mention it to her), her mother and her loopy New Age cousin are shopping shopping shopping for new decor for her house, and so just *can't* babysit the toddler; and he's proven to be such a handful that Meg's seriously questioning her never-very-strong desire to be a mother. Someday. Maybe never. Especially now.
It's not urgently necessary to read these books in order. I'd suggest starting out with Murder with Peacocks to get some of the background, and certainly would not have a newbie skip past Revenge of the Wrought-Iron Flamingos before tackling the rest of the series. But...and here's the big point...there is too much fun to be had for me to go all OCD and strenuously urge you to follow the chronology. You're big people now, you can figure it out, and Andrews gives very good fill-ins for all crucial relationships.
Read. Enjoy. show less
When an old friend comes and asks Meg to look after her toddler for a while, Meg agrees. But when her friend Karen doesn't return for Timmy in "a little while," Meg begins looking for her with a toddler in tow.
Searching for Karen leads to discovery of an embezzling plot at the college where Michael teaches and to possible animal trafficking which greatly interests not only her dad and her new-found grandfather Dr. Montgomery Blake but also the DEA, FBI, and other alphabet agencies.
With her dad and grandfather storing snakes in her laundry room and birds in one of the third-floor bedrooms, animals have their usual roles in this series. There is Jade the Emerald Tree Boa who is in the middle of a difficult shed. And let's not forget show more Spike who is his usual irritable self.
This was another fun episode in a long-running series. show less
Searching for Karen leads to discovery of an embezzling plot at the college where Michael teaches and to possible animal trafficking which greatly interests not only her dad and her new-found grandfather Dr. Montgomery Blake but also the DEA, FBI, and other alphabet agencies.
With her dad and grandfather storing snakes in her laundry room and birds in one of the third-floor bedrooms, animals have their usual roles in this series. There is Jade the Emerald Tree Boa who is in the middle of a difficult shed. And let's not forget show more Spike who is his usual irritable self.
This was another fun episode in a long-running series. show less
Cockatiels at Seven by Donna Andrews is a 2008 Minotaur publication.
Now that Meg and Michael are married, Meg's thoughts have begun to flow toward the next step- children. Meg gets a good dose of reality when Karen, an old friend, drops by out of the blue asking Meg to babysit her son, Timmy, for a while. As time passes, and Karen still hasn’t come to claim Timmy, Meg must find out what’s become of her friend, while also caring for Timmy full time.
Naturally, the situation takes on a sinister tone when I dead body is found, and the possibility that little Timmy could be in danger becomes more apparent.
This is one of my ‘read though’ series. I love touching base with these zany characters, but I thought Meg was especially show more funny in this episode. The mystery, as always, was very well executed, the pacing is brisk, and the dialogue is top-notch.
Another hysterically wild and entertaining installment in this beloved series!! show less
Now that Meg and Michael are married, Meg's thoughts have begun to flow toward the next step- children. Meg gets a good dose of reality when Karen, an old friend, drops by out of the blue asking Meg to babysit her son, Timmy, for a while. As time passes, and Karen still hasn’t come to claim Timmy, Meg must find out what’s become of her friend, while also caring for Timmy full time.
Naturally, the situation takes on a sinister tone when I dead body is found, and the possibility that little Timmy could be in danger becomes more apparent.
This is one of my ‘read though’ series. I love touching base with these zany characters, but I thought Meg was especially show more funny in this episode. The mystery, as always, was very well executed, the pacing is brisk, and the dialogue is top-notch.
Another hysterically wild and entertaining installment in this beloved series!! show less
This is at least the fourth time I have read this book and it stands up well. I owned three cockatiels when I bought this book. It was the first one I bought in this series and I liked it so much that I went out and bought all the ones that came before it and kept buying those that came after it.
Reread again May 2020 during a pandemic, a week after I euthanized my dog and under quarantine for Covid-19, vivid, detailed dreams. Not horror dreams, nothing that had me waking up in a sweat, but dreams filled with people and animals..family and not family but familiar. I felt like the books heavily influenced the dreams. What was even nicer was I remembered huge chunks of them when I woke (for a little while at least...boy do dreams fade away show more fast).
Reread again October 2023...still good.
It’s time for more outrageous and feathered fun in the award-winning, laugh-out-loud Meg Langslow series.
When her old friend Karen drops by with two-year-old son Timmy, Meg Langslow reluctantly agrees to babysit “just for a little while.” But when nightfall comes, the toddler is still in residence and Karen isn’t answering any phone calls. Meg decides she must find out what’s happening, so the next morning, with Timmy in tow, she retraces her friend’s footsteps---and begins to suspect that Karen’s disappearance is tied to at least one serious crime. Has Karen been killed or kidnapped? Is she on the run from the bad guys? Or is she one of the bad guys? The police don’t seem to care, so Meg once again plays sleuth---this time with a toddler as her sidekick.
As usual, Meg’s extended family adds to the complications in her life. What covert animal welfare project are Dad and the curmudgeonly zoologist Dr. Montgomery Blake working on---and will Meg have to make another late-night trip to bail them out of jail? Why does Meg’s brother keep disappearing---is he merely trying to avoid babysitting, or is he involved in something more mysterious? Will taking care of Timmy dampen newly married Meg and Michael’s enthusiasm for starting a family of their own? And are any of Meg’s relatives reliable enough to be trusted with a two-year-old---especially a two-year-old whose whereabouts might be of interest to some very dangerous people? show less
Reread again May 2020 during a pandemic, a week after I euthanized my dog and under quarantine for Covid-19, vivid, detailed dreams. Not horror dreams, nothing that had me waking up in a sweat, but dreams filled with people and animals..family and not family but familiar. I felt like the books heavily influenced the dreams. What was even nicer was I remembered huge chunks of them when I woke (for a little while at least...boy do dreams fade away show more fast).
Reread again October 2023...still good.
It’s time for more outrageous and feathered fun in the award-winning, laugh-out-loud Meg Langslow series.
When her old friend Karen drops by with two-year-old son Timmy, Meg Langslow reluctantly agrees to babysit “just for a little while.” But when nightfall comes, the toddler is still in residence and Karen isn’t answering any phone calls. Meg decides she must find out what’s happening, so the next morning, with Timmy in tow, she retraces her friend’s footsteps---and begins to suspect that Karen’s disappearance is tied to at least one serious crime. Has Karen been killed or kidnapped? Is she on the run from the bad guys? Or is she one of the bad guys? The police don’t seem to care, so Meg once again plays sleuth---this time with a toddler as her sidekick.
As usual, Meg’s extended family adds to the complications in her life. What covert animal welfare project are Dad and the curmudgeonly zoologist Dr. Montgomery Blake working on---and will Meg have to make another late-night trip to bail them out of jail? Why does Meg’s brother keep disappearing---is he merely trying to avoid babysitting, or is he involved in something more mysterious? Will taking care of Timmy dampen newly married Meg and Michael’s enthusiasm for starting a family of their own? And are any of Meg’s relatives reliable enough to be trusted with a two-year-old---especially a two-year-old whose whereabouts might be of interest to some very dangerous people? show less
Cockatiels at Seven by Donna Andrews was a good cozy mystery to me but I don't understand why she has cockatiels on the cover and the title is about cockatiels. Cockatiels are mentioned in this book but there are no individual cockatiels connected to this story. That is my main complaint.
I liked the main character, Meg Langslow. She was smart, witty and funny.
A friend from the past makes her promise to take care of her son, two year old, Timmy. Karen says that she will be back soon. The friend, Karen wasn't close to Meg so when the friend does not return she goes to the police who just don't seem that interested. Later in this book, she convinces them that there is something very wrong going on and they start to help her. But she does show more most of the helping her herself.
Meg like to make forges items like towel racks to sell. She is newly married and is not sure that she is Mommy material. As the hours pass, she has to use the services of her grandfather, father, brother and her husband to help take care of Timmy. Timmy is the poster child for two year olds. He has a knack for getting into messes and being annoying. I loved this character more than the rest of the characters in this book!
Along with Timmy and the relatives there is a menagerie of animals that makes the story more interesting.
There were laugh out loud moments, outlandish chase scenes and many other successful ingredients to this mystery.
I highly recommend this cozy mystery to cozy readers but with a caution about the cockatiels not having a significant role in this cozy. show less
I liked the main character, Meg Langslow. She was smart, witty and funny.
A friend from the past makes her promise to take care of her son, two year old, Timmy. Karen says that she will be back soon. The friend, Karen wasn't close to Meg so when the friend does not return she goes to the police who just don't seem that interested. Later in this book, she convinces them that there is something very wrong going on and they start to help her. But she does show more most of the helping her herself.
Meg like to make forges items like towel racks to sell. She is newly married and is not sure that she is Mommy material. As the hours pass, she has to use the services of her grandfather, father, brother and her husband to help take care of Timmy. Timmy is the poster child for two year olds. He has a knack for getting into messes and being annoying. I loved this character more than the rest of the characters in this book!
Along with Timmy and the relatives there is a menagerie of animals that makes the story more interesting.
There were laugh out loud moments, outlandish chase scenes and many other successful ingredients to this mystery.
I highly recommend this cozy mystery to cozy readers but with a caution about the cockatiels not having a significant role in this cozy. show less
Meg had planned to catch up on her blacksmithing. Instead, she finds herself looking after a missing friend's two-year-old while looking for the friend and looking into various nefarious doings. Meanwhile, she has birds in the attic, snakes in the basement, and a variety of exotic animals in the outbuildings, all courtesy of her father and new-found grandfather.
Not the best in the series, but far from the worst.
Not the best in the series, but far from the worst.
Dr. Montgomery Blake, the world-renowned naturalist, environmentalist, and curmudgeon introduced in the last book, The Penguin Who Knew Too Much has been proven to be Meg Langslow's long-lost paternal grandfather. Cockatiels at Seven gives us an idea about what that means for Meg and her family, including her groom of a few months, the gorgeous Michael Waterston.
Dr. Blake did indeed buy the Caerphilly Zoo, which is going to become a staple of this series. Yes, Doctors Langslow and Blake are going to foist animals on Meg and Michael. They won't always ask first
Dr. Blake did indeed buy the Caerphilly Zoo, which is going to become a staple of this series. Yes, Doctors Langslow and Blake are going to foist animals on Meg and Michael. They won't always ask first
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- Canonical title
- Cockatiels at Seven
- Original title
- Cockatiels at Seven
- Original publication date
- 2008-07-08
- People/Characters
- Meg Langslow (blacksmith, the organized one); Michael Waterston (Meg's husband, Caerphilly College drama teacher); Rob Langslow (Robert James, Meg's younger brother, CEO, Mutant Wizards); Dr. J. Montgomery Blake (world-famous zooligist, James Langslow's dad); Seth Early (sheep farmer, Meg & Michael's neighbor); Karen Walker (show all 23); Timmy Walker; Jasper Walker; Henry Burke, Chief of Caerphilly police; Sammy Wendell; Jack Ransom; Ashok; Nadine Hanrahan; Ambrose Driscoll; Mabel Driscoll; Sandie; Aubrey Hamilton; Freddy Hamilton; Dr. James Langslow aka Dad; Mrs. Langslow aka Mother (Margaret Hollingworth Langslow); Rose Noire (Meg's cousin Rosemary Keenan, an herbalist); Spike (Meg and Michael's black & white male dog, a.k.a. the Small Evil One); Scout (Jasper Walker's mixed hound dog)
- Important places
- Caerphilly, Virginia, USA (fictional, pronounced 'car--FIL-ly')
- First words
- "Meg, are you busy?" Dad asked.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Go see Mommy."
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