Cover Image: Murder on the Quilt

Murder on the Quilt

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Member Reviews

This is the first book I have read by this author and I quite enjoyed it.

The story of trying to find out about your family and your past was well written. The story kept me interested until the very end.

Looking forwarding to reading more in the future by this author.

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This has been a fun book to read. I’m a quilter and I love genealogy! Family history is so fascinating and this story is such a great example of what you can learn from it. Thank you for it!

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Murder On The Quilt is a short story, almost a novella, that follows a man named PJ. Fresh off the death of his mother, he discovers paperwork in his mother’s safety deposit box that confirms he was adopted. In light of this discovery PJ adopts his birth name of Nick Coy, and decides that he wants to take an extended road trip back to the home state of his ancestors in an effort to reconnect with his history. Nick starts digging into the backgrounds of his many now deceased relatives and comes to uncover a centuries old homicide of his namesake great, great, great, great grandfather. He feels compelled to solve this ancient homicide before he returns home to California. This story did have some highlights and the story is interesting in certain respects. It’s a very quick read. It is so quick, it is worthwhile to zip through. This is not one of my favorite historical fiction. I can appreciate the tie ins between old family history and current world events that the author depicts.

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I am a quilter and this was an interesting book for me. . I enjoyed most of the writing but it did feel a little sluggish in spots. The storyline itself was great.
Many thanks to Sunbury Press Inc. and to NetGalley for providing me with a galley in exchange for my honest opinion.

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There are times when I would like a dual rating system for reviewing - one for the story and the other for the writing. This is one of those times. The story revolves around Nick Coy, a young man who, whilst sorting out his mother's affairs after her death, discovers that he was adopted as a baby. He wants to know about his biological family and this is where the genealogical part comes in. He heads off east to search out relatives - using local libraries and archives as well as diverting to visit the amazing Family Search collection in Salt Lake City (envious there as I can only access their records on-line). He talks to "old timers" who remember some of the family and others who have already researched local families, including the Coy/Koys and, in the process, uncovers an unmarked grave, a quilt showing a story and a diary of a relative from the 1860-80s. It got a little unrealistic at this stage in that the unmarked grave was divined, by him, to be an ancestor and he arranged for exhumation of the skeleton. If this really is that simple in the USA then I'm amazed. I'm also not convinced about divining a grave (let alone whether the occupant was male or female, come on please) as one can divine water although I know that the latter is true. He does find various distant relatives including an eccentric, anti-social great something aunt who conveniently dies before he gets to talk to her but does leave him a large amount in her will. Her cedarwood chest, which she requested be destroyed after her death, of course is not and from it he recovers a more greats-relatives diary. This naturally solves the riddle of the skeleton, the gun and the quilt. An interesting story though and although rather too neat and twee it gets a three and a half star for showing the various sources of family history research. The writing: the sentences are typically very short and succinct, almost staccato, leading to little flow to the story to my mind. I felt breathless whilst reading them and not through the excitement I'm afraid. I am certainly one for descriptions of people and places feeling that the author should be doing this for me and bringing me into what is after all, their story. This author certainly does that - we have overly excessive detail of the distance and routes and so on for Nick's drive across various States but, disappointingly, 'boring' is all we get for the landscape. Driving from California through Nevada I remember miles and miles of going up a hill, across and down the other side, then across miles and miles of beige dry basin to another hill - mind numbingly dull rather than just boring; the fun was to catch sight of a bush or a deer or a dust devil or to guess which gear you would need for the next hill. ditto his descriptions of some baseball/football matches (I know not nor care not which) which adds nothing to the story. I'm not even sure about his love life either - his on/off girlfriend for sex at home in California let along the new love of his life - it all seems rather contrived and "I'd better put some romance in because it's expected". A 2 star for the writing style - it's not my cup of tea. Thanks to NetGalley and Sunbury Press Inc for an advance copy in exchange for my honest review.

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Unfortinetly I could not get into this book and did not end up finishing it. It just was not my cup if tea. I did try

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