Absence of Mallets
-
-
4.5 • 141 Ratings
-
-
- $8.99
-
- $8.99
Publisher Description
Contractor Shannon Hammer steels her nerve to pin down a killer in the latest Fixer-Upper Mystery from the New York Times bestselling author of Premeditated Mortar. . . .
Shannon could not be happier that her hunky thriller-writing boyfriend, Mac, has moved in, and it is a good thing they are living together because they are both busier than ever. Mac is hosting writing retreats at his now vacant lighthouse mansion, while Shannon and her crew build Homefront, a quaint Victorian village of tiny homes for veterans in need. Mac’s latest guests are proving to be a handful though, and Shannon has heard some grumbling from the luminaries of Lighthouse Cove about her latest passion project. But nothing can throw a wrench in their plans except a malicious murder.
When one of Shannon’s new friends is found brutally bludgeoned with a mallet near the lighthouse on Mac’s property, the couple hammers out a suspect list and searches for a motive. As they drill deeper for clues, more violence strikes and a new victim winds up in a coma. The pressure is on, and Shannon and Mac will have to move fast to find an unhinged killer dead set on demolishing anyone who gets in their way. . . .
Customer Reviews
Great series
Thank you for these books and that they are suspenseful, funny and are not filled with senseless sex. The romance in your books is just that — romance.
I enjoy your characters and the way your books read. i have a terrible time of putting them down as I get so engrossed in them.
Absence of Mallets
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The relationship between Shannon & Mac is so loving & sweet. The mystery portion of the book keeps you engaged to the end.
A book with heart!
Another fine installment in Carlisle’s Fixer-upper series, which sees Shannon and Mac living together and working on a veterans’ tiny home development. But that project, and Mac’s latest writers’ retreat, are impacted by murder. Carlisle’s empathetic portrait of veterans is quite gripping.