Monday, August 4, 2025

Extra Sensory Deception - the 4th (and Final) Raven's Nest Bookstore Mystery

And so, with sadness in my heart, we come to the fourth, and final, Raven's Nest Bookstore Mystery.  With this last book in the series, we get our last adventure with Clara Quinn, her cousin Stephanie, her dog Tatters, her mother Jessie, her boyfriend Rick, the town's sheriff Dan, the sheriff's deputy Tim, Clara and Stephanie's employee at the bookstore Molly, and Molly's new addition to the store, a small homeless cat named Edgar (after Poe, of course!).  Author Allison Kingsley has created a quickly little world in the small New England town of Finn's Harbor, Maine, with a diverse cast of characters that I've grown to really like and about whom I have enjoyed reading.  I will miss them all, and it's a shame Kingsley did not continue the series...
 
Extra Sensory Deception features a murder mystery that is set in the most unlikely of places, considering the location of Finn's Harbor.  A rodeo has come town!  Yes, you read that right.  A rodeo - in a small town on the coast of New England. Definitely not where I thought the author would take our intrepid psychic sleuth next, but it turned out to be quite the intriguing mystery.  A great improvement over the last book, whose murderer just sort of popped up out of nowhere.  This time around, Kingsley provides readers with some subtle clues along the way (if you are careful enough to catch them!), and the visions Clara has with her Quinn Sense are a lot trickier than they've ever been - but they all come true, just not how Clara (nor the reader) expects them to.  Plus, we get a lot more of Tatters in this book, one of the supporting cast finally learns about Clara's abilities, and Clara herself discovers that dogs are not the only animals whose minds she can read.  For a final book, this one pulls out all the stops!
 
The story centers around the rodeo and a murder that takes place on the opening night.  A woman is found dead, strangled behind the main stage.  The problem is, the piggin' string used to stranger the woman belongs to Wes Carlton, a good friend of Clara's boyfriend, Rick.  So, needless to say, Clara, with her cousin's help, begins asking questions, hoping to prove Wes' innocence (although everything she finds seems to point to Wes as the guilty party!).  The visions she has - a clown getting run down by a truck, a cowboy with a red shirt standing over the body, and a clown tumbling down the stands and being chased by an angry bull - make absolutely no sense, and her attempts to warn the one clown she meets are not taken seriously.  The digger she deeps, however, the more secrets she uncovers.  Like, how the dead woman was known for turning down suitors in a hateful manner, making herself any number of enemies. Like, how some of the other women in the rodeo hated the idea that the men they liked were in love with the victim.  Like, how the owner of the rodeo was possibly having an affair with the victim.  And like, how the wife of the owner had some very damaging evidence that she destroyed in order to protect one of the suspects!
 
It is funny how Clara and Stephanie are so careful to avoid doing anything to attract the attention of the Sheriff, since he has made it super clear in previous books that they are to stay out of it; the only problem is, when Clara has her final confrontation with the killer (someone she never even suspected, although some of the clues had been right in front of her the whole time!), it means the Sheriff has no way to show up in time to save her.  It is only through Stephanie's concern for her cousin and Rick's quick actions that Clara is saved from a charging bull and the killer is brought to justice!
 
I have to wonder if Kingsley had been to a rodeo recently, or knew someone who worked in the rodeo circuit, or perhaps even was a fan of rodeos; the story has some pretty good details about the inner workings of such an event, and it lends some reality to the story.  Also, I thoroughly enjoyed Clara's bantering with Tatters (even if no one else can hear the dog's thoughts), and was thrilled when Clara discovered she could also read the minds of cats when Molly happens to hide a stray cat in the bookstore storeroom.  I thought that opened up the doors for some interesting possibilities, had the series continued.  And speaking of which, it definitely felt like Kingsley was setting up the premise of the next book (or, at the very least, a near future mystery), because there were several references to the bookstore getting an author or two to come out and do a signing.  That definitely sounds like a great set-up for a new murder mystery.  But, alas, that was clearly not to be, and such a set-up leads me to believe that the termination of the series was not Kingsley's choice. 
 
It's a shame to see this series end, but if it had to come to a conclusion, this book was a fitting book to do so.  While there were a few plot lines that remain unresolved (does Clara ever tell Rick about her abilities?  does Clara ever move out of her mother's house? do Clara and Rick take their relationship to the next level?), the book ends with a relatively happy, satisfying conclusion that leaves the reader smiling.
 
RATING:  10 thick white pillars wound with English ivy out of 10 for a superbly plotted murder mystery, a fun story, and a sad, but satisfying, ending to the series. 

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