Review by Booklist Review
Detective Gretel of Gesternstadt is no fan of sorcerers, if only because of their lack of fashion sense, with their excessive facial hair, trailing purple satin hems, and pointy hats. But when Sorcerer Ernst Arnold vanishes, leaving only his appendix behind, Gretel is persuaded by his distraught widow to undertake the search for him (while also contracting with the sorcerer's insurer, meaning that Gretel will get paid whether he's found dead or alive). With the sorcerer's hand-drawn map as a guide, Gretel persuades her brother, Hans, who is needed as her porter, to come with her into the deep, dark woods, which rekindles memories of their childhood trauma in the gingerbread cottage, memories soon to be recalled even more vividly. This is the fourth of Brackston's fractured fairy tales featuring the intrepid Gretel, and while they are a far cry from most crime fiction, they are served with at least some crime and offer a nice change of pace for mystery readers. Fantasy with a touch of wry.--Leber, Michele Copyright 2017 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Bestseller Brackston's comic mystery series set in a Grimm fairy tales version of 18th-century Bavaria hits its stride with this often hilarious fourth entry (after 2016's The Case of the Fickle Mermaid). In this imagined world, Gretel works as an investigator for hire, though her insights aren't always profound; she tells a prospective client, Evalina Arnold, that "it is facts that will solve this case, as they have solved many others." Evalina's sorcerer husband, Ernst, has died, but she has been unable to collect on his insurance policy. The only trace of him is his appendix, which Evalina found in his workshop, but which the insurers insist only shows that one of his tricks went wrong. Gretel interviews a number of Ernst's disappointed clients in an effort to identify who may have wanted to kill him. The wry humor is a delight (a wolf threatening Gretel "had evidently never been attacked by a fierce Bavarian detective with a flaming Bavarian hat and had not a notion of how to defend itself"). Agent: Kate Hordern, Kate Hordern Literary Agency. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Brackston's fourth fairy-tale mystery (after The Case of the Fickle Mermaid) finds private investigator Gretel reluctantly looking into the disappearance and possible murder of a sorcerer who annoyed almost everyone in Bavaria. The only trace of his body is his appendix. Clues lead Gretel and brother Hans to the gloomy forest, the source of their childhood ordeal.-ACT © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A brother and sister of fairy-tale fame stumble from one complication to another in their search for a missing magician.Years after escaping the gingerbread house, Gretel enjoys renown as the best detective in Gesternstadt. But determining whether the sorcerer Ernst Arnold is really dead is quite a challenge, for all that's left of Arnold in his magicarium is his appendix and his pet bat. The insurance company won't pay Frau Arnold if her husband isn't really dead, and she can't pay Gretel until it's proven that he is. Though she decides to take the case on spec, Gretel negotiates with the insurance company for payment if she delivers proof of life. She needs the dough: not only does she have to keep her bon vivant brother, Hans, in "weisswurst and ale," but she's just ordered an expensive wig to charm the man she loves, Uber General Ferdinand von Ferdinand , away from his fiancee. Gretel finds a map of Arnold's that sends her and Hans deep into the woods that still fill them with dread. Despite its beautiful hostess, a house of "vernacular architecture" is not the refuge it seems, and Gretel and Hans flee straight into a troupe of perpetually pickled pixies. Reluctant as Hans is to leave his new friends, Gretel has a job to do despite several attempts on their lives (von Ferdinand unfortunately rescues her while she's not looking her best). Pressing onward with a cheerfully bromidic forest guide, the duo find what they're looking for in a fanciful village populated with Germany's Most Wanted and refugees from other Grimm tales. It's up to Gretel to find a way out in an adventure that unrepentantly defies history (cocktails and cigarette lighters in the 18th century?) and follows up a beloved tale with farce. This fourth series entry features a resourceful but not entirely lovable heroine, zany secondary characters, and the tendency to go for cheap laughs. Still, give Brockton (The Fickle Mermaid, 2016, etc.) high marks for creativity. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.