The Handyman's Last Bite
Preorder Price Until May 1!
Gypsy Lee Miller had a successful career in Washington, DC, but felt adrift. Her friends thought she was nuts when she decided to go back Bay View Harbor on the eastern shore of the Chesapeake Bay. Not a retreat, kind of a rethinking. At her cousin Linda's suggestion, she renovates a building to become the Bay View Harbor Bakery and the two become entrepreneurs. Business doesn't pick up rapidly but it is growing until Gordy, the local handyman, drops dead on the bakery floor.
Gypsy Lee's yoga instructor friend, Tessa, encourages her to delve into what happened. She doesn't need a lot of encouragement; if the bakery fails she'll lose everything she invested. They trace Gordy's footsteps to the posh Bay View Inn, a local fishing boat, and a glass blowing store owner Gordy tried to blackmail.
Gordy owed money to people and was fixated on not being well-to-do. He was also focused on a town real estate development project that might benefit the owner of the local inn. But why did he care whether she really owned it? Questions irritate the mayor and other important people in town.
With the bakery clients dwindling and sparse clues, Gypsy Lee continues to persist -- against police and Linda's advice -- to delve into what happened. Being known as the Killer Cupcake Woman is bad for business. But the questions she's asking bring unwanted attention in the form of bricks through her bakery window and bashed taillights.
She begins to think she's on the right path, But her actions aren't recipes for a long life.
Come to the charming town of Bay View Harbor on the Chesapeake Bay to meet an eclectic group of towns people and begin the Bayview Harbor Mystery series.
Cover Description: View of the harbor from inside the Bay View Bakery, complete with a lemon-frosted cupcake with a bit out of it.
BIOGRAPHY Elaine L. Orr writes five mystery series, the fourteen-book Jolie Gentil cozy mystery series, the three-book River's Edge series, the three-book Logland series, and the four-book Family History Mystery series.
The Jolie Gentil series is set at the Jersey shore. Behind the Walls was a finalist for the 2014 Chanticleer Mystery and Mayhem Awards.
Her newest series, Shore Shenanigans, is also set at the Jersey Shore.
The first book in Elaine's River's Edge cozy mystery series, From Newsprint to Footprints, debuted in late fall 2015, followed by Demise of a Devious Neighbor. The latter was a Chanticleer finalist in 2017. The fictional South County sits along the Des Moines River in Southeast Iowa.
In 2016, Elaine issued Tip a Hat to Murder, first in the Logland mystery series. Set in small-town Illinois, its protagonist is a police chief rather than an amateur sleuth. The third book, Final Cycle, was published in June 2019.
Finally, a series set in her native Maryland! The Family History series in the Western Maryland mountains examines crimes of the past with a sleuth in the present. Add a ghost only Digger can see, and you get a great mix of humor and insight of the region.
Nonfiction includes Writing When Time is Scares -- and Getting the Work Published, and many family history books. In 2019, she published Fitting in After Fifty -- to Your New Town. The guide to breaking into a community at a 'mature' age is practical and adds a touch of humor.
Elaine also writes plays and novellas, including Falling Into Place and In the Shadow of Light. Biding Time was one of five finalists in the National Press Club's first fiction contest, in 1993, and her play, Permission to Hope, was part of the Bethesda, MD Plays in Progress series in 1989. The one-act, Common Ground, is a story of three couples planning big moves -- with a twist.
Elaine conducts presentations on electronic publishing and other writing-related topics. Nonfiction includes Words to Write By: Getting Your Thoughts on Paper and Writing in Retirement: Putting New Year’s Resolutions to Work. She also conducts online courses on writing and publishing on the TabletWise and Teachable platforms.
Thought her degrees are in government, Elaine studied writing at the University of Maryland, Georgetown University School of Continuing Education, the Writer's Center of Bethesda, Maryland, and the University of Iowa's Summer Writing Festival. A member of Sisters in Crime and the Indiana Writers’ Center, Elaine grew up in Maryland and moved to the Midwest in 1994.