To kill a mocking girl a Bookbinding mystery

Quinn Victoria Caine is back in her quirky town of Vienna, Virginia, starting her new life as a bookbinder in her family-owned charm-for-days bookshop Prose & Scones. With her trusty German Shephard RBG--Ruff Barker Ginsburg--by her side, what can go wrong? Okay, sure, bumping into her ex Scott...

Full description

Main Author: Kincaid, Harper (Author)
Format: Books Print Book
Language: English
Published: New York : Crooked Lane, 2020.
Edition: First edition.
Series: Bookbinding mystery ; 1.
Subjects:
Summary: Quinn Victoria Caine is back in her quirky town of Vienna, Virginia, starting her new life as a bookbinder in her family-owned charm-for-days bookshop Prose & Scones. With her trusty German Shephard RBG--Ruff Barker Ginsburg--by her side, what can go wrong? Okay, sure, bumping into her ex Scott or her former high-school nemesis Tricia is a drag. It certainly doesn't help that they've acquired the new hobby of shoving their recent engagement in her face every chance they get. But that doen't mean Quinn wanted to find Tricia dead in the road. So why does half the town think she may have done it? Quinn is determined to find Tricia's killer, even if it means partnering with her cousin-turned-nun Sister Daria and Detective Aiden Harrington, her older brother's too-movie-star-handsome-for-his-own-good best friend. They believe she's innocent, but, of course, that doesn't influence the police, who peg her as their prime suspect. Or, at least they do until she's poisoned. But there is no way Quinn is going to stop now. Vienna is her town and--for better or worse--Tricia was one of their own. Someone may have killed the mocking girl, but no one's going to stop the notorious QVC.--
Item Description: Includes recipes.
Physical Description: 344 pages ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 9781643853048
164385304X
Author Notes: Born in California and raised in South Florida, Harper Kincaid has moved around like a nomad with a bounty on her head ever since. After earning her master's degree in Gender History and another in Clinical/Macro Social Work, Kincaid decided to not to use either and become a writer instead.