Grade A #BookReview: Crescent City Christmas Chaos by Ellen Byron

Grade A #BookReview: Crescent City Christmas Chaos by Ellen ByronCrescent City Christmas Chaos (Vintage Cookbook Mystery 4) by Ellen Byron
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via NetGalley
Formats available: hardcover, ebook, audiobook
Genres: cozy mystery, culinary mystery, holiday mystery, mystery
Series: Vintage Cookbook Mystery #4
Pages: 225
Published by Berkley on November 4, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

It's Christmas. It's cozy. It's culinary. It's chaos! It's the fourth book in this fabulous mystery series with a vintage flair from USA Today bestselling and Agatha Award–winning author Ellen Byron.

Have yourself a merry little . . . murder?

Ricki James-Diaz gets the best present ever when her parents arrive in New Orleans for the holidays. Not only is it a chance to catch up, it’s also an opportunity to jog her mom Josepha’s memory about Ricki’s adoption. The details have always been shrouded in mystery. And Ricki understands why when she learns her mother was blackmailed for years, simply for not wanting to lose her precious daughter.

But digging into the past soon lands the James-Diaz clan in water hotter than a big pot of gumbo! When the woman who extorted Ricki’s mom is found dead at her home, Josepha becomes the primary suspect. Now Ricki has another murder to solve, and tracking down a killer in Crescent City is going to take a miracle.

Luckily, ‘tis the season! And Ricki has all the staff at the Bon Vee Culinary House Museum on hand to help. Can she prove her mother’s innocence and have the case wrapped up in time for Christmas?

My Review: 

Ricki James’ – more formally Miracle James-Diaz’ – life has certainly gotten a bit more complicated (and interesting) in the intervening books in this Vintage Cookbook Mystery series that occurred between Ricki’s first adventure in Bayou Book Thief and this delightfully twisted Christmas murder. To the point where I really want to go back and find out all the deets even if I didn’t need them to enjoy this holiday mystery.

Ricki began her amateur sleuthing hobby the way that many amateur investigators do. In Bayou Book Thief, she was the potential suspect all the circumstantial clues pointed towards. She knew she was innocent, she knew the line to murder the victim not only formed on the right but went around several blocks, and that the NOPD was overworked and understaffed and all too inclined to take the easy way out of an investigation.

As that ‘easy way out’ for them had the potential of a jail sentence for her, she was desperate and determined enough to investigate for herself, leading to the creation of a delightfully quirky ‘Scooby gang’, the discovery of an unsung treasure among New Orleans’ literati, and, of course, the actual murderer.

This Christmas mystery begins as a treat for Ricki – and it ends that way too. But it middles in a victim that, again, no one will miss – but that Ricki’s family and friends will miss least of all. Not that Ricki’s not at the center of the mystery, but at least she’s off the hook when it comes to committing the actual murder. Her parents, not nearly so much.

Ricki has always known that she’s adopted, that her mother Josepha adopted Ricki as an infant before she moved them both to LA and met her husband. Ricki is white, her mother is black, her dad is Latino, so keeping Ricki’s adoption a secret was a non-starter. Which doesn’t mean that there wasn’t a secret involved, just not that.

A secret that doesn’t matter, NOW, to any of the people involved, but was juicy enough back then for Josepha to be blackmailed over it for years. Ricki’s adoption by Josepha, then a young, single black woman, was facilitated by a lie. Specifically, the lie that Josepha was a widow. A lie that was facilitated by someone in the records office of the hospital where Josepha worked as a nurse.

At the time, revealing that lie would have resulted in Ricki being sent into the foster system, and Josepha going to jail. So she paid, and she paid, and she paid until her blackmailer was declared dead.

Ricki’s search for her birthparents, while it hasn’t brought the dead back to life, has brought the knowledge that the dead weren’t dead to both the blackmailer Phyllis Gibbs (the next morning’s murder victim) and the blackmail-ee (Ricki’s mom)

That’s much too big a coincidence for even a beleaguered NOPD to ignore. Considering that both Josepha and Ricki’s dad Luis were caught on the victim’s ring camera paying her a visit in the hours before the woman’s death, it’s a bit too easy for Ricki to see the case forming in all their heads.

Especially when they have a bigger – or at least more attention getting fish to fry in a high-profile thief breaking into, well, pretty much everywhere while dressed in the costume of a well-loved New Orleans children’s icon. Like the local equivalent of Ronald McDonald was out knocking over shops and getting caught on camera while doing so.

So Ricki’s parents are under suspicion of murder. Her boyfriend is under suspicion of the same murder, albeit for entirely different reasons. Her friend-adjacent in NOPD want to solve the murder but the mayor demands that the NOPD’s resources be devoted to the much higher-profile string of thefts.

Leading Ricki – and her eager friends – to get themselves involved in a murder investigation – yet again – even as the younger members of the gang are also caught up in the purely local, but extremely divisive and incendiary – underhanded dealings of their parents in the generational drama that wraps around the selection of the Krewe Queens and their courts for the upcoming Mardi Gras Parades.

Between the thieving clown, the sniping Krewes, and the cold, dead body of a conniving blackmailer, there’s more than enough shenanigans to generate a LOT of chaos in Ricki’s life. It’s going to take a lot more than one night, and the spirits are going to need quite a bit of earthly help, but there WILL BE holiday spirit at the Bon Vee’s Christmas celebration no matter what ‘miracle’ Ricki James has to pull off to get it there!

Escape Rating A: This was just such a ‘right book, right time’ thing that I fell right into it and didn’t want to leave when I was done. (Leaving me with an itch for a good holiday murder to finish out the week!)

It also left me with a desire to read the middle two books in the series, Wined and Died in New Orleans and French Quarter Fright Night, just to find out the details of Ricki’s quest to find her birthparents – AND to experience more of Ricki’s New Orleans and the goings on at the Bon Vee. Don’t get me wrong, I didn’t NEED those details to enjoy this story, I just want them. (I’m not quite sure this stands completely alone because I did read the first book in the series, but it definitely doesn’t require reading them all to enjoy this one – but why wouldn’t you since they’re terrific!)

I wrote a LOT in the first part of this to set the stage for the story, and I still don’t think I did it justice. There’s a LOT going on and it IS chaos. But the story goes down easy, like cafe au lait and beignets from Cafe du Monde, complete with clouds of powdered sugar to add to the delicious chaos.

The A plot here is clearly the murder, but the B plot, the Krewe court maneuverings, is fascinating because it gets just a bit into all the frantic paddling going on underneath the swans that are New Orleans’ famous Mardi Gras parades.

There’s also a C and a D, not plots exactly, but situations and history that link the two plots together and dive a bit more deeply into the way the city works – and doesn’t. The C part is the Charity Hospital, one of two public hospitals in the city that served everyone, which means they served those who couldn’t get medical care anywhere else. Conditions at Charity Hospital during Hurricane Katrina and the difficulties and heartbreak of its evacuation were a huge part of the story of Katrina, and the hospital was not rebuilt or reopened after. Josepha was a NICU nurse at Charity, and it’s where she cared for and ultimately adopted the abandoned infant Ricki. It’s a tragedy that lingers, and it lingers over this story as well because it’s an important part of Josepha’s and Ricki’s ‘origin story’.

That D should be an R, for the endemic racism that hangs over New Orleans like a pall, in the present as well as the past. In the past, it’s the reason Josepha had to lie about being a widow in order to adopt Ricki. In the present, the victim’s OBVIOUS bigotry was a HUGE reason why so many of the murdered woman’s victims hated her so much, AND it’s also part of the parental Krewe shenanigans.

In other words, for a story that is simply hella fun to read, there’s also a lot to unpack under the surface if you look for it. And that’s what I loved about Crescent City Christmas Chaos. A delightful cast of characters, a fascinating and twisted murder, an eye-catching distraction, and something to think about after the last page is turned.

I’ll definitely be back to this author’s New Orleans to see what I missed in the series, AND I’ll be looking for the next entry in it when it appears, because this New Orleans holiday mystery – complete with delicious recipes – was the perfect cozy mystery to fill in my holiday reads this season!

#BookReview: Bayou Book Thief by Ellen Byron

#BookReview: Bayou Book Thief by Ellen ByronBayou Book Thief (Vintage Cookbook Mystery, #1) by Ellen Byron
Format: ebook
Source: purchased from Amazon
Formats available: paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genres: cozy mystery, culinary mystery, mystery
Series: Vintage Cookbook Mystery #1
Pages: 304
Published by Berkley on June 7, 2022
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

A fantastic new cozy mystery series with a vintage flair from USA Today bestselling and Agatha Award-winning author Ellen Byron.
Twenty-eight-year-old widow Ricki James leaves Los Angeles to start a new life in New Orleans after her showboating actor husband perishes doing a stupid internet stunt. The Big Easy is where she was born and adopted by the NICU nurse who cared for her after Ricki's teen mother disappeared from the hospital.
Ricki's dream comes true when she joins the quirky staff of Bon Vee Culinary House Museum, the spectacular former Garden District home of late bon vivant Genevieve "Vee" Charbonnet, the city's legendary restauranteur. Ricki is excited about turning her avocation - collecting vintage cookbooks - into a vocation by launching the museum's gift shop, Miss Vee's Vintage Cookbooks and Kitchenware. Then she discovers that a box of donated vintage cookbooks contains the body of a cantankerous Bon Vee employee who was fired after being exposed as a book thief.
The skills Ricky has developed ferreting out hidden vintage treasures come in handy for investigations. But both her business and Bon Vee could wind up as deadstock when Ricki's past as curator of a billionaire's first edition collection comes back to haunt her.
Will Miss Vee's Vintage Cookbooks and Kitchenware be a success ... or a recipe for disaster?

My Review:

There is just something about New Orleans, and there probably always has been. There certainly always has been for me, as I’ve been drawn to reading books set in that city ever since my very first visit decades ago. So, when a friend picked up this book and said it looked like fun, I was more than willing to come along for the virtual trip.

Ricki James isn’t so much visiting as returning home to New Orleans after a long absence when this story begins. Her move may be a return to her roots after years in Los Angeles, but it also represents a fresh start – or at least Ricki certainly hopes so. She has come home in an attempt to dodge not one but two scandals she hopes she left behind in LA.

Just as no good deed goes unpunished, no really big scandal ever truly gets left behind – particularly not when there’s still some juice left in it. A situation with which Ricki becomes all too aware when a new and equally juicy scandal arrives at her door.

Not, initially, her personal door, but definitely, more importantly and absolutely worse, the door of her new and just barely established antique cookery, bookstore and museum gift shop at the equally newly established Bon Vee Culinary House Museum in the Garden District home of the late and much lamented Genevieve “Vee” Charbonnet, one of the city’s legendary restaurateurs.

One of the museum’s docents, a man nearly everyone on the staff can barely stand – at best – is caught red-handed with a selection of her shop’s vintage cookbooks concealed under his coat. It’s theft, pure and simple – no matter how much he tries to pin the blame that is so obviously his on practically every other person on the scene. His attempt to shift the blame merely spreads the ill-will he has always engendered – and avails him absolutely not.

But it might be the cause of his murder that night. A murder that casts a shadow over the Museum AND Ricki’s shop, as the theft, the spurious accusations the man threw around, AND the general enmity that nearly everyone seems to have felt for him, points out a possible motive. A motive that, as thin as it might seem, seems to be the only one the police can find.

The question, a question that seems to generally hover around the NOPD according to these local residents, is whether the police are willing and/or able to look all that hard when there’s an easy solution clearly to hand.

And that’s what leads antique cookbook expert Ricki James onto the path that many a worried amateur sleuth has trod before her. She decides to investigate the murder herself. Just to see if she can find a clue – or ten – that the police might have missed. In the hopes of preserving a wonderful place full of terrific people who are doing good work and might just offer her a chance to make a new place for herself into the bargain.

Escape Rating B: Bayou Book Thief was simply a delicious starter for a cozy mystery series. There was plenty of atmosphere – well of course because New Orleans – along with tempting red herrings, a fascinating ‘home base’ filled with interesting and quirky characters AND a whole series of villains that were easy to hate.

Beginning with that first murder victim, as it seems like no one misses the man. He was a nuisance when he was alive – and an even bigger one now that he’s dead. Leaving behind oodles of potential suspects and plenty of motives.

What made the story extra, added fun and filled with even more surprises was that the motive was wrapped around a decades old secret in a way that added to all the charm – and warmed the cockles of this booklover’s heart.

Writing randy romances – actually soft core porn – in the 1950s (around the time that the infamous Peyton Place was first published) was just not the done thing for young blue-blooded women possessing New Orleans’ finest pedigrees. Over half a century later, the now 80something Madame Lucretia Noisette is delighted that her old pseudonym has been rediscovered and she’s more than willing to own it.

The world has changed in the intervening decades, and at her age she’s past caring about any possible remaining potential scandal – even if her son and her grandchildren are not.

Little do they know that it’s not grand-mère’s once upon a time scandal that will cause the most problems. It’s not even Ricki’s much more recent scandals – the ones that she hoped she had left behind in LA. (That she had one serious scandal in her past is not atypical for the amateur detective in a cozy series. Two, however, struck this reader as a bit over-the-top, as both scandals were extremely juicy to the point where having one person be involved in both felt a bit like ‘overegging the pudding’. I’m curious to see the effects they’ll have on Ricki in future books in the series.)

Where back in the day the investigative axiom “cherchez la femme” might have led to the real villain, in this later day “follow the money” is a much better bet. Even if Ricki doesn’t figure out the whole thing at the very last moment.

She’s still ahead of the NOPD, something that is likely to spur her to future investigations. As it already has, considering that there are at least two more books in this charming cozy mystery series, Wined and Died in New Orleans and French Quarter Fright Night. I’m certainly planning on a return visit the next time I feel like ‘laissez les bon temps rouler’ the way to murder.