Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Chopping Spree by Diane Mott Davidson


Chopping Spree is another installment in the Goldy the Caterer series. In this one, she is catering a meal for her college friend Barry Dean, who is subsequently murdered at the event. Among the suspects are Barry's fellow mall employees, his two girlfriends, and unfortunately, Goldy's assistant Julian. The cops think Julian is the killer and he's in jail--Goldy can't believe for a minute her trusted friend is guilty, so she starts snooping to try and figure out the real killer's identity.
Back in the mix are Goldy's best friend, Marla, her cop husband, Tom, and a bunch of obnoxious rich people that Goldy caters for throughout the book.
The mystery was solved in a pretty much out-of-nowhere way, but it made sense, just kind of Agatha Christie like in the "unfairness" to the reader.
I've been reading this series for three or four years now and I usually really enjoy the antics of Goldy. But this particular episode had a major flaw. Goldy's son, Arch, is now a teenager and he is totally disrespectful and rude to his mother. It is well-known to readers of these books that Goldy's ex-husband (Arch's dad) is a violent jerk who savagely beat Goldy before they were divorced. The fact that Goldy's son is so mean to her and has very little respect for her is upsetting. It is well known sociologically that women who have been abused once take abuse other times, it is also known that kids of abusers are bullies at times. But to me, Diane Mott Davidson, who has written so honestly about Goldy's experiences in her marriage and how she bravely got away from the ex, is dropping the ball here. To read about how Goldy lets her son treat her so badly is frustrating. And Goldy's new, sweet as sugar husband Tom is not very good at standing up for Goldy when Arch is nasty to her. Maybe the author is setting the stage for the next novel for the situation to come to a head, but the end indicated to me that maybe she isn't. Arch is sort of nice to Goldy twice near the end, so I'm not sure if the reader is supposed to be satisfied as Goldy was, with his behavior "change."

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