π A little confession: I
was first interested in this book because of the word "dumpling" in
the title, and a bowl of noodles in the cover. And that's because: I love
noodles - especially wonton noodles! A cozy murder mystery with noodles and dumplings
in it? Yes, please!
π Our sleuth is a
American-Taiwanese girl called Lana Lee. After a nasty breakup from her
boyfriend and from her former workplace, Lana reluctantly helps as a server in
her family's culinary business: Ho Lee Noodle House. The restaurant is located
at the Asian Village Plaza, a mall full with shops related to Chinese/Asian
culture, founded by a Mr. Feng.
π On that fatal day Lana
must hand-deliver Mr. Feng's lunch order to his office. Later that day, Mr. Feng was
found dead from asphyxiation after he ate his lunch of shrimp dumplings, to
which he was allergic. This was strange, because Ho Lee Noodle House is always
careful not to serve shrimp for Mr. Feng's lunch, who was their loyal customer.
There's definitely no dumpling in that lunch box Lana delivered. Moreover, Lana
is sure she saw Mr. Feng's epipen in his pocket when she delivered the food,
but it was evidently not there when the asphyxiation attacked him, for
otherwise, it could have saved his life. Where was it?
π When Peter the cook was
arrested by the police, Ho Lee Noodle House began to lose customers, and she herself was regarded with suspicion by the Asian community, Lana made up her
mind to investigate the murder case, if not to save her friend Peter, whom she
believes is innocent, then, to save herself.
π Little by little Lana
collects a handfuls of information from and about people inside the Asian
Village community to build her list of suspects. From these efforts, we could
see how vulnerable Lana herself is actually. She isn't built for a strong brave
sleuth, and only manages to do what she did because her best friend assists
her, and the handsome police detective, who's clearly smitten by her, protects
her.
π In the end, Lana's
investigation reveals hidden dark secrets and consequences from ill-fated
decisions, which become the murder motive. And suddenly all the pieces of the
puzzle fit into place; but not before an attempt of murder to herself. I wonder
how Lana couldn't see for herself when the murderer's identity was very clear, at least from that incident.
π All in all, this was a
very promising debut of a series. Vivien Chien succeeded in well-constructing
her foundation. She laid the cultural background beautifully without overly
doing it to a point of stereotyping; while her characters and their struggles
are believable without exaggeration. It's probably an average murder mystery,
but a little deeper, with a tinge of romance and humour, which makes it
enjoyable.
Rating: 4 / 5
I enjoyed this one because of the humor. It was just a fun cozy, and I really liked Lana.
ReplyDeleteFor me, it's the humor and the romance, I kind of liked Adam (the detective) :D
DeleteThis looks like a fun read; I hope there were lots of noodles and dumplings in it too!
ReplyDeleteThis looks like a really fun one although now I want gyoza and I don't really have the wherewithal to get them right now!!
ReplyDelete