Monday, May 12, 2025

Glory Be by Danielle Arceneaux

 



Reviewed by Jeanne

Glory Broussard is a devout, Church-going woman of a certain age in Layfayette, Louisiana but don’t let that lull you into thinking she’s a pushover.  Glory is sharp-eyed, sharp-tongued, and the neighborhood bookie.  She can also make grown men cry, as Gus the new barista at the coffee shop can attest.  But Miss Glory has problems of her own: for one thing, someone has reported her house as being unfit for human habitation just because she has a few things piled up—well, okay, a lot of things, but some of these thrift store finds are just too good to throw away.  Also, her daughter Delphine may be a big-time lawyer in New York and married to a rich boy, but Glory has a feeling that things may not be going so well in that marriage.  But the worst thing is that Glory’s best friend, a nun named Amity Gay, has been found dead.  The police believe it was suicide, but Glory doesn’t believe that for an instant. Amity might have had her faults, but suicide is out of the question.

Glory just has to prove it.

This debut mystery was on a lot of “Best of” lists at the end of the year, and I think it deserved to be.  Glory is a vivid character, stubborn, opinionated, and not afraid to speak her mind.  The Louisiana setting is used to great advantage; one can almost feel the heat and humidity seeping out of the pages.  While many called this a cozy mystery, for me it’s grittier than most cozies, with some obviously dangerous characters.  There are references to violence (dog-fighting, for example) and characters share more than a chaste kiss on the cheek.  The sharp-edged humor carries the day for me, and Miss Glory is not one to pull her punches when she speaks her mind.  The second book in the series, Glory Daze,  has come out already and I’m definitely going to be reading it.

And while one should not always judge a book by its cover, I really like the covers on both books.  They just looked so inviting!

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