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Abandoned houses tell stories. This one screams murder.
Paisley Sutton always expects the unexpected when she goes into a house to salvage the architectural prizes before it's torn down. She even knows she might encounter a rodent or two. But she really isn't expecting to find a dead body, not again. And when it turns out the young man she found slumped in the house's basement was killed, Paisley discovers that it's not only the house that was abandoned.
Will her research trigger the decades-old fear that someone hoped to bury in the rubble?
Discover Bobbins and Bodies, the captivating second book in the Stitches in Crime series--where salvage meets sleuthing, old secrets refuse to stay hidden, and a resourceful single mom must piece together a murderous puzzle before becoming part of the demolition plan herself.
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Praise for the Stitches in Crime series:
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Relatable, loveable characters and a mystery that keeps you entertained.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Paisley and Sawyer are sew much fun!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Such a fun read and series!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ The best! I just adore this series.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Lovely mystery read, I couldn't stop once I started.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ More than a cozy, an enjoyable and exciting story.
ACF Bookens loves a good mystery, a quaint bookshop, and a good cup of coffee. She lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, where she takes joy in the mountain views and the quiet back roads. She lives with her son Milo and a beautiful rescue hound who inspired Mayhem in her St. Marin's Cozy Mystery Series. Aslan, the cat in her books, is based on her departed first cat by that name, who spent an inordinate amount of time digging up her houseplants. In her books, Bookens addresses issues of justice and writes with intention to disrupt the white supremacy that says that "whiteness" is normal by making purposeful note of every character's ethnicity. She is weary of books that assume everyone is white unless the author says otherwise because being white is not the default of reality. Her hope is that readers enjoy escaping into her stories and are challenged, just a little, to make themselves better people and the world a better place from the reading.