Book Review: “Whole Latte Death – A Cozy Sci-Fi Mystery Adventure” by Chris J. Pike and M.D. Cooper

After the rather depressing tale that was Childhood’s End, I needed something lighter to lift my spirits during this über-bleak month of January. I needed a cozy mystery. But, not just any cozy mystery; so I searched Amazon for cozy sci-fi mysteries and this came up.

It’s about a pair of twins, Milly and Tilly, who run a restaurant on a space station. But when the competitor who runs the diner across the way is found dead after having an argument with the twins, it’s up to them to find the real killer, with the help of their cybernetically-modified cat.

Is this deep, like Asimov and Clarke? Not even remotely. Is it goofy and amusing? Absolutely yes. It’s a breezy, funny, quick read with a lot of standard tropes of both sci-fi and cozy mysteries. And this reflects one of the great dichotomies in literature. As Chuck Litka reminded me on last week’s post, not everyone wants their sci-fi drenched in philosophy and intellectualism. Sometimes you just want to sit back and read a fun story.

And is there anything wrong with that? Nope, not a bit! Stories are meant to be primarily used as entertainment, and that is exactly what this is. Sure, it’s kind of unbelievable and the mystery in question is not especially tough to solve. That’s not the point. The point is to have fun. Otherwise, what are we even doing?

2 Comments

  1. lmao – I’m going to check this out, so thank you. That said, I have nothing against having fun, but fun is like cream cake, great once in a while but not as standard fare! Then again, I’m one of those weird people who actually like salads and, you know, -whispers- healthy stuff…

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