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Close Knit Killer
Close Knit Killer
Close Knit Killer
Audiobook7 hoursKnitting Mystery

Close Knit Killer

Written by Maggie Sefton

Narrated by Chloe Cannon

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this audiobook

Springtime in Fort Connor, Colorado, is a breeze until a veteran con man shows up in town. Everyone—including the House of Lambspun knitters—is up in arms, and once again it's up to Kelly Flynn to untangle the threads of a complicated crime . . .



Years ago Jared Rizzoli operated a Ponzi scheme that defrauded countless Fort Connor residents—including Barbara, one of the shop's knitters. Jared went to jail for his crime, but after being released for good behavior, he's back to ruin more lives.



When Jared is found dead in his car outside of Lambspun, Barbara becomes a prime suspect, much to the shock of the knitting community. Kelly and her friends now need to sort through a long list of fleeced suspects to pin the crime on the true killer . . .
LanguageEnglish
PublisherTantor Media, Inc
Release dateJun 21, 2022
ISBN9781666134926
Author

Maggie Sefton

Maggie Sefton is the New York Times Bestselling author of the Berkley Prime Crime Knitting Mysteries. UNRAVELED, 9th in the series, made the New York Times Bestselling Hardcover Fiction List after its June 2011 release. UNRAVELED was also Barnes & Noble #4 Bestselling Hardcover Mystery. All of the mysteries in the successful series have been Barnes & Noble Top Ten Bestselling Mysteries. Publisher¹s Weekly has said about the series, "Readers will enjoy visiting with Kelly and her knitting buddies, who, in their carefree way, resemble the cast of Friends." Maggie was first published in historical fiction in 1995 with ABILENE GAMBLE, Berkley Jove, under the pen name Margaret Conlan. She had written over a million words of historical romance fiction before she ever wrote the first mystery. DYING TO SELL, with real estate agent sleuth Kate Doyle, was published by Five Star/Tekno Mysteries in 2005. Maggie Sefton was born and raised in Virginia, and she received her bachelor's degree in English literature and journalism from The George Washington University in Washington, DC. Maggie has been a CPA and a real estate agent in the Rocky Mountain West, but finds nothing can match creating worlds on paper. Mother of four grown daughters, Maggie resides in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado with a bossy Border collie and a playful Blue Tick Hound. Website/Blogs:www.maggiesefton.com, www.cozychicksblog.com, www.killercharacters.com. You can also visit Maggie on Facebook.

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Reviews for Close Knit Killer

Rating: 3.2777776944444446 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

36 ratings6 reviews

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  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5

    Jul 5, 2016

    Initially I enjoyed this series but it really doesn't stand up to my preferred style of reading - which is to read several books of a series back to back. The first few were nice because I enjoyed the mysteries, but lately the books are becoming more about the main character and her group of friends.

    Which could be tolerable except I don't find the characters very well written. I find the main character excessively self-centered, even for a main character in a cozy mystery. And her friends are so interchangeable, I can't tell them apart. They all use the same phrases and slang, and I can't tell them apart. Not that it matters really because they are just there to run on stage, deliver some news to the main character and then run back off. You know which friend it was by the excuse for having to leave. The waitress friend always has a customer or is off break. The yarn shop owner always has a supplier on the phone who she's been trying to get ahold of for weeks. The ranchers stop by for a minute and then have to run, presumably to make the long drive back up the mountain having come to town just to talk to main character.

    It's just growing tiresome to get almost halfway through the book with no murder or mystery, just life stuff of people I don't care about because they are just constructs/plot devices. Maybe it's more tolerable when reading just one of the books a year. I just don't know if I'll care to try again even with a year break.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5

    Jan 17, 2016

    I think this is the last book I'll read in this series n
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Aug 25, 2014

    A charming installment in the Kelly Flynn mystery series. There were plenty of possible murderers. Heaven knows, the man was not well-liked after what he pulled. My only regret is that I had a strong idea who the murderer was, long before the story drew to a close. Regardless, this is a light and entertaining read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Sep 21, 2013

    Close Knit Killer is the 11th book in the A Knitting Mystery series.

    First off, their is an exciting new character in the Kelly Flynn series. Her name is Cassie and she is almost 12 and is the niece of Pete, the owner of Pete Porch Cafe at the House of Lambspun. The gang at Lambspun have all joined together to help out Pete and Jennifer keep Cassie occupied and to smooth out the rough edges of her moving to a new home. She seems to have adapted to her new home. I certainly hope to read more about her.

    Mimi and Burt have decided to renovate a storage building and turn in into classrooms for the spinners and weavers who frequent the House of Lambspun. When, Hal Nelson who will be doing the work, shows up with his helper, Malcolm, Kelly recognizes Malcolm as the homeless person who provided her with some valuable information solve a previous case. Then when Jared Rizzoli shows, things really begin to tense. Rizzoli had operated a Ponzi scheme and many of the residents of Fort Connor had lost money in the scheme, some, even had been ruined by it. Soon Jared is found dead in the drive of Lambspun. Barbara, a knitter that is frequently at Lambspun, Hal and Malcomb were all seen having an argument with Jared, in addition Hal and Malcomb were seen by his car shortly before he was found dead. All three had had their lives saddly touched by Jared Ponzi scheme.

    Kelly and Bert have their hands full sorting out people's alibis and trying to find hard facts that will point to the murderer.

    Sefton wonderfully ends up the story by setting up the next book. I wouldn't even be surprised if there isn't another romance blooming in the next book.

    Another exciting chapter in Kelly Flynn's life. Looking forward to book 12 next year.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Sep 8, 2013

    Close Knit Killer
    Maggie Sefton
    Berkley Prime Crime
    June 4, 2013
    Maggie Sefton's Kelly Flynn series never disappoints. I've had the pleasure of reading every book in the series and the main characters have all become close friends that I enjoy visiting with each year. Ms. Sefton provides enough clues and enough twists and turns that I can't figure out whodunnit very easily. After all of my years of reading mysteries and watching them on television, that isn’t easily done.


    This book was purchased by me
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5

    Jun 14, 2013

    Life in Fort Connor, Colorado, gets dismal when Jared Rizzoli, a financial advisor whose Ponzi scheme wiped out the savings of many residents, causing the death of some of them, returned after serving a ten-year sentence to conduct a financial seminar and purchase some property. He is unrepentant and, since this is a murder mystery, is murdered. Suspicion quickly falls on two residents but other possibilities arise.
    Meanwhile, Pete Wainwright’s Grandfather Ben, who lived in Denver and cared for Pete’s eleven year old niece Cassie, had a major heart problem. Pete brought Cassie back to Fort Connor.
    Kelly Flynn, the main character, continued her work as an accountant, drunk a lot of coffee, had her home repaired, and tried to find the killer.
    There is a lot of information about types of wool the way it is formed from the original shearing until it becomes threads of yarn.
    I really wanted to like this book. I looked forward to reading it for more than a month before it was published. I’ve read other books by Maggie Sefton and enjoyed them. Therefore,
    I stuck with it to the end, even though I was ready to quit before I got to page 50. I should have quit. The book reminded me of the game of Telephone where the same message is repeated from one person to another. The difference was that in CLOSE KNIT KILLER the end message is identical to the original one; it is just repeated numerous times as a different character arrives on the scene.
    I found all the conversation to be repetitious and very boring. There should have been a limit on the number of times we read about Kelly’s love of coffee and a few other food offerings.
    Except for Cassie, it was difficult to differentiate the characters because most of them sounded and acted pretty much alike. And I identified the killer very quickly.
    I hope the next book is more developed and interesting.