![]() ![]() Of course, the book also ends with some tasty recipes. Still, it was nice to only have her pop in from time to time as part of an entertaining subplot to the main story. She is pretty annoying, though Davis is good at giving her some redeeming qualities to keep us from wondering why Sophie remains her friend. Natasha doesn’t have as prominent a role in this book as the previous ones, which I found to be a relief. ![]() ![]() Plus, it was lovely to catch up on all the goings-on with Sophie, Nina, Mars, Bernie, Humphrey, and of course, Natasha, the other domestic diva in the book who antagonizes everyone. There was a surprise at the end, which made me both laugh out loud and cheer. The book was enthralling from the first paragraph to the last. When another traveler turns up dead, Sophie worries her friend is next on the list. ![]() suburb, it has some international intrigue and a possible smuggling operation woven into the plot. While the story takes place in the well-known Washington D.C. Perhaps the clue scratched into the soil by the victim before dying will hold the answer. However, when Sophie finds one of Nina’s traveling companions dead the following morning, she wonders just what went on during that trip. Still, she has time to pick up her best friend, Nina, at the airport after she returns from a trip to Portugal. I just finished reading The Diva Serves Forbidden Fruit, number 14 in the series, and I loved it! In this edition, event organizer and domestic advice expert Sophie Winston is in the middle of Old Town Alexandria’s Home Decorating Festival. ![]()
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