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Looking Out The Window: Julie Cosgrove Talks About Her Latest Book, Baby Bunco. Shares An Excerpt.




A Warm Welcome to Julie Cosgrove




Hi Julie, tell us about Baby Bunco, your latest book.

Janie Manson suspects a murder of a young woman at the convenience store across the highway and the abandoned newborn in a bathtub of a vacant garden home in Sunset Acres, her retirement community, are connected.

Now to convince her son-in-law, Chief Detective Blake Johnsonā€¦as soon as he calms down over her breaking into the morgue, that is.

This sounds like another Julie Cosgrove fun read.




Here are a couple reviews for Baby Bunco:

Cosgrove wove the story with such humor, I found myself laughing out loud at the antics these sleuths got themselves into as they went to great lengths to help in the investigation! Not only dishing out information with each other, but dishing up amazingly delicious comfort food...totally in character with the elderly. Christian Book Reviews

Cosgrove does an excellent job of leaving a breadcrumb trail of clues that leads you in circles right along with the characters. I laughed at and fell in love with the charming trio of women would-be-sleuths in their stubborn and relentless resolve to figure out who killed their neighbor. Sometimes authors shove a Christian message in between crime scenes and car chases. However, Cosgrove seamlessly threads her message throughout the bookā€¦the characters exemplify what it means to live a life of Christian love. Beautifully done! A
mazon reviewer

Buy on Amazon




Excerpt from Baby Bunco

Chapter 1


ā€œDid you say she found a baby?ā€ Janie stopped mid-roll, the pink and white dice warming in her clutched fist. ā€œHere in Sunset Acres, a retirement community?ā€

Babs, seated to her left at the Bunco table, nodded. ā€œThatā€™s what Mildred told me as we were walking up to your front stoop tonight. Right, Mildred?ā€

ā€œI went to collect a few more of my things since Iā€™m staying with Ethel, and no more than three minutes later the leasing agent pounded on my door. ā€˜Come see,ā€™ she motioned to me. Her eyes grew as wide as those mega donuts at the Crusty Baker.ā€ She thumped her pencil against her score pad and groaned. ā€œIt took every ounce of gumption to follow her into thatā€”ugh!ā€”place next door.ā€ She quivered her shoulders.

Janie shifted her gaze to the woman sitting across from her. ā€œEthel, you knew about this?ā€
ā€œI did.ā€

ā€œAnd you didnā€™t tell me?ā€ Her voice elevated to echo-off ā€“the-ceiling volume. She humphed and pivoted to face the storyteller. ā€œMildred. What happened?ā€

The other eight ladies halted their Bunco round. Each swiveled to listen in, their eyes fixated on the first card table.

Mildred leaned. ā€œI paused at the steps, determined to not go inside. Only peek in from the front door. Then high-pitched, frantic cries came from the direction of the bathroom. Well, I had to rush to its aid. Every motherly fiber in my being dictated it.ā€

Murmurs and head bobs filtered through Janieā€™s living room.

 Mildred sniffled. ā€œPoor little thing. Alone, scared and red as a beet from wailing so hard. That house is cursed, I tell you.ā€

Janie patted her hand. ā€œNow, dear. Just because someone murdered Edwin soon after he moved in there doesnā€™t mean...ā€

Mildred shot from her seat and paced, her arms flaying in circles, resembling the duck windmill on top of the antiques barn down the road. ā€œEver since I relocated into Sunset Acres itā€™s been one thing after another. Edwin murdered, then my nephew Bobby arrested, and now an abandoned newborn in a bathtub? This is supposed to be a quiet retirement community.ā€

ā€œMaybe because you live on Solar Boulevard.ā€ Annie huffed. ā€œNothing weird ever happens on my street, Sunrise Court, except for an occasional stray golf ball. Then again, if you kept your nose out of everyoneā€™s business...ā€ Her voice trailed off with a smug cock of her head.

ā€œMy nose?ā€

The other ladies mumbled to each other.

Ethel blew a whistle through her teeth. ā€œOkay, everyone calm down. We all lived through the ruckus of one of our neighborā€™s brutal murder last month. Itā€™s not Mildredā€™s fault. Nor mine or Janieā€™s that this happened...ā€

Betsy Ann raised her hand, as if her legs once again dangled from under her desk in Ms. Everettā€™s kindergarten classroom.

Janie rolled her eyes. ā€œWhat?ā€

ā€œWell, it is sort of our fault.ā€ She pointed to Janie, Ethel and herself. ā€œWe helped solve the case and Bobby did wind up in the middle of all of the commotion. Thatā€™s why he threatened you and tried to break into your house.ā€ She folded her hands and gazed down at them. ā€œIā€™m just saying...ā€

ā€œDuly noted.ā€ Janie felt the healing, pinkish wound on her neck where his knife grazed her skin. ā€œI must add, my dear son-in-law, Chief Detective Blake Johnson, appreciated all of our...ā€ her hands encircled the room...ā€research, sleuthing and cunningness. He told me so.ā€A smile curled along the edges of her mouth. ā€œBesides, it did beat back the doldrums a while, right?ā€™

A few silvery head bounced in agreement as the condo sprinkled with giggles. Annie crossed her arms and harumphed.

Janie eased over to Mildred and led her back to her designated chair. She patted her on the shoulders and scanned the room, making certain every slightly glaucoma-pressed or cataract-corrected eye fixated on her. ā€œNow we must figure out who placed a newborn baby in a vacant garden home bathtub and why?ā€

Babs cocked an eyebrow. ā€œWe do?ā€

ā€œAbsolutely. Letā€™s face facts. Someone put the little thing in a home in our community so she would be discovered. Therefore it is our responsibility...ā€

ā€œWell, now. Iā€™m not sure...ā€ Mildred frowned.

ā€œWe are all over fifty-five, correct? The child certainly doesnā€™t belong to one of us. If so, we should be renamed Sarah after Abrahamā€™s elderly wife in Genesis.ā€

ā€œOr Elizabeth in the New Testament.ā€ Betsy Ann added, this time with a forefinger, not a full hand, aloft.

ā€œExactly. Therefore, unless one of you wants to confess...ā€

Cackles ensued.

Janie allowed the cacophony to settle, her eyes glimmering with escalating excitement. ā€œI, for one, do not think this is a coincidence that this wee one ended up in Edwinā€™s old garden home. There may be a connection we overlooked. Blake never discovered who left long, black hairs in that comb or ruby red lipstick on those empty beer cans when the police searched his place for clues.ā€

Ethel scoffed. ā€œPffft. We all can guess what she was, even if we donā€™t know who.ā€

The women eyed each other and chuckled.

Annie shook her head. ā€œBut the officials only released him from prison a couple of days before he died, right? Last I heard it takes nine months to make a baby.ā€

Mildred arched her eyebrow. ā€œI thought it only took one night.ā€

Several of the elderly ladies laughed so loud Janieā€™s china tea service jiggled.

Janie pumped her hand toward the floor. ā€œAll right. All right. Even so, someone knew that home remained unoccupied.ā€

Babs flipped up her palms. ā€œHis demise dominated the local news for several weeks.  Which means thousands of readers learned it.ā€

Roseanne Rodriguez spoke up. ā€œMore than that. Hundreds of thousands. It was all over the news, too.ā€

Mildred flayed her arms. ā€œThat narrows it down a bunch.ā€

More laughter.

Janie tapped her fist to the card table. The hum of comments faded. ā€œTrue, Roseanne. However, I donā€™t recall them specifically giving out the address, even if everyone heard Betsy Ann and I discovered him in the community dumpster here at Sunset Acres.ā€

ā€œSo, whoever dropped the baby girl off cased the joint and determined no one lived there anymore.ā€ Ethel, the one with the massive catalogues mystery paperback collection, offered the proverbial gumshoe response.

ā€œWhich means they planned to leave her at that garden home.ā€ Janie snapped her fingers. ā€œYes, that has to be it. So a person or persons unknown, who wouldnā€™t attract attention as they wandered around our senior retirement village, knew about this pregnancy and somehow persuaded the mother to give up the poor thing.ā€

Babs clucked her teeth. ā€œWell, it does happen.ā€

ā€œYes, but what gets me is they figured someone would find the infant fairly quickly.ā€

ā€œA ā€˜For Lease or Saleā€™ sign is planted plain as day on the front lawn.ā€ Annie shoved the last bite of butterscotch brownie into her mouth.

Janie gave her a nod. ā€œGood point. Still, there must be homes all over this area for sale or rent. Why our little corner of the world? A fifty-five plus community. Why not a neighborhood with young families? Thatā€™s what we must discover. Something tells me the answer might be the key to the whole dilemma.ā€

Ethel leaned into Betsy Ann. ā€œGet a load of Janie. Proud as a peacock and giddy as a school girl. Sheā€™s in her element. A new gameā€™s afoot.ā€

Betsy Ann lowered her auburn, curly head into her hands. ā€œHere we go again. Bunco Biddies to the rescue whether anyone wants us involved or not.ā€

To learn more about Julie's books and devotionals visit her website

Comments

Lisa Lickel saidā€¦
Love the series and the concept behind it. This story is on my list for this week/weekend.
Unknown saidā€¦
I really enjoy Julie's books, and this is a really fun read.
Lynn Lovegreen saidā€¦
Great concept, Julie! Sounds like another winner! :-)

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