Brewed Awakening (A Coffeehouse Mystery)
Brewed Awakening (A Coffeehouse Mystery) book cover

Brewed Awakening (A Coffeehouse Mystery)

Hardcover – December 3, 2019

Price
$11.95
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Berkley
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0451488879
Dimensions
6.31 x 1.2 x 9.27 inches
Weight
1.23 pounds

Description

Praise for Brewed Awakening "Told from multiple points of view, this sometimes poignant page-turner satisfies with plot twists, humor, and nicely rounded characters."-- Booklist "Engrossing...Amid the delightfully twisty mystery, Coyle (the husband-and-wife team of Alice Alfonsi and Marc Cerasini) poses an intriguing question: if you lost all memory of your beloved, would you fall for him all over again?"-- Publishers Weekly "How memory loss affects a strong woman's life."-- Kirkus Praise for the Coffeehouse Mysteries "A gripping and entertaining mystery"-- Library Journal (Starred, Pick of the Month) "Sure to delight"-- Publishers Weekly "Clare and company are some of the most vibrant characters I've ever read."-- Mystery Scene "Fun and gripping."-- The Huffington Post "A delicious mystery!"-- Woman's World "Cleo Coyle is by far one of the best..."-- Fresh Fiction "Mix[es] clever and intricate plots with a regular cast of characters who become more enjoyable with every episode."-- Booklist Cleo Coyle is a pseudonym for Alice Alfonsi, writing in collaboration with her husband, Marc Cerasini. With more than one million books sold, Alice and Marc are New York Times bestselling authors of the Coffeehouse Mysteries--now celebrating twenty years in print, three starred reviews, a Mystery Pick of the Month by Library Journal, and multiple Best of Year listxa0honors by reviewers.xa0They also write the nationally bestselling Haunted Bookshop Mysteries, originally released under the pen name Alice Kimberly. Alice and Marc write independently and together and are also bestselling media tie-in writers who have penned properties for Lucasfilm, NBC, Fox, Disney, Imagine, Toho, and MGM. They live and work in New York City. Connect with Cleo at CoffeehouseMystery.com Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. One I like coffee because it gives me the illusion that I might be awake.-Lewis BlackTwo months laterI awoke in darkness, curled in a shivering ball. I'd been a restless sleeper since my divorce, and I assumed I'd kicked off the blankets. So why was something still covering my face? Heavy and stiff, it was definitely not my well-worn J.C. Penney comfort quilt.A blaring horn and a string of angry expletives sat me up fast. A coat fell away from my face, and I blinked against a misty-morning sun peeking through naked branches.Feeling dizzy, I rubbed my eyes before deciding-This is no dream. This is real.I tried to rise but my joints were stiff. My right arm was so numb that I had to shake it out. More troubling was the fact that somehow-and I could not for the life of me remember how-I wasn't in my nice warm bed in my cozy little bedroom in New Jersey. I was sprawled across a hard, cold bench in a public park, close enough to the street for me to hear a cabby cursing out the driver in front of him, which sounded an awful lot like Manhattan.My suspicion was confirmed when I spied the towering arch of white marble that marked the start of Fifth Avenue.I'm in Washington Square Park.The triumphal arch gave me a triumphant rush of relief. I knew where I was-Greenwich Village, but . . ."How in heaven's name did I get here?"My baffled whisper emerged as a cloud of vapor.Still shivering, I donned the coat that covered me. It fit perfectly, though it wasn't mine. I went through its pockets for a clue to its owner but found no ID or personal items, beyond a single right-hand glove. Its mate was missing.The tan leather had a red-brown stain on the palm, about the size of a shot glass rim. Blood. I knew because I'd seen enough of it dried on clothing from scuffed knees and elbows after Joy's soccer matches.I was tempted to start spit-scrubbing the stain but instead tucked the glove back in the pocket.Rising to my feet, I felt wobbly and blamed the unsteadiness on my footwear. There was a theme here, because the high-end, high-heeled boots weren't mine, either-ditto for the cashmere sweater set and tailored slacks. If I hadn't been in public, I would have checked to see if I recognized my underwear!Did I go on some wild shopping spree with my Jersey friends? If I did, where are they now? And why is it I don't remember? Cupping my hands, I blew warm breath into them and took a sniff. I detected no scent of alcohol. Okay, so I didn't get tipsy and have a blackout.I sat back down on the cold bench to orient myself. While I retied my deconstructing ponytail, I realized my purse was nowhere in sight. I dug through every pocket, pants first and coat again. No wallet. No house keys. No car keys. All were gone.I felt panic rising.Okay, Clare, pull it together. You'll figure out what happened, but right now you've got to get home to your little girl.With no watch on my wrist, I called out to a young man who was cutting through the park."Could you tell me the time, please?""Sure." He pulled an odd device from the pocket of his NYU hoodie. "It's six fifty-five, ma'am.""Wow, that's really something you've got there."He grinned, proudly displaying the black rectangle. Its glowing screen was crowded with colorful icons."I got it yesterday, first day of release," he said. "Everybody in my lab is jealous . . ." He rattled off a series of its "features," which sounded more like a shopping list in a foreign language. Then he cackled when all I did was ask if this amazing device would be made available to people like me."You're funny, lady. Give it a year. You can buy one used."As he moved on, I took a breath and reassessed.Okay, it's the crack of dawn. I have no money, no ID, no keys to anything. Panic began to rise again, until I remembered. This was the Village, my old neighborhood, and there was one place I'd always be welcome-The Village Blend coffeehouse.Even better, I could get some decent coffee there. In my experience, there weren't many problems a good cup of coffee couldn't help solve.TwoAs I started my stroll, a strange feeling came over me. The city's sights and sounds always energized and grounded me, but today I couldn't shake a creeping sense of displacement.I'd moved out of Manhattan mere months ago, yet the city appeared to have changed impossibly since I'd packed up my young daughter and left. For years, Washington Square had suffered from neglect, its monuments scrawled with graffiti, its central fountain inactive. Now the white marble arch gleamed, the greenery was tidy, the paths newly paved, the fountain spraying rainbows in the morning light.The sight should have cheered me. Instead the surreal sense of uneasiness only worsened as I walked. At the corner of West Fourth and Sixth Avenue, I saw the basketball court was still there, but the skeevy head shops, bodegas, and pizzerias around it had been replaced by slick storefronts and upscale eateries.I tried to shrug it off. After all, New York never did stand still. The only constant in this town was change.Crossing Sixth, I passed people with devices similar to the one that NYU student had shown me. They were staring, almost hypnotically, at their screens as they walked. Some were even talking into them!Who were these people talking to at seven am? And what could they be talking about? Was there an advanced-technology convention at the university? Or was this some kind of rehearsal for performance art-it certainly looked bizarre enough to be an avant-garde spectacle.I passed a convenience store with no magazine rack, just a colorful display for something called vaping. The only two newspapers on sale carried similar headlines:HOTEL HEIRESS MISSINGMYSTERY AT PARKVIEW PALACE: ABDUCTION OR MURDER?The stories appeared to be about some wealthy woman named Annette Brewster, who owned the famous Parkview Palace hotel. She had disappeared days ago. Evidence pointed to foul play.Staring at the headlines, I felt dizzy again, as if something was clawing at the edges of my mind, trying to get in. Then, whatever it was slipped away, like a dream disappearing as you wake.Left only with a lingering frustration, I tried to shake my thoughts clear and suddenly remembered my young daughter, home alone. What was I doing wasting time on headlines that had nothing to do with me?!Stepping up my pace, I made it to Hudson Street and felt an instant sense of calm at the sight of the Village Blend. Thank goodness nothing had changed there. The French windows were closed, but the blinds were open and front entrance unlocked.I followed a pair of customers inside. Hearing the familiar bell above the door was reassuring; and the roasted coffee, freshly brewing, smelled like ambrosia. That surprised me-and, I admit, made me a little jealous.I'd taken pride in my former work here as a master roaster. My mother-in-law said she'd never met anyone who had my touch with the Probat or talent for creating exceptional blends. Except her, of course, but right now Madame was in Europe with her second husband, Pierre.I'd have to sample a few sips to be sure, but from the aroma (and the raves from the customers in line), I knew I'd been replaced. Madame had obviously found someone else who knew how to handle her son's specially sourced beans.A line was forming at the coffee bar, but I didn't want to wait. I was anxious to call my daughter, so I approached a zaftig young woman wearing a blue Village Blend apron and black-framed glasses, which dominated her pleasant round face. She looked distracted, hurriedly setting up cafŽ tables for the day. (Tables that should have been set up by now-not a good reflection on the new management.)"Excuse me," I said, tapping her shoulder. "I used to work here and I'm in a fix. May I use your phone?"The young woman froze a moment, staring into space as if she'd heard a voice from the great beyond. Then she dropped the wrought iron chair, whirled around, and screamed.Every person in the coffeehouse stared. Embarrassed, I stepped back, assuming I'd startled her.What she did next more than startled me."Clare Cosi!" she shouted, giving me a smothering hug. "YOU'RE BACK AND YOU'RE ALIVE!"I rolled my eyes. Would city people never change? Move out of Manhattan and you no longer exist? Sheesh!"Omigod, omigod!" the girl kept chanting. When she finally broke her mother-bear clutch, I actually saw tears in her eyes.What is wrong with this person?I noticed her necklace displayed the name Esther in silver letters. "I'm sorry-Esther, is it? I assume Madame told you about me, maybe showed you my photo, but the joke's over, okay.""Joke?" The baffled barista took a step back. "Boss, what are you talking about? This is no joke. You've been missing for days!"ThreeI stared in confusion at the young woman named Esther. "I've been missing?"She nodded emphatically. "We were sick with worry about you. We looked everywhere but there was no trace. We feared the worst. Now here you are, perfectly okay, talking about a joke. Are you saying your disappearance was some kind of prank?"Before I could answer, another barista-this one male and wiry-emerged from behind the marble counter and threw his tattooed arms around me."Stop!" I cried, pulling away from the young man's apron. "I don't recognize you. Who are you?""See, Dante!" Esther smirked at him like a mocking sister. "I told you not to grow that beard. He's just trying to look cool for his big art competition next week.""Sorry, Boss Lady. I should have waited and asked you," the young man said, sheepishly scratching his facial hair. "I wasn't sure you'd approve with all the catering we do. But Mr. Boss okayed it, since you weren't around."I blinked. "Of course I wasn't around, Mr. Dante. I don't work here anymore."Esther scowled. "You mean you're quitting? Is that what the disappearing act was all about? So it had nothing to do with the Parkview Palace murder-?""Murder?""Or maybe just an abduction," she said. "You would know better than any of us-""Clare! You're back!"Finally, the sound of a familiar voice.Madame Blanche Dreyfus Allegro Dubois, the elegant owner of this legendary coffeehouse, enveloped me in her arms. "Thank God my prayers have been answered." Tears choked her voice. "Oh, my dear child, I was beginning to fear I'd never see you again. But I never gave up hope. Nobody did.""It's good to see you, too . . ." I was buoyed by this reunion with my former mother-in-law, my mentor, and my dearest friend. But I was completely confused by her overblown emotions. After all, we'd just seen each other a few weeks ago."What are you doing back?" I asked her. "I thought you were in Europe with Pierre."Madame pulled away; her violet gaze, damp with tears, began to study my face. As she did, I took in hers.Matt's mother occasionally indulged in makeovers with updates to her wardrobe, hairstyle, and cosmetics. Her taste was impeccable, and the new looks always took years off her age.But not this time.Yes, her tailored pin-striped pantsuit was chic, cut from the finest cloth, and her blunt pageboy flattered her high cheekbones. This time, however, she'd let her hair color go completely silver. And whatever she'd done with the change to her makeup had left her looking more wrinkled than I remembered. Searching for reasons, I tensed.Had some health issue reared its ugly head? Was that why she'd come back to the States before the holidays?"Madame, how are you feeling?""I was about to ask you that very question.""She's lost her mind!" Esther declared. "She told me she's quitting the Village Blend. That's like quitting her family!""You can't quit," Madame said. "I've made this coffeehouse your legacy.""You have? When?" I shook my head. "I don't understand. I already quit. Months ago. The same day I left Matt . . ."Legend has it that if you speak of the devil, he will appear. In this case, the legend was right. The bell over the front door jangled, heralding the arrival of one of the world's most talented coffee hunters, Madame's son, and my ex-husband.Like mother, like child, I decided at the sight of him. It appeared that Matteo Allegro had remade himself, too. His usual shaggy hair was close-cropped now, and he'd grown a beard-full and dark around his straight white grin. With Matt, however, some things never changed. That deep tan, no doubt from some intrepid expedition in the tropical belt, was still in place, along with his obnoxious swagger."Damn, Clare, where have you been? I was afraid the next time I'd see you was on the side of a milk carton!"It took every bit of my willpower not to lash out and slap him as he attempted to embrace me. I didn't want to resort to violence, but I did push free of his despicable grip."You've got a lot of nerve, trying to put your hands on me. And to answer your ridiculous question, I've been living in New Jersey, with an eleven-year-old daughter who adores you-and you've been neglecting!""What-?""Don't act like you haven't heard this before. You've only visited Joy twice since we split. She's just a little girl, Matt. What is wrong with you?"There it was again! That expression of confusion."What is wrong with you, Clare?" His tone wasn't angry at all, just concerned. "We've been divorced for over fifteen years-"Fifteen years? Matt kept talking, but he made no sense. Then that surreal feeling returned. The displacement I'd experienced, after opening my eyes on that park bench, flowed over me with disturbing force.I took in the anxious looks around me: the worry on Esther's face; the confusion on Mr. Dante's; the absurdity of Matt's dopey stare. Even Madame appeared upset, almost frightened, and I realized I was as unnerved as they were.That's when something went haywire, like a delayed reaction from a bar-crawl bender. The coffeehouse began to spin, and my knees went weak. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From Cleo Coyle, the
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • Shot in the Dark
  • and
  • Dead Cold Brew
  • , comes a delicious new entry in the "fun and gripping" (The Huffington Post) Coffeehouse Mysteries.
  • When coffeehouse manager Clare Cosi awakens on a bench in Washington Square Park, she has no idea she's been missing for days, or that her friends and family have been frantic with worry. Now that she's back, everyone is overjoyed, including a handsome NYPD detective who claims to be her fiancé. But to Mike Quinn's crushing distress, Clare doesn't remember him, or much of anything about the last fifteen years of her life.Clare's missing memory is tied to a crime she witnessed. An acquaintance of Clare's elegant employer--and fellow member of an exclusive Gotham circle known as "The Ladies Who Brunch"--invited Clare to her posh hotel to sample gourmet wedding cakes. After their indulgent tasting, they headed to the parking garage, where a camera captured a masked figure with a gun confronting the hotel heiress with Clare looking on. Did the kidnapper take Clare, too? The camera went dark, just like Clare's memory. Soon authorities grow suspicious. Is Clare really a victim? Or merely acting like one? Evidence is mounting that she set the woman up.To clear her name, Clare must find a way to reclaim her memories and rescue the heiress before this high-stakes crime ends in tragedy. Otherwise, instead of walking down the aisle, Clare may find herself perp-walking to prison as an accomplice to kidnapping and murder.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(446)
★★★★
25%
(186)
★★★
15%
(112)
★★
7%
(52)
-7%
(-52)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Wake Up And Smell The Coffee

Cleo Coyle can always be counted upon to deliver much more than a murder mystery and a few recipes. This husband-and-wife team, true professionals both, know their craft and how to use it to draw you into the world they create.

This one starts out with the main protagonist, Clare Cosi, suddenly losing her short-term memory. She wakes up on a park bench, having forgotten all of the last fifteen years of her life. To her mind, she has just gone through a difficult divorce, leaving her and her eleven-year-old daughter to pick up and reshape their lives.

I once suffered a head injury with short-term memory loss. The authors do a superb job of conveying the lost feeling of suddenly not knowing what you do every day, who you can trust, how you relate to the people in your life, your place in the current world--all the things you rely on to function. Clare must use her basic character strengths - without even knowing what those are - to escape being ensnared by people who want to use her memory loss to achieve their own goals, regardless of the cost to Clare.

I don’t know how the authors do it, but they seem to up their game with each book. This one is the best yet, really difficult to put down and impossible to stop thinking about.
11 people found this helpful
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A Great Start For Me

I was unfamiliar with this series. I read the description of the book and decided I wanted to read it. I'm glad I did. I was able to pick up on who the characters were and their relationship to each other easily. The further into the book I got, the more involved in the storyline I became.
Clare wakes up with the last 15 years of her life missing from her memory. Boy is that making things complicated. Especially when she agrees to treatment by a somewhat questionable Celebrity Doctor. With a friend abducted, Clare a witness with no memory of the incident, a fiance she doesn't remember and a grown up daughter who is still a child in her mind, getting her memories back is of utmost importance with time being of the essence.
There is no shortage of suspects, theories or shady characters in this book. I kept coming up with my own theories throughout the course of my reading it, non of which were exactly right. Some came close, but close theories don't count in a murder investigation you need facts.
I will most definitely be reading more of this cast of characters' escapades.
5 people found this helpful
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I would give this book more than 5 stars if I could!!

This is one fabulous book!! In fact, this series is just plain terrific. I love the writing style, the characters, the plot lines, the settings, everything. Every time I reread any of these books (and I have read them all several times) I am transported back to the Village Blend--the writing is so good I feel like I am right there with these people, and I don't even like coffee!! All the characters are wonderful, and I appreciate the fact that they are all so different in age, background, personality, etc., yet they all come together to form this unique community of people who love and care for and support each other. Every character is important in these books, no matter how small their role is, they all add so much to the story.
In this particular book Clare wakes up on a park bench not knowing how she got there or why. We find that she has amnesia, that 15 years is missing from her memories, and this book deals with her journey back to the present. I don't want to give anything away, but her journey back makes for great storytelling with all that happens along the way.
I (we) all waited quite a few months for this book to come out, and I can honestly say it was worth the wait. This is definitely the best book yet in this series, I couldn't put it down, it made me reread yet again the other books in the series, and I am anxious to read the next chapter in the lives of Clare, Mike, and the rest of the Blend family .
4 people found this helpful
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Boring

Wanted to like it. Series is getting stale.
4 people found this helpful
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Love the concept but the story is prolonged, feels a bit forced ...

I just couldn't get into this story and some historical details about the city (W 4th Street and 6th Avenue is not filled with trendy restaurants now) were off. Washington Square Park was always a much loved and used space even when NYC was more gritty. I liked the coffeehouse concept and setting. I think Clare and Mike are sort of boring. I think the author has developed interesting characters and are good writers but everything feels prolonged. And I think Clare might be more interesting single!
3 people found this helpful
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Disappointed in the focus

I typically love this series!! However, I felt like solving the crime was the subplot when it could have been so much more. I’m a diehard fan and have made several of the recipes in these books, which turned out great, am looking forward to the next installment for redemption.
3 people found this helpful
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Disappointed in the focus

I typically love this series!! However, I felt like solving the crime was the subplot when it could have been so much more. I’m a diehard fan and have made several of the recipes in these books, which turned out great, am looking forward to the next installment for redemption.
3 people found this helpful
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The writing style seemed different

There was something different in the writing style of this book. An almost push and pull between the styles of the writing team of Marc Cerasini and Alice Alfonsi.

What begins with Clare Cosi, manager of the Village Blend waking up on a park bench with no knowledge of how she got there, to recalling the area looked familiar and hopeful she might be able to get help at a coffeehouse where she once worked with her ex-husband, to realizing she has somehow lost about 10+ years of her memories. Clare is now in a struggle with the local police, and a questionable publicity hound doctor, to prove she is not responsible for the disappearance of a local hotel owner.

No one wants to push Clare into remembering, reasoning she should come about her memories as organically as their coffee, yet Matteo wants to use their time to convince Clare they belong together all the while Mike Quinn has a ring he is dying to put back on her finger.

‘Brewed Awakening’ involves the usual “scooby-do” type adventure all over New York and the Hamptons, and somehow, they bumble their way around the police, even though Mike is the police, to get to an interesting conclusion as to who and what was behind this mishap all along.

There is more than the usual amount of characters bandied about so the reader is going to have to pay close attention as to who is related to who, who married who, and most importantly who ended up where.
3 people found this helpful
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Forget me not said Mike

Looks like this Cosi writing duo needed a break from the wedding planning and gave us “um I uh, oh dear, what is this thing in my hand that is buzzing? where am I? “ instead. Not a bad thing at all because I can’t quite imagine life at the Village Blend after the nuptials.

In this interesting mystery there is a better look into Madame’s friends and associates as well as s bigger than usual roles for her and Matt. Mike is more than arm candy too this time and we see new side of him that caught my memory off guard.

Shady docs and mysterious spaces contribute to this latest entry in the series. Enjoy!
2 people found this helpful
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Written in the same, talented style that has brought this series to eighteen books

In BREWED AWAKENING, author Cleo Coyle has brought us an original storyline, not often, if ever, seen in a cozy. We’re all used to the different types of crimes in cozies. Murder, disappearance, and so forth that happen to the story’s characters. Most are “bit” characters, or even ones we never read about, dead before they tale begins. In an interesting twist, our Coffeehouse lead, protagonist, Clare Cosi is one of the victims!

BREWED AWAKENING is written in the same, talented style that has brought this series to book number eighteen. The author knows her audience, and knows how to reel readers in and hold onto them until the last page.

The above being said, I have noticed that in a few of the books in this series, (as well as many cozies from other series), some subjects and/or language are, in my humble opinion, just crossing the line of cozy. I tend to take more notice of this because I, like my sister and several of my friends, am a cozy mystery purist, where even the words h*ll and d*mn don’t exist. So again, this is IMHO.

If you are a diehard fan of this series, and of Cleo Coyle, then you are going to really enjoy, BREWED AWAKENING.
1 people found this helpful