Catering to Nobody (Goldy, Book 1)
Catering to Nobody (Goldy, Book 1) book cover

Catering to Nobody (Goldy, Book 1)

Mass Market Paperback – February 26, 2002

Price
$7.99
Publisher
Bantam
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0553584707
Dimensions
4.16 x 0.84 x 6.71 inches
Weight
5.4 ounces

Description

Praise for Diane Mott Davidson and Catering to Nobody “A medley of murder, mayhem, and melted chocolate.” — New York Post “Diane Mott Davidson’s culinary mysteries can be hazardous to your waistline.” — People “Delicious . . . sure to satisfy!” —Sue Grafton From the Inside Flap MEET THE CATERER WHO WHIPPED UP THE MULTIMILLION-COPY MYSTERY SERIES?AS GOLDY SOLVES HER FIRST MURDER!Diane Mott Davidson?s winning recipe of first-class suspense and five-star fare has won her and caterer Goldy critical raves and a regular place on major bestseller lists across the country. In Goldy?s tantalizing debut, she serves up a savory dish of secrets, suspicions, and murder....INCLUDING NEVER-BEFORE-PUBLISHED RECIPESCatering a wake is not Goldy?s idea of fun. Yet the Colorado caterer throws herself into preparing a savory feast including Poached Salmon and Strawberry Shortcake Buffet designed to soothe forty mourners. And her culinary efforts seem to be exactly what the doctor ordered...until her ex-father-in-law gynecologist Fritz Korman is struck down and Goldy is accused of adding poison to the menu. Now, with the Department of Health impounding her leftovers, her ex-husband proclaiming her guilt, and her business about to be shut down, Goldy knows she can?t wait for the police to serve up the answers. She?ll soon uncover more than one family skeleton and a veritable stew of unpalatable secrets?the kind that could make Goldy the main course in an unsavory killer?s next murder! MEET THE CATERER WHO WHIPPED UP THE MULTIMILLION-COPY MYSTERY SERIES-AS GOLDY SOLVES HER FIRST MURDER! Diane Mott Davidson's winning recipe of first-class suspense and five-star fare has won her and caterer Goldy critical raves and a regular place on major bestseller lists across the country. In Goldy's tantalizing debut, she serves up a savory dish of secrets, suspicions, and murder.... INCLUDING NEVER-BEFORE-PUBLISHED RECIPES Catering a wake is not Goldy's idea of fun. Yet the Colorado caterer throws herself into preparing a savory feast including Poached Salmon and Strawberry Shortcake Buffet designed to soothe forty mourners. And her culinary efforts seem to be exactly what the doctor ordered...until her ex-father-in-law gynecologist Fritz Korman is struck down and Goldy is accused of adding poison to the menu. Now, with the Department of Health impounding her leftovers, her ex-husband proclaiming her guilt, and her business about to be shut down, Goldy knows she can't wait for the police to serve up the answers. She'll soon uncover more than one family skeleton and a veritable stew of unpalatable secrets-the kind that could make Goldy the main course in an unsavory killer's next murder! Diane Mott Davidson is the New York Times bestselling author of the Goldy Bear Culinary Mystery series. She has been named Writer of the Year by the Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers and has received the Anthony Award and the Romantic Times Reader’s Choice Award. Born in Honolulu and educated at Wellesley, Stanford, and Johns Hopkins, she worked as a volunteer rape victim counselor, a tutor in a correctional facility, and in several roles in the church before she turned to writing. Diane and her husband have three sons and three grandchildren, and split their time between Colorado and Florida. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Catering a wake was not my idea of fun. First of all, there was the short notice. A person died. Three days later there was a funeral. In this case the body had been discovered on a Monday, autopsy Tuesday, funeral Saturday, seven days after the presumed day of death. In Colorado we didn’t call the buffet after the funeral a wake. But whether you called it a reception or coming over for a bite to eat afterward, it still meant food for forty mourners.I dumped a mound of risen dough as soft as flesh onto the oak countertop. Eating, I reflected, was a way of denying death. I had known her. I did not want to think about it now. My fingers modeled soft dough around dill sprigs, then dropped the little rolls onto a baking sheet, where they looked like rows of miniature green-and-white sofa pillows. This was the last two dozen. I rubbed bits of yeasty mixture off my hands and let cold water gush over them.A professional caterer has to keep her mind on the job, not the reason for the job. October was generally a slow month for parties in Aspen Meadow. Despite the fact that Goldilocks’ Catering , Where Everything Is Just Right! provided the town’s only professional food service, making a living here was always a precarious enterprise. Like it or not, I needed the income from this postfuneral meal.Still. I would rather have had Laura Smiley alive. She had been Arch’s fifth-grade teacher last year. She also had taught him third, when he was recovering from the divorce. They had become special friends, had worked on games and outdoor projects. They had written letters over the summers. I could picture Laura Smiley with my son, her arm around his slender shoulders, her cascade of brown-blond curls just touching the top of his head.Psychologists and social workers had come into the elementary school to work with the students after the news of Ms. Smiley’s death broke on Monday. Arch had not spoken much about it. I did not know what the counselors had said to him, nor he to them. All during the week he had come home from school, taken snack food into his room, and closed the door. Sometimes I could hear him on the phone, acting as dungeon master or playing television trivia games. Perhaps losing Ms. Smiley was not much on his mind. It was hard to tell.But now because of her death we had this job, which would help pay the bills for October. Laura Smiley’s aunt from Illinois, acting in place of parents long dead, had ordered the food and sent me an express mail cheque for eight hundred dollars. This covered my second problem, usually my first, and that was money.Above the steel hand-washing sink, one of several required by the county for commercial food service, the booking calendar showed only two parties between tomorrow, October tenth, and the thirty-first. Clearing four hundred dollars on each of those plus four hundred for tomorrow’s buffet would take us to the Halloween-to-Christmas season, where I made almost enough money to get Arch and me through May. Long ago I had learned to stop depending on regular child support payments from Arch’s father, even if he did have an ob-gyn practice with an income as dependable as procreation. The payments were invariably wrong and invariably late. But arguments between us were bad for Arch and dangerous for me. Peace was worth a lower income. I stared grimly at the calendar. Lots of parties between Halloween and Christmas. That was the ticket to financial security.Problem number three after short notice and money was getting all the supplies for a job. My meat and produce supplier was doing an extra run for me because she, too, had known the financial strains of single motherhood. Her truck was supposed to be rumbling up from Denver right now bringing a salmon and out-of-season asparagus and strawberries. After she delivered them, she’d give me a lecture on going out. She’d say, It’s not that tough to have fun. But tough was like a roll in the microwave. I didn’t have time for a harangue about my social life because in addition to needing the supplies, I’d just used the last of the honey to make the rolls. This meant the muffins were on hold. The local honey supplier was a handsome fellow named Pomeroy, lusted after by every unattached woman in the county, a fact my supplier usually did not fail to mention. Unfortunately Pomeroy had said he wouldn’t be able to get over for a while to resupply my stock. The unusually warm weather had brought out a predator that had raided one of the hives. And he had his hands full.Of what, I had wanted to say, but hadn’t. Sugar would do for the muffins.The phone rang.“ Goldilocks’ Catering ,” I said into the receiver, “ where everything is just... “Spare me the greeting, Goldy,” came the voice of Alicia, my supplier. “I called Northwest Seafood. Fish’s all yours.”“You’re great.”She mm-hmmed and then said nothing.I said, “What is it?”“How well did you know this Laura?”“She was Arch’s teacher. For a couple of grades.”“Young?”“Early forties,” I said. “She acted young.” I paused. “I knew her.”She grunted and said she would be up in an hour.I opened the refrigerator, a walk-in needed for the business. John Richard Korman, my ex-husband, had found the cost of this item ridiculous. Ditto the van and the required new sinks and shelves to store food above insect level. Other purchases out of my sixty-thousand-dollar divorce settlement had included a six-burner stove, extra oven and freezer, and enough cooking equipment to outfit Sears. Retrofitting our old house off Aspen Meadow’s Main Street had not been terribly difficult.What had been difficult was hanging up on John Richard’s alternately shrieking and pleading voice, and then finally getting the locks changed when he had shown up repeatedly to do one of two things. At first, even though we were separated, he would try to seduce me. Sometimes successfully, I was ashamed to admit. Or he would start a fight to demonstrate his opposition to my financial independence.And by demonstrate, I don’t mean like Gandhi.In the walk-in I reached for the butter, eggs, and cream. I backed out and whacked the door with my foot, then regarded my balancing act in the mirror-black surface. Blond curly hair. Freckles on a face unbruised for three years. Brown eyes. These stared back at me, saying, Don’t think about it now, just cook. At thirty I was doing okay, single but with good friends, and only slightly pudgy from all the fancy cooking that made the living for Arch and me.But I was preparing a wake for someone I’d known. Early forties. Also single. Had been.For the dessert shortcakes I used an old trick: make giant scones. Another thing I’d learned in this business: involve the clients with the food. Make the spread good to look at, smell, touch, taste. Gauge action by needs. At a bridal shower, don’t give the guests much to do with the food since they’re already involved with the presents. But keeping people active at a wake was essential. Being busy, like working, allayed grief. By splitting cakes and heaping on berries and cream, the mourners could start to get their minds off death. Getting one’s mind off it. Not easy.Laura had smiled broadly and flourished papers with Arch’s drawings of mountain wildlife at our parent conferences, which I’d always attended alone, as John Richard couldn’t be bothered. Arch is so talented, Laura had said, one of the most unusual students I’ve ever had. It’s too bad he doesn’t have more friends.The food processor blade whirred and bit through the butter and flour. Soon the kitchen would smell divine. Arch could have a hot scone when he came in from school. Maybe he would eat it in the kitchen instead of heading off to his room. The phone rang again.“ Goldilocks... ” I began, but was interrupted.“Shut up, it’s me!” shouted Marla Korman, John Richard’s other ex-wife, now a good friend of mine. “Arch home yet?”I strained to see out the window that overlooked Main Street, then listened for the bus. Yellow aspen leaves as bright as lemon disks shook in the warm breeze. No children’s shouts announced the bus’s afternoon rounds. Instead there was only the roar of a motorcycle and the rushing sound of Cottonwood Creek, already frigid with October snow melt from the high mountains.I said, “Not yet. Ten minutes or so.”“I’ve been shopping,” Marla said, “because I don’t want to think about Laura. The stores are empty now that the tourists have gone. They didn’t leave much.”“Maybe we didn’t have much in the first place,” I said.“This place,” wailed Marla.I poured a cup of coffee and steeled myself for the coming barrage of complaints. The town would be the warm-up for the ex-husband.She said, “How demoralizing to live in a terminally quaint western village.” I made sympathetic noises.“Of course, I don’t know why I would need a size sixteen cowgirl dress anyway,” Marla complained, “since I’m not coming to this shindig tomorrow. The Jerk’s going to be there, isn’t he?”“He certainly is,” I said. “But I’m leaving the rolling pin at home.”Bad joke, but we chuckled anyway. The Jerk was what Marla had dubbed our mutual ex, for his personality and his initials, J.R.K. Marla so intensely disliked seeing John Richard that it was hard to understand why she talked about him so much. Seven months after my divorce was final, John Richard ended a fling with a married woman who sang in the church choir and wedded Marla’s bulk and wealth. They were divorced fifteen months later and she and I promptly became partners in anger. But before that point Marla’s disgust with his extramarital antics had ballooned her up another thirty pounds, weight she’d used to good advantage when he came at her with a rolling pin. She had managed to heave him into a hanging plant, dislocating his shoulder.I looked down at my right thumb, which still would not bend properly after John Richard had broken it in three places with a hammer.“That rolling pin,” Marla was saying between giggles, “that damn rolling pin. You could use it to fix him green tomato pie.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Even though working a wake isn’t Goldy Bear’s idea of fun, the Colorado caterer throws herself into preparing a savory feast featuring Poached Salmon and Strawberry Shortcake Buffet designed to soothe forty mourners. Her culinary efforts seem to be exactly what the doctor ordered . . . until her former father-in-law, gynecologist Fritz Korman, is struck down—and Goldy is accused of adding poison to the menu. Now, with the Department of Health impounding her leftovers, her ex-husband trashing her name, and her business close to being shut down, Goldy knows she can’t wait for the police to serve up answers. She soon uncovers more than one skeleton in the closet, along with a veritable slew of unpalatable secrets—the kind that could make Goldy the main course in an unsavory killer’s next murder.
  • Praise for Diane Mott Davidson and
  • Catering to Nobody
  • “A medley of murder, mayhem, and melted chocolate.”
  • New York Post
  • “Diane Mott Davidson’s culinary mysteries can be hazardous to your waistline.”
  • People
  • “Delicious . . . sure to satisfy!”
  • —Sue Grafton
  • Includes recipes!

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(570)
★★★★
25%
(475)
★★★
15%
(285)
★★
7%
(133)
23%
(437)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Read one and I was hooked. --

"Catering to Nobody" is the first delectable book in this culinary mystery series full of crazy, different characters.
Lightly entertaining, and a good murder mystery Davidson's witty writing and clever clues combine with some yummy recipes along the way to solving this short, fun mystery.
Goldy is a former battered wife who has finally divorced her abusive doctor husband and strikes out to support herself and her pre-teen son by starting an upscale catering company.
Handsome police officer Tom Schultz adds another delicious dimension to the story. If you enjoy Grafton, Evanovich, and Tamar Myers (my other favorite mystery authors who write about 'real' people) you'll enjoy Goldy's sleuthing attempts to determine 1)who keeps trying to poison her lovable (?) ex-father-in-law, 2)who murdered her son's lovely, yet peculiar prior elementary school teacher and (deep breath) 3)WHY does everyone seem to know more about the entire mystery than Goldy? Most mysterious of all her books I've read to date! Excellent.
34 people found this helpful
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Fun introduction to culinary whodunit.

This was a a light, entertaining book and and fun murder mystery. The first book in the series, we are introduced to Goldy Bear (Whose real name is Gertrude Bear Korman). Goldy has started her own catering business, to support herself and her son, after divorcing her abusive ex husband. While catering a funeral, Goldy's ex father in law is poisoned, and Goldy's business is shut down. In order to clear her name and get her life back, Goldy decides to investigate the crime.
Chock full of interesting characters, a possible love interest and as an added bonus, some terrific sounding recipes. I can't wait to move on to the next book in the series.
30 people found this helpful
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It was really boring throughout different parts

This book developed VERY slowly. It was really boring throughout different parts, and then it ended okay. It tried to be a "serious" cozy, and failed. The characters were not likable. Goldy is annoying. Her son is even more annoying. I got tired of hearing how terrible John Richard was, and yes, he's a vile creature, but stop telling me. I feel like this may be the themes of all the books, and if so I won't make it through the whole series. I am currently reading book two. Maybe it's better. This wasn't awful, it just was a poor start to a series. But, series often start slowly. So, I'll forge on. The recipes sound great though.
15 people found this helpful
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What???

O.K.--the premise is interesting. Culinary mysteries. But the story doesn't make much sense, the characters lack any depth and the writing is, in many places, poor, or poorly edited. I was hoping to find another series of books I would enjoy reading, but I'll have to look elswhere.
10 people found this helpful
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Not a yummy dish.

I found "Catering to Nobody" to be a disappointing read. As others have noted the pose was flat. I kept trying to like the book, but I found Goldy, the protagonist to be whiny. I should have saved some hours in my life and just skipped to the ending. I found the characters to be flat, not well developed and not very interesting. And this was a shame because I think some of the characters could have been interesting and I could have cared for them. At the end I was just glad to be done with the book. I liked the idea of the recipes but after seeing mayonnaise in her Guacamole I just may pass. I will not be spending any more of my money or time on a Diane Mott Davidson book
9 people found this helpful
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Poison and family secrets

This is the first book in the series. Goldy has a catering business which is her primary means of supporting herself and her son, Arch, as her ex-husband, John, a doctor, is notorious for being late with his payments. She left him because of his abuse, and is good friends with his other ex-wife, Marla. They refer to John as “The Jerk”. She has a job catering a wake which is particularly sad as is it for her son’s teacher, Laura Smiley, a woman who made an extra effort to connect with Arch, and because she died of an apparent suicide. She is surprised to see her John, his new girlfriend, and John’s father and mother at the wake. When the father, Fritz, falls to the floor, John accuses Goldy of poisoning him in an attempt to get John. When it turns out to be rat poison in the coffee cup, the police send Detective Tom to investigate. While he is sympathetic to Goldy, he has to close the business until he can clear her from the investigation. With her business shut down, Goldy is decides to help with the investigation to move things along. She begins to untangle some nasty secrets from the past, leading her into danger. The characters are intriguing and very well done. This looks to be a “cozy” series that is more like the China Bayles type, with more depth and good character development. I look forward to reading more about Goldy and Arch in the next book.
6 people found this helpful
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Great cozy mystery series with bonus recipes!

I love a cozy mystery and Diane Mott Davidson delivers a great series with her Goldy Catering books. I was first introduced to this series from my local library, but I am purchasing the series on Amazon as a gift for my mother who is also a voracious reader and enjoys mysteries of this kind. With such a great cast of characters, I was sad to reach the last book of the series and have to say goodbye to them all, especially the wise cracking best friend Marla, who reminded me so much of my own best friend. I appreciated how the murders were not overly gruesome, the story lines had just enough twists to where I wasn't figuring out "who done it" by chapter 2 and I loved the recipes sprinkled throughout. Many of which I actually made with great success. All in all, a great series to keep you entertained on the beach or curled up this winter. I really enjoyed the series!
5 people found this helpful
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Wonderful...fun...delicious...

Another outstanding murder mystery by the talented Diane Mott Davidson. She not only conjures up a plate of delicious murder, she also cooks up wonderful recipes for the reader's pleasure. All of the recipes featured in the life of her amateur sleuth, Goldy Schulz (Professional Caterer), are included in the book so the reader can have more of a "being there" experience, if desired. This novel stands on its own, but if read in sequence with the rest of the Goldy collection, the broader, more complete story of Goldy's life unfolds. So much fun!
3 people found this helpful
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Don't waste your time

I listen to a lot of audio books while I’m driving or working on various projects. I try to stick with books that are fun and entertaining, but are not very complicated and require little concentration – I don’t want major distractions when operating a car or playing with power tools. This book seemed like it would be just what I needed.
Boy, was I wrong.
There are so many things wrong with this book, it’s hard to know where to start. Many of my complaints have already been addressed in other reviews: Goldy -the whiney, self-centered main character, the author’s derogatory descriptions of Goldy’s “good friend” Marla, the superficial characters, and the constantly irritated sounding narrator.
The book is full of huge plot holes and factual errors (the entire Driver’s Ed scene comes to mind). One scene that particularly bothers me is the trigger event that the remainder of the book springs from – the attempted poisoning of Goldy’s father-in-law. Rat poison, particularly in the tiny amount that would have been ingested (especially by a very large adult) by some pellets being added to coffee would not have produced the symptoms described. Actually, it would likely not have produced any symptoms in the time frame mentioned (or ever). There are other things out there that might have had a dramatic result within 30-60 minutes, and a little research by the author would have allowed that scene to be effective while remaining accurate.
The audio book was particularly annoying to me because of the narrator. Not only was her inflection unpleasant, but in the pauses between speaking she could be heard making a wide variety of mouth noises. Breathing I expect to hear (although the air whistling through apparently clogged sinuses was a little more than I bargained for), but swallowing, lip smacking, and assorted other sounds I’m not even sure how to label, made her difficult to listen to.
Really, the book, especially the audio version, was completely unpalatable.
3 people found this helpful
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Be sure to start with the first one

The first book in this series is okay but not highly recommended by me. If you are interested in reading this series be sure to read each title in order otherwise some of the sequences and events won't be as interesting or make sense to you. I'm almost at the end of this series so I do feel that I know what I'm talking about. I found that the first 2 or 3 titles in this series were more appealing. But then the whinning and brattiness of the teenage son became very tiresome and boring and left me wondering why in the world Goldy would put up with such horrible behavior. Also the focus on the malicious and rude actions of the ex-husband became very repetitive and downright tedious. Usually the story line would be just fine w/o having to read through this garbage. After the first 2 or 3 titles, the only reason I have continued to read this series is because my local library has them. I would never spend good $$$ for these books. I have read other mystery series that were much more appealing to me.
3 people found this helpful