V171 reviewed Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala
Review of 'Arsenic and Adobo' on 'Goodreads'
1 star
Okay so let me get this out of the way. I don't /fully/ blame this book for missing as hard as it did. This was the first cozy mystery I've ever read and it became quite apparent that this is NOT my genre, and it will likely be the last cozy I ever read. I can't speak for "classical" cozy mystery, but for this contemporary cozy, I found it absolutely insufferable.
This extends beyond this genre, but I really don't like when books are self aware and lean hard into tropes. It feels lazy and corny, and was completely unrewarding. As a mystery, it completely failed. The miscommunication, the absent mindedness, the pointless elusiveness and the complete incompetence as an amateur sleuth made this such a frustrating read. Not only was I just annoyed by how the main character did literally everything, but the mystery itself was uninteresting and sloppily …
Okay so let me get this out of the way. I don't /fully/ blame this book for missing as hard as it did. This was the first cozy mystery I've ever read and it became quite apparent that this is NOT my genre, and it will likely be the last cozy I ever read. I can't speak for "classical" cozy mystery, but for this contemporary cozy, I found it absolutely insufferable.
This extends beyond this genre, but I really don't like when books are self aware and lean hard into tropes. It feels lazy and corny, and was completely unrewarding. As a mystery, it completely failed. The miscommunication, the absent mindedness, the pointless elusiveness and the complete incompetence as an amateur sleuth made this such a frustrating read. Not only was I just annoyed by how the main character did literally everything, but the mystery itself was uninteresting and sloppily executed. Many parts were abundantly obvious while others were underdeveloped.
If you put aside the half-baked mystery and /try/ to read this as a contemporary fiction, it still wasn't good. Every character was completely one-dimensional and largely interchangeable. The Calendar Crew was just a hivemind, often the aunt and grandmother were indistinguishable aside from the former being "sweet" and the latter "mean", the friends were flat, the two love interests boring, and every other side character was present just enough to give the exact amount of exposition that was needed before dipping out of the scene. Every good character was pure, and every bad character died. Every conversation with a good person was very much "hey girlboss queen slay" and every conversation with a bad character was "listen here you meanie jerkface!" It felt so juvenile and repetitive. And outside of the mystery plot, there were a lot of holes in the story that were hard to look past.
So the mystery wasn't good, the characters weren't good. Was there anything that was good? I mean.. kinda. The food descriptions were good. The food sounded delicious, and the author certainly had a way with providing detail that was so evocative and appealing.. however... often the descriptions were inserted in the most disruptive times that I became frustrated whenever they came up! If you're headed into a restaurant to question a suspect, and then you meet that suspect, now is not the time to go on a two page description of the food. I don't know, the structure felt unedited.
Maybe this is just how cozy mysteries are supposed to be, but I really really did not like this, but I will say that if you like contemporary cozy mysteries you may very well like this. If this is prototypical for the genre, I hope y'all have fun with it.