Murder of a Sweet Old Lady
  “More fun than the Whirl-a-Gig at the County Fair and tastier than a corn dog.”
 —The Charlotte Austin Review
 “A magnificent tale written by a wonderful author.”
 —Midwest Book Review
  Murder of a Small-Town Honey
  “Bounces along with gently wry humor and jaunty twists and turns. The quintessential amateur sleuth: bright, curious, and more than a little nervy.”
 —Agatha Award–winning author Earlene Fowler
 “A charming, insightful debut.”
 —Carolyn Hart
    Other Scumble River Mysteries
 Murder of a Bookstore Babe
  Murder of a Wedding Belle
  Murder of a Royal Pain
  Murder of a Chocolate- Covered Cherry
  Murder of a Botoxed Blonde
  Murder of a Real Bad Boy
  Murder of a Smart Cookie
  Murder of a Pink Elephant
  Murder of a Barbie and Ken
  Murder of a Snake in the Grass
  Murder of a Sleeping Beauty
  Murder of a Sweet Old Lady
  Murder of a Small- Town Honey
     Copyright © Denise Swanson Stybr, 2011
 All rights reserved
     To my good friend, and trivia team member
  extraordinaire, Beverlee (Angel) Porter.
  Thank you for nearly single-handedly spreading the word
  about my books throughout Canada.
    Acknowledgments
 A big thank-you to Donna Sears for telling me about a music promoter trying to turn her town into the “Branson of the West.”
    Author’s Note
 In July of 2000, when the first book in my Scumble River series, Murder of a Small-Town Honey, was published, it was written in “real time.” It was the year 2000 in Skye’s life as well as mine, but after several books in a series, time becomes a problem. It takes me from seven months to a year to write a book, and then it is usually another year from the time I turn that book in to my editor until the reader sees it on a bookstore shelf. This can make the timeline confusing. Different authors handle this matter in different ways. After a great deal of deliberation, I decided that Skye and her friends and family would age more slowly than those of us who don’t live in Scumble River. So to catch everyone up, the following is when the books take place:
 Murder of a Small-Town Honey—August 2000
 Murder of a Sweet Old Lady—March 2001
 Murder of a Sleeping Beauty—April 2002
 Murder of a Snake in the Grass—August 2002
 Murder of a Barbie and Ken—November 2002
 Murder of a Pink Elephant—February 2003
 Murder of a Smart Cookie—June 2003
 Murder of a Real Bad Boy—September 2003
 Murder of a Botoxed Blonde—November 2003
 Murder of a Chocolate-Covered Cherry—April 2004
 Murder of a Royal Pain—October 2004
 Murder of a Wedding Belle—June 2005
 Murder of a Bookstore Babe—September 2005
 And this is when the Scumble River short story and novella take place:
 “Not a Monster of a Chance” from And the Dying Is Easy—June 2001
 “Dead Blondes Tell No Tales” from Drop-Dead Blonde—March 2003
 Scumble River is not a real town. The characters and events portrayed in these pages are entirely fictional, and any resemblance to living persons is pure coincidence.