Member Reviews

This was a really fun holiday mystery told in the same world and with the same multi-media style as The Appeal. I particularly liked watching Sarah-Jane and the Hallidays bump heads. There were moments where it got a little cutesy, but given it was a holiday story, I could roll with it, and mostly enjoyed the hijinks

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The Christmas Appeal takes us right back to Lockwood and into the world of the Fairway Players - the overly cheerful, secretive community theater group at the center of The Appeal.

I thoroughly enjoyed this. As with Hallett’s previous work, this story is told through transcripts of emails, text messages, and police interviews. It will keep you guessing about what is actually happening with the Fairway Players and get your suspicions up right away. I love Hallett’s immersive style of writing. She manages to recreate the small English village mystery genre with a fresh approach and offers a wonderful critique about how in our modern society appearances are everything.

This book, much like Hallet’s the Tywford Code, has much to say about trying to escape one’s past. The Fairway Players are doing their very best to move on since the recent unpleasantness but old resentments and grievances won’t quite let them.

Highly recommend for anyone looking for a short, entertaining mystery read.

Very grateful to Atria Books and Netgalley for the ARC.

This review was posted to Goodreads.

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Another fun craxker if a mystery by Hallett. She just gets better with each novel she writes. A Christmas Panto that goes horribly wrong. A must fun read .

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The Christmas Appeal revisits the Fairway Players theater group three years after their last tragedy, recounted in Janice Hallett's first book, the Appeal. The group is putting on a Christmas pantomime, Jack and the Bean Stalk, in order to raise money for the local church's roof. But during the holiday events, there is tension amongst the group as couples battle for power and a body is found on stage. Follow two lawyers as they pour over emails and letters to discover who is the body and is this a case of murder?

What makes Hallett's books special is how she tells stories through emails, texts, and police interviews. I love how I am right alongside the detectives, reading through all the evidence to figure out who committed the crime. I am seeing information that other characters don't see.

The Christmas Appeal is such a fun experience. You get to revisit the Fairway Players from Hallett's first book and feel some holiday magic. You've gotta love a Christmas murder mystery.

Hallett is also great at developing characters through these texts and emails. All of the characters have a different voice and have a different feel. You feel the bad attitude from the son, the stress and frustration from the theater lead, and the cockiness from the wannabe lead.

I would recommend this book to those who like feeling like a detective, reading different mediums like emails, texts, and interviews, following actors as they put on a play, and spending time in a Christmas murder mysteries.

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5⭐️
The writing style of this book was absolutely perfect for me. I loved how the entire book is told in different forms of media, such as emails, text messages, etc.

This story is all centered around a community play group. A new couple has taken lead and others of the group that are loyal to the original leads are undermining them any chance they get. The biggest drama is centered around the beanstalk prop.

Oh my amount of sass and petty small group politic dynamics was fantastic! I found so much joy in the interactions of these characters and small attention to the dialogue between them.I found it to be absolutely hilarious.

I have never read anything from this author before but I for sure will be checking out others from her.

Thank you so much to NetGalley and Atria books for this advanced reader copy. My review is voluntarily my own.

I will be posting my review to my Instagram page the.floofs.booknook and retail sites close or on publication.

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What a fun and fast little read The Christmas Appeal by Janice Hallett is!! If you enjoyed her previous book (The Appeal), you will love this return to the Fairway Players and their antics. As they set out to put on a pantomime for charity, Christmas past and present collide for a village whodunnit. Told in Hallett’s unique style of texts, WhatsApp, email, and interviews, the reader gets to try and best the detectives by solving all the clues first. Out this fall, it’s a perfect holiday read for mystery fans.

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This is sort of a sequel to "The Appeal". While you don't need to have read the earlier book, it helps to know some of the characters. This one is about discovering a dead body during a Christmas play.

The author's unique way of progressing a story via text and email snippets is always enjoyable. However, in this case, there isn't much of a story. The murder does not surface till about half way through the book and even then, there isn't much to it.

The humor keeps the book going though. Short book so goes by quick. I still remain a fan of the author and will be looking forward to future works.

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I unfortunately didn't realize that this was a second book, so I unfortunately don't feel like I can give a full review for this book.

I can say that I did enjoy it but want to read the other and then reread this.

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I received a free copy of, The Christmas Appeal, by Janice Hallett, from the publisher and Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Lower Lockwood is performing the play Jack and the bean stalk, for the holidays. All is going fairly well until a body is found. Lawyers Charlotte and Femi have a murder to solve and a play to put on. A very busy holiday season indeed. This book is a mixture of texts, messages, and interviews, so is not written like a regular book or novella. This book wasnt as organized read as I would of liked, jumping from messages, to texts to interviews, was a little to much for me.

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If you read and enjoyed The Appeal by Janice Hallett, you'll love this quirky holiday follow up titled The Christmas Appeal. We are reunited with many of the same Fairway Players for their holiday pantomine of Jack in the Beanstalk. It sounds simple, but of course with this dramatic crew it is anything but.

Femi and Charlotte are back on the case, sifting through the variety of documents that tell this story. Sarah-Jane and her husband are newly in charge by democratic vote, so they are trying to please most everyone while sticking to their own high standards. Everything is the usual local theater group drama until a very, very large beanstalk is borrowed from another play group.

And I'll leave it there. This is full of hijinks, a mysterious murder (or was it?), and so much fun. Thank you to NetGalley and Atria Books, all opinions are my own.

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I truly loved the cover, but the format of the book (through emails, paper trails etc) was written was out of my comfort zone and not right for me. I don’t wish to give a star rating for this one, but want to praise for the cover!

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THE CHRISTMAS APPEAL by Janice Hallett

First off, it’s important to realize going in (which I did not, as I got a digital copy) that this is a novella. So when I got about 30% through super quickly and realized I’m not THAT quick of a reader, it dawned on me that this was intentionally shorter. Set in the same setting as THE APPEAL, this mystery novella takes place as the community theater stages a pantomime in December in order to raise funds for renovating the church building where they also host their plays.

Once again we are reading a mixed media novel with transcripts, emails, and text messages, going along with the two lawyers who have been sent these documents for review. The mystery itself is interesting, because we all as readers know going in that someone is going to end up dead, but we are also finding out who actually died and why.

Personally, I would have rather the author waited and released a second in the series that is more fleshed out, as I actually love these characters and setting and wanted to spend more time with them. Ultimately, I think if you read THE APPEAL and loved it, and you go into this one with the mindset of just being happy to be back in the world of the Fairway Players theater group, you will enjoy it as a fun Christmas themed book to read during the holiday season. This would also be a perfect one-sitting book for Jolabokaflod!

Thank you @netgalley and @atriabooks for a free review copy of this book. All opinions are my own.

**Review will be reposted on Goodreads and Instagram the week of the publication date**

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Pub date: 10/24/23
Genre: mystery, humor
Quick summary: In THE APPEAL, we met the Fairway Players of Lower Lockwood. This Christmas, they're back, but there's a dead Santa in the scenery.
Do I need to read THE APPEAL first? Yes. Trust me, it's worth it.

I really needed an escapist read, so I decided to mood read THE CHRISTMAS APPEAL even though it's August and definitely still summer in NC. It turned out to be a great decision! I didn't really remember all the characters from book 1, but Hallett did a good job bringing me back into this world. I really love the email format of the book - as someone who reads emails all day, it's nice to laugh at snarky and passive-aggressive emails that aren't actually addressed to me. The mystery was compelling as well.

If you enjoy a light-hearted mystery, definitely read this series!

Thank you to Atria Books for providing an e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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I will gladly read anything Janice Hallett publishes, especially if it’s in this epistolary format. She manages to make the characters’ distinct personalities stand out through nothing more than emails and text messages.
The Fairway Players are still around and putting on a Christmas pantomime in order to raise money for a new church roof. Do you need to have read The Appeal first? Not necessarily. There is a possible spoiler towards the end but only if you’re paying really close attention.
I know this is just a novella but I wish it was longer!

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The Fairway Players are putting on their Christmas pantomime, “Jack and the Beanstalk” (the Beanstalk is its own special character) and, of course, a murder has occurred. And once again, lawyer/investigators Femi and Charlotte are reviewing all types of correspondence regarding the “incident” in Hallett’s clever epostilary compilation. If you’ve been a fan of Hallett’s unique style (“The Appeal,” “The Twyford Code,” “The Mysterious Case of the Alperton Angels”) you’ll be delighted again, this time with a Christmas twist. We have some repeat players from “The Appeal,” and the fundraising is for a church roof this time, but this novella can be read as a standalone.

I love these sorts of puzzles for readers — I’m reading exactly what Femi and Charlotte are reviewing and so it’s possible that I can determine the clues as well (but thank goodness the investigators/ “Greek Chorus” can explain betterand ask questions). The characters are delightful and quirky again. Like its non-holiday predecessor, “The Christmas Appeal” deserves 5 stars.

Thank you to Atria Books and NetGalley for a free advanced reader copy in exchange for an honest review!

Literary Pet Peeve Checklist:
Green Eyes (only 2% of the real world, yet it seems like 90% of all fictional females): NO Since this is a series of texts, emails, and interviews, no one is expected to mention eye colors.

Horticultural Faux Pas (plants out of season or growing zones, like daffodils in autumn or bougainvillea in Alaska): NO, but there is a giant beanstalk filled with something mysterious that’s basically the star of the play

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Janice Hallett takes us back to the small town Fairway Players (The Appeal) where inexplicably another murder may have occurred!
Join Femi and Charlotte as they read through letters, emails and police transcripts to determine what actually happened when the Fairway Players presented "Jack and the Beanstalk" in pantomime at the local church.

The insanity is real as any competitive neighborly get-together can be! I devoured this story and only wish someone was murdered every month on or off stage! Join our players as the modern day Agatha Christie takes us through the motions. Keep your detective hat handy as there are plenty of suspects and more then one crime occurring!

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A return to the scene of Janice Hallett's first book, The Appeal - and after reading her two intervening books, I found it a very welcome diversion, although the epistolary gimmick is getting old. It just is not credible that people would write all those text messages! The little-theater setting is the most entertaining thing about her writing; I wish she'd stick with that and do a more conventional narrative. I think she's talented enough at dialogue and character that she could venture into another format. Or else find a new gimmick.

One other note: weird that though clearly set in England, the prices for treats at the show are given in dollars???

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I loved the Appeal, so I was excited to read this holiday mystery about the Fairways Players!

The Christmas pantomime of Jack and the Beanstalk has brought out the best and the worst of the village's acting troupe members, and once again Hallett uses the device of telling the story through emails, What's App and text messages, leading us through the story in reveals that turn out to be twisty and turny. Everyone is an unreliable narrator, but the show must go on.

Really, really funny - you'll laugh throughout!

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When the Fairway Players (first featured in Hallett's book The Appeal) present their Christmas play as a fundraiser for the church's new roof, the performance is hampered by a drug dealer, threats to the director, and the discovery of a body in the stage scenery.

Told via emails, texts, transcripts, and direct messages, The Christmas Appeal offers the same complex mystery as The Appeal but with more humor and a touch of the holiday spirit. Entertaining, fast-paced, and at 200 pages, a quick read, this book is recommended for mystery lovers and anyone looking for an original Christmas read.

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I was so pleased to receive this novella ARC from #Netgalley and Atria Books. I loved Janice Hallett's The Appeal - a great mystery told mainly through emails. The Christmas Appeal is the same format and is set in the same village two years later. Like all of Hallett's books, this one is really funny. The mystery isn't the main attraction here - it's the interplay between the characters leading up to the Fairway Players Christmas Pantomime. I definitely recommend The Christmas Appeal

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