"Hotttest Jalapeno's in Texas"
Reviewed by Ellen Hogan
Posted January 15, 2013
Women's Fiction | Contemporary
Miss Clawdy's Cafe is owned by her daughters Cathy and
Marty Andrews and one of their best friends Trixie Matthews.
Cathy and Marty opened the cafe in their home in honor of
their mother. When Trixie and her husband Andy divorced, she
found him cheating, she became a partner in the cafe. The
Blue Ribbon Jalapeno Society Jubilee is coming up and Violet
Prescott, Cathy's fiance's mother wants another blue ribbon
to hang in her home. Cathy like her mother before her grows
the hottest jalapenos in Texas. There is to be a vote for a
new member, Trixie and Cathy and Marty's Aunt Agnes
are both in the running. Violet and Agnes do not get along at all
and after the vote neither she or Trixie wins. The winner
turns out to be Anna Ruth, who broke up Trixie's marriage.
When Ethan pressures Cathy to sign a pre-nup she refuses and
breaks their engagement. Then Cathy quits the Society and
Violet gets very upset because she knows they will not win
another blue ribbon without her.
This is an excellent book. I loved every bit of it. The
relationships that Cathy, Marty and Trixie have along with
their friend Jack, are heartwarming. Each of the main
characters go through a life altering time. Cathy breaking
her engagement and then finding true love. Marty in letting
go of Andy and coming to grips with her mother's
Alzheimer's. Marty in revealing that she is the erotic
romance author that both Cathy and Marty love to read. Aunt
Agnes is a funny yet endearing minor character and I also
loved the sub story of Pastor Darla Jean helping abused
women. This is Ms. Brown's first book in the women's fiction
genre and I for one can not wait for the next installment.
I'm sure I will be reading this one over and over again.
SUMMARY
Bestelling author Carolyn Brown makes her first foray into women's fiction with this poignant and hilarious novel about four friends in Cadillac, Texas—where the best jalapeños in the world are grown. Everything is calm in Cadillac, Texas until Aunt Agnes declares war on Violet Prescott, the president of the Blue-Ribbon Jalapeño Society, just in time for the annual jubilee. But after the festivities—and the hostilities—are over, it's four friends who are left standing, proving once again that friendship is forever.
ExcerptTrixie was still pissed at Andy and still had dreams about strangling Anna Ruth, but sex was sex, and she was just paying Anna Ruth back. She opened the back door, and together they crossed the kitchen. He followed her up the stairs to the second floor, where there were three bedrooms and a single bathroom. She opened her bedroom door, and once he was inside, she slammed it shut and wrapped her arms around his neck.
"I miss you," he said.
She unbuttoned his shirt and walked him backward to the bed. "You should have thought about that."
"What if I break it off with Anna Ruth?"
"We've had this conversation before." Trixie flipped a couple of switches, and those fancy no–fire candles were suddenly burning beside the bed.
He pulled her close and kissed her. "You are still beautiful."
She pushed him back on the bed. "You are still a lyin', cheatin' son–of–a–bitch."
He sat up and peeled out of his clothes. "Why do you go to bed with me if I'm that bad?"
"Because I like sex."
"I wish you liked housework," Andy mumbled.
"If I had, we might not be divorced. If my messy room offends you, then put your britches back on and go home to Anna Ruth and her sterile house," Trixie said.
"Shut up and kiss me." He grinned.
She shucked out of her jeans and T–shirt and jumped on the bed with him. They'd barely gotten into the foreplay when a hard knock on the bedroom door stopped the process as quickly as if someone had thrown a pitcher of icy water into the bed with them. Trixie grabbed for the sheet and covered her naked body; Andy strategically put a pillow in his lap.
"I thought they were all out like usual," he whispered. "If that's Marty, we are both dead."
"Maybe they called off her class for tonight," Trixie said.
"Cadillac police. Open this door right now, or I'm coming in shooting."
Trixie groaned. "Agnes?"
Andy groaned and fell back on the pillows. "Dear God!"
And that's when flashing red, white, and blue lights and the mixed wails of police cars, sirens, and an ambulance all screeched to a halt in front of Miss Clawdy's.
Trixie grabbed her old blue chenille robe from the back of a rocking chair and belted it around her waist. "Agnes, is that you?"
"It's the Cadillac police, I tell you, and I'll come in there shooting if that man who's molesting you doesn't let you go right this minute." Agnes tried to deepen her voice, but there was just so much a seventy–eight–year–old woman could do. She sounded like a prepubescent boy with laryngitis.
"I'm coming right out. Don't shoot."
She eased out the door, and sure enough, there was Agnes, standing in the hallway with a sawed off shotgun trained on Trixie's belly button.
The old girl had donned her late husband's pleated trousers and a white shirt and smelled like a mothball factory. Her dyed red hair, worn in a ratted hairdo reminiscent of the sixties, was crammed up under a fedora. Enough curls had escaped to float around the edges of the hat and remind Trixie of those giant statues of Ronald McDonald. The main difference was that she had a shotgun in her hands instead of a hamburger and fries.
Trixie shut her bedroom door behind her and blocked it as best she could. "There's no one in my bedroom, Agnes. Let's go downstairs and have a late–night snack. I think there are hot rolls left and half of a peach cobbler."
"The hell there ain't nobody in there! I saw the bastard. Stand to one side, and I'll blow his ass to hell." Agnes raised the shotgun.
"You were seeing me do my exercises before I went to bed."
Agnes narrowed her eyes and shook her head. "He's in there. I can smell him." She sniffed the air. "Where is the sorry son–of–a–bitch? I could see him in there throwing you on the bed and having his way with you. Sorry bastard, he won't get away. Woman ain't safe in her own house."
Trixie moved closer to her. "Look at me, Agnes. I'm not hurt. It was just shadows, and what you smell is mothballs. Shit, woman, where'd you get that getup, anyway?"
Agnes shook her head. "He told you to say that or he'd kill you. He don't scare me." She raised the barrel of the gun and pulled the trigger. The kickback knocked her square on her butt on the floor, and the gun went scooting down the hallway.
"Next one is for you, buster," she yelled as plaster, insulation, and paint chips rained down upon her and Trixie.
Trixie grabbed both ears. "God Almighty, Agnes!"
"Bet that showed him who is boss around here, and if you don't quit usin' them damn cussin' words, takin' God's name in vain, I might aim the gun at you next time. And I don't have to tell a smart–ass like you where I got my getup, but I was tryin' to save your sorry ass so I dressed up like a detective," Agnes said.
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Comments
1 comment posted.
Re: Hotttest Jalapeno's in Texas
Ellen, Thank you, thank you for the wonderful review! I'm so glad that you liked The Blue Ribbon Jalapeno Society Jubilee! You've flat out made my day (no, my week...maybe my year) with this awesome review! Carolyn Brown (Carolyn Brown 4:09pm January 15, 2013)
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