A Bed-And-Breakfast Mystery book cover

The Bed-And-Breakfast Series in Order

Bed-And-Breakfast Books in Order

32 books

Complete reading order for the Bed-And-Breakfast series.

#
Title
Date
Rating
1
Jul 1991
2
Nov 1991
3
Apr 1992
4
May 1993
5
Nov 1993
6
Aug 1994
7
Mar 1995
8
Oct 1995
9
Mar 1996
10
Nov 1996
11
Aug 1997
12
Feb 1998
13
Oct 1998
14
Apr 1999
15
Jan 2000
16
Jan 2001
17
Feb 2001
18
May 2002
19
Jul 2003
20
Jul 2004
21
Aug 2005
22
Aug 2006
23
Aug 2007
24
Aug 2008
25
Sep 2010
26
Aug 2011
27
Jul 2012
28
Jul 2013
29
Aug 2014
30
Apr 2016
31
Jul 2018
32
Sep 2022

About the Bed-And-Breakfast series

Series Premise

The core premise follows Judith McMonigle Flynn, a resourceful widow (later remarried) who runs Hillside Manor, a charming bed-and-breakfast on Heraldsgate Hill in a fictionalized Seattle suburb. Judith hopes for a peaceful life serving breakfasts, managing guests, and enjoying family time after her first husband's untimely death. Instead, her inn becomes a magnet for murder: guests drop dead, bodies appear in the backyard, or suspicious visitors bring trouble. Each book begins with Judith booking an unusual group—eccentric families, celebrities, corporate retreats, holiday gatherings, or theme weekends—only for foul play to interrupt.

Judith doesn't seek out mysteries; they find her through her hospitality role. She investigates unofficially, driven by curiosity, a sense of justice, and the need to protect her business reputation (and insurance rates). Clues emerge from overheard conversations, guest behaviors, kitchen mishaps, or neighborhood gossip. Judith's cousin Renie Jones (Serena Grover Jones) serves as her enthusiastic, often reluctant partner-in-crime—providing comic relief, moral support, and occasional muscle.

Cases involve classic cozy elements: multiple suspects with motives (greed, jealousy, inheritance), red herrings, alibis, and clever reveals. Over the series, ongoing threads include Judith's evolving family life—remarriage to detective Joe Flynn, her son Mike's growth, Renie's marriage to Bill Jones and their brood—plus recurring threats to Hillside Manor (renovations, financial woes, competing inns). The premise celebrates resilience, female ingenuity, and the idea that even in a cozy world, evil lurks among the ordinary, but wit and friendship prevail.

Main Characters

Judith McMonigle Flynn anchors the series: a warm, capable woman in her forties/fifties (aging gradually), widowed early from her first husband Dan (a difficult man whose death she views pragmatically). Judith is intelligent, observant, and resilient—running Hillside Manor with efficiency while raising her son Mike and navigating remarriage to Joe Flynn, a homicide detective whose job often conflicts with her sleuthing.



Renie Jones (Serena Grover Jones), Judith's cousin and best friend, is the perfect foil: outspoken, artistic (a graphic designer), food-obsessed, and prone to dramatic flair. Married to psychiatrist Bill Jones (often absent in his study), Renie has four rambunctious children and provides comic energy, loyalty, and occasional recklessness.



Joe Flynn, Judith's second husband (from mid-series onward), is a competent, affectionate detective who tolerates (and sometimes aids) her investigations while worrying about her safety.



Mike Flynn, Judith's son (from her first marriage), grows from teen to adult—becoming a forest ranger and starting his own family—adding generational warmth.

Setting

The series is firmly rooted in the Pacific Northwest, centered on Heraldsgate Hill, a fictional upscale neighborhood in Seattle (inspired by Queen Anne or Capitol Hill areas). Hillside Manor itself is the heart: a restored Victorian home turned cozy B&B with creaky floors, antique furnishings, a welcoming parlor, and a bustling kitchen where Judith bakes scones and plots deductions.



Seattle's misty climate, evergreen landscapes, and urban-suburban blend influence plots—rainy days trap suspects indoors, foggy nights hide clues, nearby attractions (Space Needle, Pike Place Market, ferries) serve as backdrops. Stories venture to rural retreats (mountain lodges, islands, small towns), holiday destinations, or family estates, contrasting the inn's warmth with isolated peril. The setting feels authentic and lived-in: coffee culture, liberal quirks, family-oriented neighborhoods, and the ever-present drizzle add texture while grounding the coziness in a recognizable Pacific Northwest world.

Tone & Themes

The tone is witty, warm, and gently irreverent—classic cozy mystery with a sardonic edge. Daheim's prose is conversational and humorous, filled with Judith's dry observations, Renie's sharp-tongued quips, and exaggerated family antics. Suspense builds through escalating oddities and narrow escapes, but violence stays off-page or discreet—focus remains on puzzle-solving, interpersonal dynamics, and the absurdity of human behavior.

Humor is abundant: Judith's exasperation with demanding guests, Renie's food obsessions and dramatic outbursts, chaotic family dinners, and the duo's bickering banter provide constant levity. Emotional moments—grief, family tensions, small triumphs—add heart without heaviness. The mood is reassuring and entertaining: murder disrupts domestic bliss, but order restores through intelligence, loyalty, and a good breakfast. Readers finish each book amused, satisfied, and ready for the next quirky case.

The Bed-And-Breakfast Mystery series by Mary Daheim offers delightful, long-running cozy escapism where hospitality and homicide collide in charming, laugh-out-loud fashion. Through Judith McMonigle Flynn's sharp mind and Renie Jones's irrepressible spirit, the books deliver clever whodunits wrapped in family warmth, witty banter, and the comforting rhythm of inn life. Daheim's affectionate portrayal of Seattle-area domesticity, combined with satisfying resolutions and gentle humor, makes the series a reliable favorite for cozy mystery lovers seeking lighthearted intrigue, relatable heroines, and the timeless appeal of justice served with a side of scones.

FAQ

How many books are in the Bed-And-Breakfast series?

32 books

When will the next book in the series be released?

No new book is currently scheduled. The latest book, Lady MacDeath, was published in September 2022.

When was the most recent book released?

Lady MacDeath was published in September 2022.

What was the first book in the series?

The first book in the series is Just Desserts, published in July 1991.

What genre is the Bed-And-Breakfast series?

The series primarily falls into the Cozy Mystery genre.

What is the Bed-And-Breakfast series about?

The core premise follows Judith McMonigle Flynn, a resourceful widow (later remarried) who runs Hillside Manor, a charming bed-and-breakfast on Heraldsgate Hill in a fictionalized Seattle suburb. Judith hopes for a peaceful life serving breakfasts, managing guests, and enjoying family time after her first husband's untimely death. Instead, her inn becomes a magnet for murder: guests drop dead, bodies appear in the backyard, or suspicious visitors bring trouble. Each book begins with Judith booking an unusual group—eccentric families, celebrities, corporate retreats, holiday gatherings, or theme weekends—only for foul play to interrupt. Judith doesn't seek out mysteries; they find her through her hospitality role. She investigates unofficially, driven by curiosity, a sense of justice, and the need to protect her business reputation (and insurance rates). Clues emerge from overheard conversations, guest behaviors, kitchen mishaps, or neighborhood gossip. Judith's cousin Renie Jones (Serena Grover Jones) serves as her enthusiastic, often reluctant partner-in-crime—providing comic relief, moral support, and occasional muscle. Cases involve classic cozy elements: multiple suspects with motives (greed, jealousy, inheritance), red herrings, alibis, and clever reveals. Over the series, ongoing threads include Judith's evolving family life—remarriage to detective Joe Flynn, her son Mike's growth, Renie's marriage to Bill Jones and their brood—plus recurring threats to Hillside Manor (renovations, financial woes, competing inns). The premise celebrates resilience, female ingenuity, and the idea that even in a cozy world, evil lurks among the ordinary, but wit and friendship prevail.

Is the Bed-And-Breakfast series finished?

The series does not currently have a new book scheduled.