I also write the Food Lovers’ Village Mysteries, where Erin Murphy runs a local foods market in her family’s hundred-year plus Mercantile in the heart of the village of Jewel Bay, Montana, and solves crime.
It takes a village . . . to catch a killer.
And I'll be giving one lucky reader winner's choice of a Village mystery. Read on, friends!
![]() |
| Death al Dente won the 2013 Agatha Award for Best First Novel! |
No surprise that Jewel Bay is based on the town where we live. I had to change the name so I could kill people. It really is the perfect cozy village, filled with great food, art galleries, live theater, and live music, on a bay formed where two rivers meet to create the largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi. Behind both real and fictional towns are several mountain ranges formed, as Erin likes to say, by the glacial hand of God. (With help from a series of earthquakes and floods, back in geologic time.) Wilderness abounds – along with a 36-hole golf course designed by Jack Nicklaus. And there’s a real-live dude ranch literally 5 minutes from the village – just drive across the one-lane bridge and turn left. .
You can’t make this stuff up.
I’ll admit, that’s not what most people think of when they imagine a small town in Montana. And that’s what makes it the perfect cozy setting.
![]() |
| A patient of Mr. Right sent his bookmark through the wash! |
So where did Erin come from? She’s half Italian, as you can tell by her name. Like me, she left Montana and worked in Seattle. I wanted her to have experience in retail and in groceries, so I made her a grocery buyer for SavCo, the international warehouse chain. (At the time, our niece was a buyer for Costco, though not in groceries.) That gave her the skills to come home and take over the struggling Merc and give her widowed mother, Francesca, a chance to focus on her own line of pastas and sauces – and a new romance.
And her name? Like the husband of a friend of my mother, Tom Murphy decided that because his wife had named the first two, it was his turn. And when she showed up on St. Patrick’s Day, her name was obvious.
Sadly, Tom Murphy was killed during Erin’s senior year of high school, in a hit-and-run that’s never been solved. Not until Erin returns home. I’ve lost count of how many readers finished the first book, Death al Dente – or murder not quite well done – and asked if we would ever find out what happened to him. Yes, yes, yes! Erin uncovers clues in each of the first three books, in addition to solving the crime in that book, and solves the mystery of her father’s death in Butter Off Dead, the third in the series.
The Food Lovers’ Village series includes five novels and a short story collection, with five short stories featuring Erin and the Villagers, and a prequel novella set in 1910, the year Erin’s great-grandparents, Paddy and Kate Murphy, married and started the Merc. Turns out Erin’s sleuthing skills may be inherited!

The one lane bridge dressed up for the holidays -- and on the cover of my Christmas short story, The Christmas Stranger! (Available in the collection Carried to the Grave and as an e-book standalone.)
I hope you’ll take a visit to the Food Lovers’ Village with me. Find out more about the books and read excerpts and praise on my website. And as a gift to my readers, newsletter subscribers get two free short stories, including “The Picture of Guilt,” in which Erin and her beau make a surprising discovery while huckleberry picking. If you’re new to the series, it’s the perfect taste of the Village!
Here's a link to one of my favorite Village recipes, Grilled Caprese Kabobs from Treble at the Jam Fest, the 4th Village mystery. I'll be back Tuesday with a yummy recipe for Shrimp with Pearl Couscous and Fried Capers.
I love visiting new-to-me places on the page! Talk to me about some of your favorite armchair travel. If you've been to the Food Lovers' Village, on the page or IRL, tell us what you love about the place and the books! One lucky reader will win their choice of a Food Lovers' Village mystery -- and if you've read them all already, we'll come up with something else! (Leave your email address to enter. US and Canada only. Winner to be announced Wednesday, July 1.)
Take a step back in time with All God's Sparrows and Other Stories: A Stagecoach Mary Fields Collection of historical short mysteries, featuring the Agatha-Award winning "All God's Sparrows" and other stories imagining the life of real-life historical figure Mary Fields, born into slavery in 1832, during the last thirty years of her life, in Montana. Out September 17, 2024 from Beyond the Page Publishing.
“Finely researched and richly detailed, All God’s Sparrows and Other Stories is a wonderful collection. I loved learning about this fascinating woman . . . and what a character she is! Kudos to Leslie Budewitz for bringing her to life so vividly.” —Kathleen Grissom, New York Times bestselling author of Crow Mary
Available at Amazon * Barnes & Noble * Books-A-Million * Bookshop.org * and your local booksellers!
Swing by Leslie's website and join the mailing list for her seasonal newsletter. And join her on Facebook where she shares book news and giveaways from her writer friends, and talks about food, mysteries, and the things that inspire her.



.jpg)
.png)

.jpg)
.jpg)




Never been to Food village but love reading books with food and recipes in it usually makes a good read
ReplyDeletedon.stewart@zoominternet.net
Thanks!
DeleteArmchair travel has taken me to many places - both here in the US and overseas. Some of my favorites are places right here in Missouri, where I've learned some of the history and seen/tried recipes from ages past.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the chance to win. madamhawk at gmail dot com
Love that! A childhood stop in Hannibal and a visit to Becky Thatcher's house and other Clemens/Twain sites was my first book-cation or literary travel!
DeleteI love this series, and have never lingered in Montana (drove through once decades ago on a trip from Seattle to Indiana...), so I loved seeing your beloved state through your eyes!
ReplyDeleteThank you, my dear -- come back any time!
DeleteThanks for taking us on a trip to Jewel Bay, Leslie! It sounds like such an inviting place to visit!
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure!
DeleteI have never been to a Food Village, but I can just imagine all the tasty treats I would want to try. Thanks for your great generosity. Maycarlson6848@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteAlways a great time to visit -- in person or on the page!
DeleteLeslie, I really enjoyed reading about the inspiration behind the Food Lovers' Village mysteries. It's always fascinating to see how real places and people find their way into fiction. Thanks for sharing the story behind the series!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ang! The first agent who looked at the proposal didn't think it sounded "western" enough -- so I added the dude ranch, which is a real place I love, and it appears in several books.
DeleteAlways love my visits to Jewel Bay! And do so love getting recipes of the delicious sounding dishes from within the stories. There's nothing like armchair traveling. Often times if more exciting than traveling in real life. It doesn't take days to get somewhere and it's sure a lot less expensive. 😊 I will say that we have loved our times in Montana. In armchair traveling, I love going to places I've never been and may never get the chance to see and places I've been to and get a glimpse of being there again.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the amazing chance to win a copy of one of your books!
2clowns at arkansas dot net
Thanks, Kay -- you nailed it!
DeleteMy favorite places to visit in books are in Europe. ckmbeg (at) gmail (dot) com
ReplyDeleteAnd no long flight needed! Several MLK authors have set books in Europe -- Molly, Peg, and Roberta, for sure, and maybe Vicki. I've set short stories in Greece, including one that's free to my newsletter subscribers (sign up on my website).
DeleteI love the cover illustrations. Alam22@msn.com
ReplyDeleteAren't they wonderful? I gave the artist a brief description, and he created the world, full of just the right details! (And they hold up well in the wash, too!)
DeleteI have been to Food Lovers' Village via armchair travel. I love these books because I adore mysteries and foodie characters who love spices, cooking, and eating as much as I do!
ReplyDeleteNancy
allibrary (at) aol (dot) com
Isn't it fun? Thanks, Nancy!
DeleteI love getting to read about new places, especially when there's food involved. I also like hearing about all the shops and different sights to see. And it gives me an idea of what to watch for if I'd ever make it there for real someday.
ReplyDeletekozo8989(at)hotmail(dot)com
So, one day, I was walking out of the library and almost smacked into a woman. My goodness, she was shocked, and I was so apologetic -- turned out she was visiting the area for work, knew the books, and took the afternoon to explore the real Village, where she was absolutely gobsmacked to almost literally run into me! (These things happen in the Village, on the page and IRL!)
DeleteI have not been to the New To Me Village page. But I enjoyed the only book in the Food Lover's Village series,, that I've read. Especially the involvement of family, in it. johnlong83@rockemail.com
ReplyDeleteSo glad you enjoyed Death al Dente!
DeleteLove this backstory about Erin and Jewel Bay, Leslie! Montana is a place I've never visited other than driving through the state on our way to the East Coast--though I have enjoyed spending time there with Erin and co.!
ReplyDeleteAs for arm-chair traveling, it's one of my favorite hobbies! Even when I'm for-real traveling, the arm-chair variety before and after the trip is a great way to extend your vacation.
Thanks, Leslie -- and yes to the wonderful before-and-after effects of armchair travel! Works for writers, too -- one of the short stories free to newsletter subscribers was inspired by a strange sight on our honeymoon to Greece 26 years ago!
DeleteI'm currently reading Christina Dodd's Trach the Torches to Burn that takes me to Verona Italy. I would love to visit Juliet's House! I'm so thrilled to meet Erin Murphy who would take me to Jewel Bay, Montana. Now, my curiosity is piqued, and will check out Montana and Food Lovers' Village Mystery series! Thank you for writing!
ReplyDeletecwkuen(at)yahoo(dot)com
Thanks, Emily! I read the first in Dodd's series, Daughter of Fair Verona, and it was a hoot -- and yes, a great way to travel to the Italy of the 17th century!
Delete