
Thereโs something special about a small-town diner.
Itโs about more than the food. Itโs the worn red booths that have held three generations of families. Itโs the way the bell above the door jingles as it welcomes old friends and says to new faces, โWelcome! You belong here.โ Itโs the sound of butter sizzling on a griddle and the scent of warm spices wafting through the air, mingling with the aroma of freshly brewed coffee.
Honeybeeโs Hideaway came from that feeling.
Murder With A Side of Shrimp and Grits began not with a body, but with a table. I imagined a diner that had survived decades because it fed more than stomachs. It fed legacy. Community. It nourished souls. Then I asked myself what it would take to rip it apart.
In cozy mysteries, the setting is the heartbeat of the story. Willow Bluff is the kind of place where gossip travels faster than Wi-Fi. Where everyone knows your grandmotherโs secret recipe ingredients and all of your business. Where one bad day does more than just ruin your reputation. It changes how the entire town looks at you.
One of the most important choices I made was centering this series around an African-American family and community. Growing up, I didnโt always see small-town Southern stories that reflected that lived reality in cozy fiction. Yet, Black-owned diners, church communities, beauty shops, and family-run businesses are pillars of countless towns across the South.
Representation in cozy mysteries (or any fiction, for that matter) simply means allowing Black women be the center of a story as business owners, investigators, daughters, and protectors of their own space.
Honeybeeโs is a Black-owned family legacy.
So, when the mayor collapses while eating at Honeybeeโs, itโs worse than murder. Itโs public. Itโs humiliating. And it threatens fifty years of family history in a single bite.
Food became the natural conduit for danger.
There is something profoundly personal about sharing a meal. We trust the hands that cook for us. We trust the ingredients. We trust that what is placed in front of us is safe. In a culinary cozy mystery, that trust becomes the tension.
A peanut allergy is common. Perfectly normal. Thatโs what makes if perfectly terrifying. Thereโs no elaborate weapon. Just an appetizing plate of shrimp and grits.
Suddenly, the question becomes: Was it an accident? Or was it deliberate?
Jessica โJessieโ Haynes, the diner owner at the center of the storm, is very protective of her grandmotherโs legacy and her town. She isnโt trained to solve crimes. Sheโs trained to make sure the grits are smooth and creamy, and the biscuits are light and fluffy. But, cozy mysteries thrive on ordinary people doing extraordinary things. Jessie investigates because she has to, not because she wants to. She has to defend generational labor and pride. And she has to do with the resilience that has sustained her family through decades of change.
Her best friend Tameka โTeeโ Grayson brings confidence and humor. Her mother, Norah Haynes, brings steadiness and legacy. Even her two mischievous kittens, Biscuits and Gravy, play a role by reminding readers that cozy mysteries balance out the danger with comfort.
That balance is important.
I love psychological thrillers. I love dark twists. But cozy mysteries offer something different, reassurance. The promise that, even when something ugly upends a community, the truth can still be revealed by someone who cares enough to look for it.
Honeybeeโs isnโt just a diner. It is a symbol of resilience. Of family. Of Southern hospitality that stands tall and strong under pressure.
Behind this book is a deep affection for food and for the communities built around it. There is a timelessness about gathering around a table. In Willow Bluff, the table just happens to be where someone dies.
When that disruption happens, Jessie begins to realize that the real danger isnโt just whatโs served on the plate, itโs what people are willing to hide to protect their ambitions.
In the end, Murder With A Side of Shrimp and Grits isnโt just about solving crime. Itโs about protecting a legacy. About refusing to let whispers and rumors redefine you. About fighting back when you name is dragged through the mud, even though youโd rather be serving a hot meal.
In a small town, reputation is everything.
And sometimes the only way to clear your nameโฆ
Is to investigate the very people sitting in your diner.

Skylar Warren is a Chicago native and a graduate of Chicago State University, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts in Communications, Media Arts and Theatre. She now lives in New York City and works as a claims adjuster. In her spare time, she enjoys watching mysteries and solving puzzles.



