Maggie Toussaint is known for her engaging mystery and romantic suspense novels. Her popular Dreamwalker Mystery series, including Gone and Done It and Bubba Done It, showcases her knack for memorable characters and charming storytelling.
If you enjoy reading books by Maggie Toussaint then you might also like the following authors:
Sofie Kelly writes cozy mysteries filled with charm, humor, and lovable feline companions. Her stories blend mystery-solving with magical touches, making them ideal for readers who enjoy Maggie Toussaint's quirky suspense.
Start with Curiosity Thrilled the Cat, a delightful tale about librarian Kathleen Paulson and her magical cats, Owen and Hercules.
Miranda James crafts cozy mysteries that center around warm characters, close-knit communities, and a puzzle-solving librarian detective. Fans of Maggie Toussaint will appreciate his gentle humor and relatable themes.
Give Murder Past Due—the first in the Cat in the Stacks series—a try, where librarian Charlie Harris and his loyal cat, Diesel, unravel intriguing cases.
Ellery Adams offers cozy mysteries that combine intriguing puzzles with appealing small-town settings and engaging, relatable characters. Her books have a cozy feel similar to Maggie Toussaint's stories: friendly communities and light-hearted suspense.
Try The Secret, Book & Scone Society, a charming mystery about friendships, secrets, and a bit of bookish magic.
Juliet Blackwell writes cozy mysteries with enchanting elements, quirky characters, and vivid locations. Like Maggie Toussaint, she adds a supernatural twist to her intriguing whodunits.
Start your journey with Secondhand Spirits, which introduces Lily Ivory, a witch whose vintage clothing shop and magical talents come in handy when solving mysteries.
Heather Blake specializes in cozy mysteries centered around magical realism, amusing characters, and cozy small-town dynamics. Her lively stories blend humor, magic, and heartwarming relationships, similar to Maggie Toussaint's appealing combination of mystery and charm.
Check out It Takes a Witch, the first in her Wishcraft Mystery series, featuring Darcy Merriweather who discovers her secret magical heritage and solves mysteries along the way.
If you're a fan of Maggie Toussaint's cozy mysteries with a supernatural twist, Victoria Laurie is someone you should check out. Her novels blend suspense, humor, and paranormal elements seamlessly.
A great book to start with is Abby Cooper, Psychic Eye, about a psychic investigator named Abby who solves crimes with her intuitive gift. Laurie's fun and approachable storytelling makes her stories easy to enjoy.
E.J. Copperman writes humorous mysteries with smart dialogue and charmingly eccentric characters. Like Maggie Toussaint, Copperman brings a mysterious and paranormal flair to his cozy mysteries.
A standout is Night of the Living Deed, the opening book in Copperman's Haunted Guesthouse series. The story follows Alison Kerby, who deals with ghosts lingering around her guesthouse and helps to solve the crimes that trouble their afterlives.
Bailey Cates creates cozy mysteries that blend food, warmth, and a touch of the supernatural—much like Toussaint's style. Her Magical Bakery Mysteries offer the comfort of baking, friendship, and lighthearted magic.
Her story Brownies and Broomsticks introduces readers to baker Katie Lightfoot, a young witch who uses her skill with baked treats and magic to crack mysteries.
Readers drawn to Maggie Toussaint's blend of quirky characters, cozy settings, and supernatural-inspired plots will appreciate Amanda Flower. Filled with warmth and humor, her mysteries feature lively communities and unusual sleuths.
A great example is Crime and Poetry, which launches her Magical Bookshop series. In it, protagonist Violet Waverly returns home to find family secrets and crimes that only her magical bookshop—and a touch of her own intuition—can help solve.
If you enjoy Toussaint's approach to clever mysteries with vivid settings and memorable sleuths, you should try Carolyn Haines. Her Southern charm and humor shine through in the Sarah Booth Delaney Mysteries.
Them Bones, the first book in this series, has private investigator Sarah Booth exploring crime and scandal in her Mississippi hometown, mixing suspenseful storytelling with a wry, entertaining tone.
Charlaine Harris writes engaging mystery stories mixed with cozy charm and a splash of the supernatural. Her stories feature likable characters, small-town charm, and intriguing plot twists.
Fans of Maggie Toussaint's mysteries with a paranormal edge will enjoy Harris' Dead Until Dark, the first book in her popular Southern Vampire Mysteries, featuring waitress and telepath Sookie Stackhouse investigating mysteries in her Louisiana hometown.
Cleo Coyle creates cozy mysteries full of warmth, humor, and plenty of coffee. Her Coffeehouse Mysteries series revolves around Clare Cosi, a spirited café owner in New York City whose knack for stumbling across murders keeps readers entertained.
If you like Maggie Toussaint's cozy, humorous tone, you'll have a good time with Coyle's On What Grounds, filled with delightful characters and intriguing plots that combine coffee culture with sleuthing fun.
Kate Carlisle offers enjoyable mystery novels with warm humor, intriguing puzzles, and engaging main characters. Her Bibliophile Mystery series follows bookbinder Brooklyn Wainwright as she solves intriguing murders while repairing rare books.
Readers who enjoy Maggie Toussaint's blend of cozy atmosphere with layered storytelling should definitely check out Carlisle's Homicide in Hardcover, featuring mystery, antiques, and plenty of witty banter.
Lorna Barrett specializes in cozy mysteries set around engaging, tightly-knit communities. Her Booktown Mystery series is especially enjoyable for book lovers, pairing amateur sleuths with small-town charm and cleverly plotted murders.
If Maggie Toussaint's cozy mysteries appeal to you, you'll appreciate Barrett's Murder Is Binding, where bookstore owner Tricia Miles solves murders while navigating the quirky local characters of Stoneham, New Hampshire—"The Town of Books."
Jenn McKinlay writes cozy mysteries filled with humor, warmth, and lively characters who always seem to find trouble—much like Maggie Toussaint's appealing style.
McKinlay's Library Lover's Mystery series, featuring librarian Lindsey Norris solving murders with the help of engaging friends, delivers intriguing puzzles alongside crisp dialogue and spirited settings.
Readers of Toussaint's enjoyable storytelling will find McKinlay’s Books Can Be Deceiving equally satisfying.