Reviews for The Joy and Light Bus Company

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Mma Precious Ramotswe’s husband takes center stage in the latest adventure of the No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency. The first third of this installment is nearly over before a paying client crosses Mma Ramotswe’s threshold. Baboloki Mophephu is convinced that Bontle Tutume, the wicked nurse attending his aging father, a retired businessman and farmer, is scheming to marry him so that she can do the client and his two sisters out of their rightful inheritance. By this time, however, Mma Ramotswe has already encountered several more typical problems. Mma Molebatsi, a matron at the Orphan Farm run by Mma Ramotswe’s old friend Mma Potokwani, suspects that Keitumetse, the latest young woman to arrive at her house, has formerly been enslaved by the employers who broke her wrist. Mma Ramotswe and Mma Grace Makutsi, the employee who’s constantly promoting herself to higher and higher status in the agency, watch their old enemy Violet Sephotho, the Great Husband Stealer of Gaborone, take a package of chocolate biscuits from a grocery shelf, help herself to two of them, and replace the package without turning a hair. Most important, Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni, Mma Ramotswe’s husband, meets an old schoolmate at a business conference and falls in with his highly speculative plan to start a new bus company, a project that will require him to mortgage Tlokweng Road Speedy Motors and risk his family’s financial future. Even though she uncharacteristically misreads several of the characters who cross her path, Mma Ramotswe eventually works some of these problems out through her own resourcefulness and watches the rest resolve themselves through other means. Comfort-food reading, and never more welcome. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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