
I have been a fan of Lori Robbins since Murder in the First Position, part of her ballet themed mysteries. (She has since been nominated for an Agatha Award for the fifth in this series, appropriately titled Murder in Fifth Position.)
In Lesson Plan for Murder, and its sequel Study Plan for Murder, she changes her setting to a High School. Her protagonist, an English teacher, investigates two murders connected to the school.
In Lesson Plan for Murder, a truly obnoxious fellow teacher is murdered. Theories run rampant, including suicide, but Liz Hopewell is convinced no English teacher would commit suicide without leaving a perfectly composed note. She then finds some mysteriously coded notes on classic books, which Liz is convinced hold the key to the solution. Despite warnings from her husband, and a handsome detective, Liz throws herself into investigating. When several more teachers are poisoned, Liz realizes the killer is someone in the school, and he won’t stop. Liz continues until she identifies the killer, and almost loses her life in the process.

Study Guide for Murder is a more personal mystery. Liz’s husband is eager for them to join an upscale golf club and he wants the sports-challenged Liz to learn golf. At her first lesson, a man is murdered with her golf club. Liz is on the case, assisted by her sister. Now Liz is the prime suspect.
At the same time, Liz and her sister are researching their past, the father who abandoned them for another family, and who owed money all over town. The investigation brings them to the rundown streets of Brooklyn, their childhood home, and a family mystery.
Highly Recommended. The characters feel very real, Liz is an engaging detective, and the setting is great. I can’t wait for the next book in this series.