"A delightful debut. One Sunday, while Glory is crunching numbers at her usual table in CC's Coffeehouse, she strikes up a conversation with police officer Beau Landry, whom she used to babysit. In the middle of their chat, he's called to a crime scene at the home of Amity Gay, an activist nun and Glory's best friend. Arceneaux successfully avoids a mountain of cozy clichés--and works in potent critiques into her well-oiled plot. Readers will be eager to spend more time with Glory in future installments."--Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Glory Broussard, the star of Danielle Arceneaux's fabulous debut mystery differs from most of the other Black women in Lafayette, La. When Glory learns that her lifelong friend Amity has died, she's immediately suspicious. Glory is up for the challenge, and she is a character for the ages."--Sarah Weinman, New York Times Book Review
"A remarkable debut novel that blends a character study with a tightly woven mystery that delves into dark corners of racism and corruption."--The Washington Post
"I needed a palate cleanser, recently--you know, a book that's smart, funny, and just hooks you from first page to last. Glory Be was that title. Unfiltered, unstoppable, and unconvinced the police know what they're doing, Glory Broussard ropes her daughter Delphine into an off-the-books investigation ('like some kind of Black Murder She Wrote, ' Delphine charges), overturning some pretty scary rocks in their bayou town. I can't wait for Glory's next adventure."--Vannessa Cronin, Amazon Books
"Glory Be is a hilarious and thrill-filled ride through the bayous of small-town Louisiana and is filled with rich descriptions of place and superb characterization. Glory Broussard grabs you by the collar and doesn't let go. I can't wait to find out what Glory and her daughter Delphine will get up to in their next set of adventures."--Harini Nagendra, author of The Bangalore Detectives Club, a New York Times Notable Book of 2022
"Glory, living in Lafayette, La., loves her daughter, the Red Hat Society and taking other people's bets on Sunday mornings instead of attending church. What she doesn't love is being written off, especially when her best friend dies in suspicious circumstances. [Arceneaux has] great fun interrogating the detective form...I'm all in."--Sarah Weinman, The New York Times Book Review, "The Best Crime Novels of 2023"