Review posted April 25, 2024.
Penguin Audio, 2021. 10 hours, 22 minutes.
Review written April 16, 2024, from a library eaudiobook.
I checked out this audiobook because of how much I enjoyed the author's book Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers. This one, too, had a lot of madcap fun.
Dial A for Aunties answers the question, at least for one Chinese Indonesian American twenty-something young woman, "Who would you call if you have to dispose of a dead body?"
Since graduating from college and breaking up with the love of her life so that she wouldn't hold him back, photographer Meddelin Chan has been working in her family's wedding business. Her mother and her mother's three sisters provide flowers, make-up, cake, and entertainment, especially at big Chinese or Indonesian weddings.
The night before one of their biggest events ever, Meddelin goes on a blind date that her mother set up for her by posing as Meddy on an online dating site -- and completely missing the sexual innuendoes of what the guy was going to expect. When the date goes south, Meddy pulls out her taser -- but causes an accident.
She comes to in a deserted area of Los Angeles with a dead cellphone and nobody coming by. The guy appears to be dead. What's a girl to do? She ends up putting the body in her trunk. (Not necessarily thinking clearly, but hey, extenuating circumstances.) She calls her mother, who calls in the Aunties. They all rally together to figure out what to do.
But the next day they'll be leaving early for the wedding at a resort on an island off the coast. They don't want the body to stink, so it needs to go in Big Aunt's cooler, because she's the one who has enough room.
But in the morning, the very helpful assistant brings all the coolers to the island. So now there's a body in one of their coolers at the island wedding, and they need to get rid of it with no one noticing and hundreds of people coming and going.
Oh and then? Turns out the love of Meddy's life (Remember him?) is the new owner of the resort. This is his first big wedding and it needs to go well.
Madcap hilarity ensues. This author was definitely not going for realism. However, since every coincidence serves to make things worse, the reader buys it, because what can go wrong will go wrong, right? It's pretty much over-the-top silliness, but it adds up to a whole lot of fun. The bickering Aunties are wonderful in what they will do for Meddy -- even if their ideas don't always work out in the best ways.