-Bob Singer. Advertising executive. A star in his family business, though he was initially reluctant to join the New York City firm. Just under 40 years old and moved several years earlier from NYC to Long Island. Likes routine and doesn’t like to deviate. Expects his wife to take care of the kids, keep the house clean and have his dinner ready when he gets home.
-Judith Singer. Early 30s and married to Bob. Majored in history but never completed her Masters. Very intelligent. Loves her two kids, a 6 year old daughter, Kate, and a 4 year old son, Joey. Bored, but keeping busy by talking to the neighbors, and especially her closest friend, Nancy.
-Dr. Bruce Fleckstein. Dentist living in the area and taking care of many of the local people. Found dead in his office with death caused by a slender rod jammed to the back of his skull.
-We come across Judith living in Long Island and keeping herself busy by gossiping with neighbors. Suddenly, the town has a mysterious murder that occurred to one of its residents, Dr. Fleckstein. He has charm and is known, through the grapevine, to have slept with certain married women of the area. The police seem to have no leads but start examining the patients as potential murder suspects, including Judith’s next door neighbor, Marilyn Tuccio, who, Judith knows, wouldn’t even be in the running as the last person possible to have killed the dentist.
-The police begin questioning all past patients of the dentist, and Judith, who had seen that dentist when she was pregnant with her son, Joey, is among them. The lack of direction of the police, and Judith’s inquisitive nature, combine, and she starts to involve herself in the investigation.
-Judith, who is a master of sarcasm in this very funny ‘whodunnit’, takes us on a joyride as she does her own investigation into the murder. She gets so far ahead of the police, that she becomes a target of the killer. Her house is broken into and a warning is left there for her to stop. The police, frustrated at their own lack of success in solving this case, as well as their inability to stop Judith from getting deeper into the investigation, realize that to solve this murder, they must include her.
-The more Judith discovers in her own unusual style, the more women are found to have slept with Fleckstein, which increases the number of people (the women or their husbands) who could be a murder suspect. What now complicates things, is Bob Singer totally disapproving of Judith’s involvement in this case, which she ignores, as well as the mutual attraction which grows, between her and the police office in charge of the crime. Her attraction is made all the harder for her to resist, once she discovers how many of her friends have “extracurricular activities” in their own marriages which makes one who’s in a loyal marriage feel very odd.
-Through a very easy going writing style, the author has penned a mystery that is both funny and filled with a deep sense of danger at the same time. As she proceeds from one possible suspect to another, she very smoothly questions each one, and comes up with discoveries that make the police feel like fools. Her side comments make this book a must read and they amuse the reader on almost every page. Admittedly, though this is the first novel in the series, I had read the third first, but nothing was lost by my reading in the order that I had. The plot is very well thought out, and has many twists and turns, with the solution to the mystery made apparent only at the very end.