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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
45 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Still good after all these years,
By Moe811 (New York USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Compromising Positions (Mass Market Paperback)
Susan Isaacs has written a sequel to this book, so I decided to reread it before reading the sequel. It is better than I remembered. Judith Singer is a frustrated mommy/wife. She has gone from a promising academic future to housecleaning and nosewiping. Her husband is a workaholic at a PR firm, and seems to care little about anyone other than himself. Judith reads about the murder of a dentist. She knew him, having seen him once for a gum problem, and is intrigued by the mystery. She starts to investigate on her own and eventually hooks up with Lt. Sharpe the lead investigator. They solve the murder and have a brief affair.This is an interesting look at suburbia in the late 70's. Most of the characters are upper middle class housewives with feminist leanings. Their struggles with their lot in life add alot to the story. The mystery was good also. This book was much better than I remembered.
39 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Compromising Positions is a can't-put-it-down great read.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Compromising Positions (Mass Market Paperback)
Judith Singer is interested when she learns the local periodontist has been murdered. Her interest turns into a need to know when she learns he was also the local Lothario, sleeping with half the women she knows and having propositioned the other half. It's the most exciting thing to have happened in her boring suburbanite life in years. Against her rigidly correct husband's vocal disapproval, she does some sleuthing among her friends and neighbors. This leads to a nasty threat against her by, she believes, the murderer. Enter a police detective, who needs the information she has and is definitely attracted to Judith as a person on all levels, mind, body and spirit. As, together, they gather the clues to make their case, Judith realizes a lot about herself and the life she's been leading.I really enjoyed the writing here. It was easy to identify with the characters, and Isaacs has painted a true picture of that type of suburban living. At the same time, she weaves an elegant mystery with a wealth of detail. I'd recommend this for anyone mystery lover.
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
So good I wished it were longer,
By A Customer
This review is from: Compromising Positions (Mass Market Paperback)
I bought this book after listening to its sequel, "Long Time, No See" on tape on my daily commute to work. Like its sequel, "Compromising Positions" centers around the life and love interests of Judith Singer. In this book, Judith is in her mid-thirties, a bored housewife with a charming house and less-than-charming dud of a husband. Though the plot of this novel is Judith's involvement in a homicide investigation, I found that the real story was in Judith's marital dilemma. What do you do when you are a bright educated young woman who loves her children but longs for a career and adult companionship? What do you do when your husband works long hours, fails to provide you with the companionship you seek, tells you you've gotten fat, and treats you like the maid? In Judith's case, you have an affair with the lieutenant in charge of the murder investigation.Judith's investigation into Dr. Bruce Fleckstein's murder is cleverly written and filled with twists and turns. It was interesting, but not the best part of this wonderful story. I appreceiated the author's humor, and her wonderful characterization of Judith, her self-righteous husband Bob, her wickedly clever best friend Nancy Miller, and her law and order lover, Nelson Sharpe. This book left me wanting more. I identified with Judith immensely despite the fact that I do not yet have children and I work outside the home. Read this book for its deft humor, clever mystery and immensely likeable heroine.
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