Mary Higgins Clark was inspired by the 1940s radio drama, Our Gal Sunday, about a country girl who marries a British aristocrat. In her version, it's an American aristocrat: The young and popular former President of the United States, who is married to a newly-elected congresswoman from a blue-collar background in Jersey City. And of course, this couple-who-has-everything solves crimes together.
The whole thing is very rich. And very white. Almost to the point of ridiculousness.
The book is a collection of four short stories.
The first is a straight-up cozy mystery, with an old friend famed for murder. It's fairly engaging, but the short length doesn't really give it the space it needs to develop false trails and red herrings, and the whodunnit turns out to be pretty much whoyouexpecteddunnit.
The second story is a kidnapping thriller with Sunday abducted by what appears to be an international terrorist organization. Standard damsel-in-distress fare, with a villain whose actions don't really make any sense, and you're (I guess) supposed to chalk all of that up to "well, he's crazy".
I liked the third story, which involved a very cold case and some international political drama involving a fictional Latin American country. It did rely a bit on male protagonist Henry Parker Britland IV being something of a child prodigy in the past (because of course he was), but the villains were fallible in ways that made sense, and the backstory was intriguing.
Last up was the best of the collection, a Christmas story involving a lost child and a kidnapping plot gone wrong. Again, interesting and fallible villains helped this, along with the fact that it did not fit as much int standard mystery/thriller plot tropes as the other stories do. It was charming and sentimental in a good way.
You'll probably get more out of this if you enjoy the Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous details that fill up the story. I appreciated the colorful descriptions, but not is the romantic way they are clearly intended. The rich sleuth couple has the vibe of the old Hart To Hart TV series, with he two main characters having a fun rapport and some witty dialogue. The balancing of real and fictional politics is handled well.