Nancy J. Cohen’s Permed to Death is one of those books that start out fast and don’t slow down. In this, the first novel in her acclaimed and long-running “Bad Hair Day” mysteries, we meet main character Marla Shore in the styling salon she owns in Florida. One page later we get the dead body—the deeply unpleasant Bertha Kravitz, who dies right there in the salon. One of the big questions in amateur sleuth mystery novels is just why is this untrained individual trying to solve a murder? In this case, the answer is readily apparent. Marla was alone with Bertha, and had just served the coffee that killed her. Marla’s automatically a suspect, and the readers soon know she has a hidden reason (or two) for wanting Bertha gone. She needs to identify the real killer before the slowly constricting web of means, opportunity, and motive closes around her.
One way of describing the “cozy” mystery genre is to offer the novels of Agatha Christie as examples. That description actually works for Permed to Death, because one of the most effective things Nancy Cohen does in this book is provide a batch of potential suspects in a fashion similar to Dame Agatha’s. The suspects are all believable, and organic to the communities surrounding Marla and Bertha. As the story unfolds, we learn more about the friends, relatives, coworkers, and enemies (some Bertha’s and some Marla’s) who might have liked to see Bertha dead and Marla blamed. By the end of the story I had changed my main suspect several times, and still didn’t guess who it was.
This is a fine debut novel, and as of this writing the “Bad Hair Day” series has 14 books in it. So go spend some time with Marla in Florida. You’ll be glad you did.