Rochelle Krich has written an entertaining detective mystery story with her latest Molly Blume novel of “Now You See Me…: a novel of suspense.” We continue from previous novels to learn about Molly’s Orthodox Jewish life as she balances her new marriage (to a rabbi) with her family, literary, and journalistic obligations, while still managing to feed her insatiable thirst for investigating crimes in present-day Los Angeles. If one didn’t already enjoy the mystery plot, the reader would, nevertheless, find the picture of everyday Jewish Orthodox life worth the read. A helpful glossary of Jewish terms helps to aid those readers who are not acquainted with Jewish culture, which is needed in order to fully appreciate the plot and the characters.
The story begins with Molly on an author tour for her latest true crime story publication. Against her better instincts, she agrees to inquire into the disappearance of a young Jewish girl who may or may not have gone off with an Internet predator. The girl’s family is not only worried about their daughter’s safety, but also what it might mean to their entire family if the story becomes common knowledge in the close-knit Jewish community of Los Angeles where even the suggestion of a scandal could affect an entire family’s reputation and future. A series of clues leads Molly in one direction and then another, and the reader really does not know the solution of the mystery until the last moment. The question, however, is not whether the mystery is solved, but rather whether the reader cares. Krich has created and developed an interesting group of characters that all play a part either in the main story, or in the sub-stories that fill out what could easily have been a group of cardboard characters in a predictable mystery. I liked the book and found it to be a nice change of pace from other mysteries with the funny and not-so-funny pictures of life as a Jew in modern Los Angeles. While I haven’t had the same life as Molly, I have to admit that I related to her enjoyment of including food in just about every social interaction—who wouldn’t? I also found her description of adolescent life disturbingly on target and well researched. Her descriptions of the Los Angeles area were on target.
Read this book when you want to escape from your own world and find out about another. The pace is fast and you can finish it quickly—and then you will begin to wait for the next installment of “Life with Molly.”