Suburban housewife and freelance investigative ace Andrea Stern and journalist and documentarian Kenny Lee return for their second soft-boiled case in The Self-Made Widow, a follow-up to the Edgar Award-nominated Suburban Dicks. This time around, the case lands even closer to home after the husband of one of Andrea's friends drops dead of heart failure. The only problem is, despite all evidence to the contrary, Andrea is convinced that Molly murdered her hubby, but all she has to go on is a hunch. At least until Kenny Lee re-enters her life, having received an anonymous phone call informing him that Molly did indeed kill Derek.
That Molly is guilty won't come as much surprise to anyone who's read past the title, or at least noted the numerous incongruities in the events that open chapter one and Molly's explanation of events (i.e. lies, lies, lies!) to the first responders. Readers will find themselves right on the same page as Andrea, with Molly suspect numero uno. The recently-widowed Goode's guilt is never in doubt, and The Self-Made Widow is less a whodunit than a howdunit and a whydunit.
Author Fabian Nicieza takes us through the investigation step-by-step, as Stern and Lee interrogate Stern's friends, the rich housewives of her suburban New Jersey community that she mockingly refers to as the Cellulitists (a mash-up of celluite and elitists), and dig into Molly and Derek's past, slowly peeling back the very many layers of conspiracy and murder. As a writer best known in comic book circles for co-creating Marvel's wiseass mutant Deadpool, Nicieza shines here with his witty banter, sarcastic dialogue, and wry observations on suburban existence.
The prose is crisp, but it's the character interactions that really keep the reader invested, at least aside from the intriguing murder investigation. If Andrea is a suburban housewife take on Sherlock Holmes, then Molly Goode is, without a doubt, her Moriarty. A detail-oriented perfectionist, Molly is smart and tack-sharp, having meticulously accounted for every facet of an investigation against her, including Andrea's involvement. Nicieza writes a really fun cat-and-mouse hunt, making the stakes incredibly personal as the investigation draws Andrea's own family deeper into Stern's quest for justice.
Although I generally prefer my mysteries more hard-boiled and violent, the soft-boiled Suburban Dicks became a fast favorite for me thanks to its wit and charm. The Self-Made Widow solidifies Nicieza as an author to watch for, and welcomingly fills the gap left by Veronica Mars' absence (God, I miss Veronica...). It's clear he intends on returning to Andrea Stern and Kenny Lee for at least one more case (hopefully more!), as he sets-up some changes in Andrea's dynamic to her community, friends, and family, which lay an interesting foundation for Nicieza to build upon in Book Three. Mark me down for more slain suburbanites, true believers!