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You are looking at: Writings: Long Time No See
Long Time No See
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Judith Singer is back! After twenty years Susan Isaacs brings us back the
heroine from Compromising Positions, her first and most beloved novel and
returns to a great suspense story set in suburbia. Judith's life has changed.
She now has her doctorate in history. Her workaday hours are spent at St.
Elizabeth's College, mostly squandered in history department shriek-fests. She
is also a widow. Her husband Bob died one half-day after triumphantly finishing
the New York City Marathon in four hours and twelve minutes. And although twenty
years have passed without seeing him, she still cannot get her former lover,
Nelson Sharpe of the Nassau County Police Department, out of her system.
With Courtney Logan's dramatic disappearance, all eyes
turn instantly toward her husband, Greg Logan, son of Long Island mobster Philip
"Fancy Phil" Lowenstein. But since there is no body, there is no
arrest. Then, in the less-than-merry month of May, Judith comes home from work,
turns on the radio, and hears the Logans' pool man telling a reporter that he
opened the pool and found . . . a raccoon? Not quite. "I see, you know,
it's a body! Jeez. Believe it or not, I'm still shaking." The woman in the
pool turns out to be Courtney, and now it's officially homicide. And Judith
comes alive! She offers her services to the police's chief suspect, Greg Logan,
but he shows her the door, thinking her just another neighborhood nut. But his
father isn't so sure: Fancy Phil may have other plans for her.
Long Time No See is Susan Isaacs at her wickedly
observant best. With razor-sharp wit and an irresistible mystery, she brings us
back in touch with an engaging, endearing and irreverent heroine we haven't seen
in far too long.
Excerpt
On an unseasonably warm Halloween night, while I was reading a snappy treatise
on Wendell Willkie's support of FDR's war policies and handing out the occasional
bag of M&M's to a trick-or-treater, the fair-haired and dimpled Courtney
Logan, age thirty-four, magna cum laude graduate of Princeton, erstwhile
investment banker at Patton Giddings, wife of darkly handsome Greg, mother of
five-year-old Morgan and eighteen-month-old Travis, canner of peach salsa, collector
of vintage petit point, and ex-president of Citizens for a More Beautiful Shorehaven
vanished from Long Island into thin air.
Odd. Upper-middle-class suburban women with Rolexes and biweekly
lip-waxing appointments tend not to disappear. Though I had never met her, Courtney
sounded especially solid. Less than a year before, there had been a page one
feature in the local paper about her new business. StarBaby produced videos
of baby's first year. "I thought it would succeed because I knew in my
heart of hearts there were thousands just like me!" Courtney was quoted
as saying. "It all started when Greg and I were watching a video we'd made
of Morgan, our oldest. Fifteen minutes of Morgan staring at the mobile in her
crib! A beautiful, intelligent stare, but still... After that, another fifteen
of her sucking her thumb! Not much else. Suddenly it hit me that we'd never
taken out the videocam for Travis, our second, until he was six months old!"
(I've never been able to understand this generation's infatuation for using
last names as first names. Admittedly it's a certain kind of name: you don't
see little Greenberg Johnsons gadding about in sailor suits.) Anyhow, Courtney
went on: "I was so sad. And guilty! Look what we'd missed! That's when
I thought, it would be so great if a professional filmmaker could have shown
up once a month and made a movie starring my son!"
Though not unmindful of the Shorehaven Beacon's aggressively
perky style, I sensed Courtney Bryce Logan was responsible for at least half
those exclamation points. Clearly, she was one of those incorrigibly upbeat
women I have never been able to comprehend, much less be. She'd left a thrilling,
high-powered job in Manhattan. She'd traded in her brainy and hip investment-banking
colleagues for two tiny people bent on exploring the wonders inside their nostrils.
And? Did even a single tear of regret slide down her cheek as she watched her
children watching Sesame Street? Was there the slightest lump in her
throat as the 8:11, packed with her Dana Buchman–suited contemporaries, chugged
off to the city? Nope. Apparently, for can-do dames like Courtney, being a full-time
mom was full-time bliss. Ambivalence? Please! Retirement was merely a segue
into a new career, motherhood, another chance to strut their stuff.
However, what I liked about her was that she spoke about Shorehaven
not just with affection but with appreciation, with familiarity with its history.
Well, all right, with its myths. She mentioned to the reporter that one of the
scenic backgrounds StarBaby used was our town dock. She said: "Walt Whitman
actually wrote his two-line poem ‘To You' right there!" In truth, Courtney
was just perpetuating a particularly dopey local folktale, but I felt grateful
to her for having considered our town (and our Island-born poet) important.
I think I even said to myself, Gee, I should get to know her.
Well, I'm a historian. I have inordinate warmth for anyone who invokes the past
in public. My working hours are spent at St. Elizabeth's College, mostly squandered
in history department shriek-fests. I am an adjunct professor at this alleged
institution of higher learning, a formerly all-female, formerly nun-run, formerly
first-rate school across the county border in the New York City borough of Queens.
Anyhow, for two and a half seconds I considered giving Courtney a call and saying
hi. Or even Hi! My name is Judith Singer and let's have lunch. But like most
of those assertive notions, it was gone by the end of the next heartbeat.
Speaking of heartbeats ... Before I get into Courtney Logan's
stunning disappearance and the criminal doings surrounding it, I suppose a few
words about my situation wouldn't hurt. I am what the French call une femme
d'un certain âge. In my case, the âge is fifty-four, a fact that
usually fills me with disbelief, to say nothing of outrage. Nonetheless, although
I still have the smooth olive skin, dark hair, and almond-shaped eyes of a mature
extra in a Fellini movie, my dewy days are over. My children are in their twenties.
Kate is a lawyer, an associate in the corporate department of Johnson, Bonadies
and Eagle, a Wall Street firm whose founding partners drafted the boilerplate
of the restrictive covenants designed to keep my grandparents out of their neighborhoods.
Joey works in the kitchen of an upscale Italian deli in Greenwich Village making
overpriced mozzarella cheese; he is also film critic for a surprisingly intelligent,
near-insolvent Web 'zine called night.
As for me, I have been a widow for two years. My husband, Bob,
the king of crudités, flat of belly and firm of thigh, a man given to barely
suppressed sighs of disappointment whenever he saw me accepting a dessert menu
from a waiter (which, okay, I admit I never declined), died at age fifty-five,
one-half day after triumphantly finishing the New York Marathon in four hours
and twelve minutes. One minute he was squeezing my hand in the emergency room,
a reassuring pressure, but I could see the fear in his eyes. As I squeezed back,
he slipped away. Just like that. Gone, before I could say, Don't worry, Bob,
you'll be fine. Or, I love you, Bob.
Except when the love of your life actually isn't the love of your life, the
loss still winds up being devastating. Golden memories? No, only vague recollections
of passionate graduate-school discussions and newlywed lovemaking fierce enough
to pull the fitted sheet off the bed. Except those times had blurred in direct
proportion to the length of the marriage, and after more than a quarter century
together, Bob and I had wound up with sporadic pleasant chats and twice-a-month
sex that fit neatly between the weather forecast and the opening credits of
Nightline...
Review Comments:
by Maureen Corrigan, NPR Fresh Air
"Isaacs does it again: skewering the pretensions of upscale suburbanites and in a tender, funny romance."
- Kirkus *Starred Review*
"The 20 years between Isaac's bestselling Compromising Positions and this second book to feature amateur sleuth Judith Singer have not affected the author's talent for snappy dialogue and astringent assessments of cant and pretension."
- Publishers Weekly (boxed review)
"Jam-packed with witty exchanges of dialogue, wry observations and Judith's entertaining foibles, the book is good fun. Crime in the suburbs of Nassau County may never be the same again."
- The Boston Globe
"Hilarious satire of suburbia."
- People Magazine
"Old friends, a former lover, and some quirky new characters populate Judith's world and showcase Isaac's sharp, often satirical style. The familiar mix of murder, humor, and wry social observation will delight her many readers."
- Library Journal
"This long-awaited sequel to the best-selling comic mystery Compromising Positions (1978) reintroduces feisty Long Islander Judith Singer...A gripping plot with skillfully rendered secondary characters and plenty of tart humor make this sequel every bit as entertaining as its predecessor."
- Booklist
"The kind of book you follow people around with, saying "Wait, wait! Just listen to one more line. Listen to this!" Intimate, irreverent and revealing, this is girl talk at its best. You don't need to have read Compromising Positions to love this book."
- The Washington Post
"...what made Judith such fun in the first place were her wit and her wiles, and the years have been kind to both."
- Entertainment Weekly
"I can think of no other novelist - popular or highbrow - who consistently celebrates female gutsiness, brains and sexuality. She's Jane Austen with a schmear."
- Maureen Corrigan, "Fresh Air," National Public Radio
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