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Carol Kaufman

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A psychologist and criminologist before evolving into a full-time writer, Carol Goodman Kaufman has published in multiple genres and virtually all media. Her work includes academic research (Sins of Omission:The Jewish Community’s Reaction to Domestic Violence, Basic Books), two long-running columns on food history (Worcester Telegram & Gazette and Berkshire Jewish Voice), short stories, and three children’s picture books. (Once in a Full Moon, Pirate Ships and Shooting Stars, and Detective Bears and Friends).

The First Murder (TouchPoint Press) is her debut novel.

THE FIRST MURDER Cover
MYSTERY & CRIME

THE FIRST MURDER

BY Carol Kaufman • POSTED ON April 2, 2024

In Kaufman’s mystery, a former New York City cop moves to a small village, where he’s soon embroiled in a friend’s murder case.

Queensbridge, Massachusetts, is a peaceful town—“a tiny Berkshire village” that its new chief of police, Caleb Crane, and his wife, Rachel, hope will be a quiet change of pace. They’re integrating themselves into the new community, setting down roots, and trying unsuccessfully to have a child. When Rachel’s best friend, Mary Jane Bennett, announces her own pregnancy, Rachel can’t help but feel jealous—but does her envy run deep enough to murder her best friend? That’s the question her husband must consider after Mary Jane is found dead at home, strangled by her own scarf in what’s quickly ruled an accident—an experiment with autoerotic asphyxiation gone wrong. Caleb doesn’t think she’d have taken such a risk, nor does he think she might have killed herself on purpose—but who wanted her dead? Kaufman writes in a close third-person perspective that occasionally breaks into Caleb’s internal monologue. The author quickly lays out the clues and potential murder suspects, who include Mary Jane’s seemingly innocent lawyer and environmentalist husband; her ornery, conservative father, who disapproves of his daughter’s choice of partner; Mary Jane’s close friend, who happens to appear on crutches the day after Mary Jane’s death; and an outcast who recently returned to his hometown looking for redemption. Kaufman also expertly spools out small details as Crane digs deeper into the case. The mystery is further enhanced by a running throughline about the story of Purim, and the recurring notion that things are rarely as they appear to be. It later becomes clear that Mary Jane’s death was not only a murder, but also that some of the suspects may be next on the killer’s list, and readers will be eager to get answers. Overall, the narrative is judiciously paced and shows Kaufman’s ear for realistic dialogue, and it will keep readers guessing until the final reveal.

An engrossing, thorny whodunit set in a small town with big secrets.

Pub Date: April 2, 2024

Review Posted Online: March 11, 2024

The First Murder

ADDITIONAL WORKS AVAILABLE

Detective Bears and Friends

Detective Bears and Friends tells in cheerful rhyme and colorful, whimsical illustrations about the names that some animal groups are called.
Published: Jan. 4, 2024
ISBN: 979-8986940236

Once in a Full Moon

Once a month a full moon rises in the night sky. But every time it does, this big gleaming circle has a different name! From January's Wolf Moon to June's Strawberry Moon to the Harvest Moon of September, in lively rhyme Once in a Full Moon tells the stories behind this monthly visitor, many of which come from Native American tradition. Richly colored full-page pictures illustrate the story that teaches both kids - and their adult readers - the reasons behind different names the brilliant ball in the sky has.
Published: Jan. 1, 2020
ISBN: 978-0578818443

PIirate Ships and Shooting STars

Whether on a sunny day or in blackest night, the sky holds wonderful things to see and explore. Use your imagination to see acrobats in a circus tent in the bright blue sky, and in the stars find Orion the hunter and Taurus the bull!
Published: Oct. 6, 2022
ISBN: 979-8986940212

Sins of Omission: The Jewish Community’s Reaction to Domestic Violence

In a congregation of devoted worshippers gathered for Shabbat services at the local synagogue, it may be difficult to accept how many wives go home with their husbands to ongoing physical and emotional abuse. In Sins of Omission, author Carol Goodman Kaufman offers a compelling investigation of the Jewish community's reaction -- or nonreaction -- to domestic violence. Concerned with the sins of the community more than the sins of the abuser, Goodman Kaufman finds that the Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform rabbis and community leaders are not doing enough and are not informed enough to help the abused women in their congregations get the support, protection, and guidance they need. Through her many insightful interviews with survivors of abuse, rabbis, and lay community leaders, the author takes a hard look at the Jewish community, its rules, regulations, and followers, and discovers the ways in which it helps and hinders victims of abuse.
Published: Jan. 1, 2003
ISBN: 978-0813340883
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