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Old News

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"This is Ifkovic's eighth outing with Edna Ferber as sleuth, and he brings the characters of post-Great War Chicago to life: the accents, the clothes, the food, the traditions." —Historical Novel Society

A sweltering July in Chicago, 1923. Edna Ferber, now a famous short-story writer, is supposed to be researching the novel that will become So Big, her Pulitzer-Prize winner. With her mother, Julia, she spends the week visiting her mother's old childhood friend, Esther Newmann, who lives with her family on the edge of the bustling Maxwell Street Jewish marketplace.

But the awful specter of a scandalous murder fifteen years before suddenly haunts Edna. Leah Brenner, the woman confined to a mental hospital after stabbing her husband Ivan to death, is back home, sitting next door on her front porch. Horrified, Julia Ferber laments the return of a brazen murderer to the quiet street. But Edna, meeting the old woman, believes she was condemned for a murder she did not commit. Leave it alone, the Newmann grandmother Molly insists—"it's old news."

Life has moved on. Even Leah's children believe their mother stabbed their father. After all, she was found standing over her husband's body, blood on her fingertips. But no knife was ever located. As Edna probes into the Brenner family—grown children at war with one another, a flashy uncle who once wanted to marry Leah—Edna shakes up the street. Undaunted, she has an idea who the murderer is, but she needs an elaborate scheme to trap the killer. Another shocking death and a funeral give her the opportunity.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 9, 2017
      Set in 1923, Ifkovic’s middling eighth Edna Ferber mystery (after 2016’s Cold Morning) takes real-life author Ferber, who’s working on her novel So Big, and her mother, Julia, to Chicago, to visit an old friend of Julia’s, Esther Newmann. Living next door to Esther is the stunningly beautiful Leah Brenner, who recently returned home to Chicago after spending years in a women’s asylum because the authorities believed she murdered her husband, Ivan. Intrigued by the nearby presence of a murderer, Edna can’t help asking questions about that day in 1908, when Leah allegedly went mad and plunged a knife into Ivan’s neck. Edna’s snooping uncovers questions that have never been answered, such as what happened to the murder weapon. Edna, comfortable to be an unmarried professional woman, is an appealing narrator, but even her wry, observant humor can’t save the plodding mystery, with its tired plot device of the beautiful woman as pariah. Did Leah really kill Ivan? When the unsurprising conclusion finally comes, readers likely won’t care.

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2017
      Edna Ferber's eighth case finds her on the cusp of fame--though little does she know it, since she's stuck back in Chicago with her imperious mother and a long-ago murder case.Retreating in 1923 from her stressful stint on a Milwaukee newspaper, Ferber, already widely known as the author of stories for women's magazines, joins her mother on a weeklong visit to Julia Ferber's old friend and former neighbor Esther Newmann. From her first sight of Leah Brenner, the neighbor convicted of killing her husband, it's clear that this vacation will be anything but restful. Leah herself, released from a mental asylum and returned to the neighborhood 15 years after her husband, butcher Ivan Brenner, was fatally stabbed in the neck shortly after the couple's latest fight, comes across as gentle, fragile, and hospitable to Edna. It's the rest of her family that's the problem. Naturally, Ivan's brother Ezra, a Philadelphia lawyer also recently back in town, is convinced that Leah killed Ivan. But so are Leah's sister and Leah's children, financially successful Herman, vagabond poet Jacob, and twin sisters Ella and Emma. Even Esther Newmann and her son, Adolph, wonder what Edna hopes to gain by stirring up these ancient ashes again. And Detective Liam O'Reilly, when Edna looks him up to ask about his original investigation, is considerably less polite. The more time Edna spends in the sweltering neighborhood where she grew up, the more she wonders why everyone's so determined to keep this case closed. A lot of conversations, some heavily salted with Yiddish, that mostly reveal the same consistent bad feelings toward the convicted killer. It's nice that the publication of So Big is about to make the real-life heroine (Cold Morning, 2016, etc.) a major literary star.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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