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Death Gets a Time-Out (A Mommy-Track Mystery)

(Book #4 in the A Mommy-Track Mystery Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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Book Overview

Between juggling lunchboxes, piano lessons, and baby-sitters, public defender turned stay-at-home mom Juliet Applebaum promises to help her famous friend clear her brother's name of murder. But what... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Such a perfect read for Moms!

For anyone who has yet to discover the world of Juliet Applebaum and the writing of Ayelet Waldman--you are in for such a treat! I find myself laughing out loud as I read this book, recognizing some many typical Mom-in-the-trenches moments while flipping pages quickly and reading late into the night due to its absorbing murder-mystery plot. (And as a Mom where you have to get up at the crack of dawn with your kids--I find that the ultimate testament to a great book!) Juliet's down-to-earth attitude and bitingly funny observations pervade Death Gets a Time Out. At various points Juliet is fishing her pregnancy test out of the toilet where she dropped it, wearing a dated 10-year-old dress to an elegant L.A. banquet and noting the dim lighting that benefits all the botoxed-enhanced women who seem to be in attendance, and careening between nursery school pick-ups and getting statements from murder witnesses. For me, balancing being the mom of a 9 and 10 year old with writing parenting books (most recently The Mom Book and Sign Me Up for Simon & Schuster), I find myself constantly torn between my 24/7 Mom role and being overwhelmed with the intensity of love for my kids, to wanting nothing more than to escape for a couple hours to the world of work and adults. Ayelet Waldman completely captures the emotional truths of being torn between roles. I have so little time to read that when I do, I want the book to be fabulous--and Ayelet Waldman's always are!

Time Out for a Great Book!

In _Death Gets a Time-Out_, Ayelet Waldman has finally hit her stride as a mystery writer. Her first book introduced mommy-track nosy sleuth Juliet Applebaum, featuring snappy dialogue, good intial scene-setting, but ultimately it didn't deliver in either plot or as a mystery. The second book well-captured the haze of the new mom, but when we found out whodunit, I had too many flashbacks to the first book. Book three broke chose a new type of murderer but lacked a sense of place and wasn't consistent in describing Juliet's kids.Here, she did everything right. If you enjoyed any of Waldman's three previous "Mommy-track Mysteries" then _Time-Out_ will delight you because it has it all; twisty plot strands that keep raising more and more questions, plenty of suspects and their deliberate misinformation. The characterization that made the first book so fresh, Juliet's relationship with her family and her musings on how she's not a mom who Does It All, is kept going in almost every chapter. And Waldman finally did some homework on Life in LA this time; Juliet appears to live there in this book. I loved the scene where she's on her cell phone to another cell phone and notices her caller's freeway is moving faster. I hope she gets a better copy editor to catch mistakes like "Cedar's Sinai" which show she doesn't live there or Elect X for "City Counsel" signs that meant too much time in court instead of on the neighborhood streets. This book is too good to have silliness like that staining it.Juliet's racking up the miles on the mom-mobile, driving from a recovery center for wealthy addicts to a religious center based on astrology, with stops in on her movie-star friend whose staff wear khakis. It was also nice to get to know her partner Al better in this book. So: does Juliet have any friends that carry over from book to book? Is this a lack in her character? Most moms find friendship invaluable, and Juliet is driving a carpool, so why do we never meet the kids or their parents? That's about the only thing lacking from Time-Out, and it probably would have made more sense to remove the carpool reference rather than have the rest of us moms wonder about it. After all, her kids go to two different schools, that could make carpooling difficult (or it would make it mandatory!) Having Juliet try to escape a mom who wants to know everything her perschooler said in Juliet's car while Juliet needs to go chase some bad guys would be the extra frosting on this delicious sundae of a book.

Hot on the Mommy-Track

I've read all of Ayelet Waldman's Mommy Track mysteries and this one may be the best yet. Juliet Applebaum is at work again, to clear the name of her best friend's step-brother. She must discover what went on in the past to figure out what has happened in the present. In the course of her investigation, she begins to wonder if she won't clear her friend's step-brother only to find out that her friend is the killer! The usual humor of Ms. Waldman's mysteries is in full flow here. Juliet is someone you'd love to have as a friend in the good times and would hope to have as a champion in the bad times.This is an exceedingly fun series.

Likeable heroine in a readable mystery

I was hooked as soon as I read page one, and had trouble putting down the book until the end. This is a tribute to Ayelet Waldman's skill as a writer as well as her likeable heroine. The ending is pretty easy to guess (well, except for the exact villain, and by the end it didn't matter which of two or three possibles was actually guilty). The heroine remains charming -- the kind of person you'd want to know as a neighbor, a "normal," unglamorous mom on the edge of the Hollywood scene. The plot elements actually seem a little stale: true/false memories, rehab center with psychiatrist who's a little too cozy with his patients, cult, ex-hippies with names like Polaris and Jupiter. Still, I read the book all the way through and I never once felt the urge to pull out the blue pencil and second-guess the writer or the editors. And we get some comic relief with vignettes of family life from the mommy perspective. Juliet's children are typical little terrors. Her husband, Peter, is almost too good to be true. This is a cozy mystery, deftly plotted, perfect for an escape, by a real pro. With fresher plot ingredients and a little more character depth, would be five stars.

Adorable mystery

She went from a public defender to a stay-at-home mom but now that her two children are older, Juliet Applebaum is going into partnership with Al Hockey, a former investigator for the public defenders. They are opening up a private detective agency housed temporarily in Al's garage until they bring in enough money to have a real office. At a Hollywood charity function, Juliet runs into her good friend Lilly Green, a famous actress who is in desperate need of her firm's discrete services.Lilly's stepbrother Jupiter Jones is accused of killing his stepmother Chloe, the wife of Polaris Jones who is the head of the Church of Cosmological Unity. Chloe was blackmailing Lilly and she asked Jupiter to help her put a stop it. She believes that Jupiter may have killed Chloe because of their close bond but when Juliet starts investigating she comes to believe that Jupiter didn't kill Chloe and that makes the real killer exceeding anxious to stop the investigation even if it means murdering again.Although the subject matter of survivor guilt and repressed memories is very serious topics, Juliet's interactions with her husband and children bring a note of much need of humor to the somber story line. Readers will be particularly tickled to realize that Juliet is pregnant again and her reaction to this unexpected event is truly memorable. DEATH GETS A TIME-OUT is darker in tone than the previous works in this series but it is just as good.Harriet Klausner
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