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The Day the Rabbi Resigned

Rabbi David Small Series, Book 10

#10 in series

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Rabbi Small has left the synagogue, but he's not done with sleuthing, in this "engaging" mystery from the New York Times–bestselling author (New York Newsday).
After three decades of dealing with temple politics and getting involved with more than a handful of murder investigations, Rabbi David Small is ready to retire from his synagogue in the cozy Boston suburb of Barnard's Crossing. For years, his secret desire has been to permanently take up teaching, but when he finally leaves the synagogue to pursue that dream, life at a university proves more dangerous than he thought.
Late at night, a notoriously ambitious college professor dies in a car wreck. The academic had been drinking heavily, but evidence suggests that the crash might not have been an accident. The local police are stumped and enlist the only detective they know whose astute eye and quick mind come from a higher power: Rabbi Small.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 1, 1992
      Politics--religious and academic--inform this welcome encore from the always entertaining Kemelman ( Conversations with Rabbi Small ), whose previous Rabbi Small mysteries have won him a legion of fans. Twenty-five years after coming to the Boston suburb of Barnard's Crossing, Rabbi David Small is considering retirement. But before he can get so much as one foot out of the pulpit, a local college professor dies in a car accident and the weary clergyman finds himself once again drawn from his own everyday concerns into more serious matters. A known gigolo, the professor had recently wed the unattractive niece of a college benefactor in a bid to ensure his tenure. At first the authorities ascribe his death to drunk driving, but as the tawdry details of the man's life become known, police chief Hugh Lanigan suspects foul play and enlists the help of his old friend and partner in detection, Rabbi Small. Moving between scenes at the synagogue with its ever-squabbling board of directors and the fiercely competitive tenure-track tableaux at the college, the narrative never flags as clues and suspects accumulate. Lively dialogue, dry wit and wonderfully authentic detail make this a sure winner.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      The penultimate book in the Rabbi Small series has the Conservative rabbi growing restless and open to new horizons. Academia, in particular, beckons him. Naturally a murder mystery pops up, but it is almost incidental in the rabbi's ruminations, though the story line and the characters are well fleshed out. George Guidall's familiar, friendly voice is the essence of reasonableness, and so is the rabbi; hence, they fit together well. Guidall controls his characters by volume and cadence, and though he is not particularly good at voicing female characters, his overall approach works for this mystery series. D.R.W. (c) AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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