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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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<text id=93TT0152>
<title>
Aug. 09, 1993: Reviews:Books
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Aug. 09, 1993 Lost Secrets Of The Maya
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOOKS, Page 59
A Prize On the Lam
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By AMELIA WEISS
</p>
<qt>
<l>TITLE: After All These Years</l>
<l>AUTHOR: Susan Isaacs</l>
<l>PUBLISHER: Harpercollins 343 Pages; $23</l>
</qt>
<p> THE BOTTOM LINE: Isaacs creates a suburban detective who, though
no tanned beauty, is perfect for the beach.
</p>
<p> At 3:30 in the morning, Rose Meyers, a middle-aged Jewish English
teacher who can't sleep, wanders down to the kitchen of her
ritzy Long Island home to grab some nonfat yogurt and trips
over the body of her estranged husband, the millionaire Richie,
stabbed through the heart with a carving knife from Williams-Sonoma.
Because he cheated on Rosie for 25 years and then dumped her,
some might say the bum deserved every stainless-steel inch.
Nevertheless, Rosie tries to pull the knife out of Richie's
body. With hers the only fingerprints on the murder weapon,
and plenty of reasons to want to see the stinker dead, Rose
Meyers, mother of two, becomes suspect No. 1.
</p>
<p> Envisioning a life spent in the prison library at Bedford Hills,
"in the company of women who do not care about Jane Austen,"
Rosie goes on the lam to find the murderer. Was it Richie's
old partner Mitch, so antisocial he orders his pizza by fax?
Or Richie's new girlfriend Jessica, the blond M.B.A. with the
six-figure salary and no cellulite? (So why wasn't Jessica found
with a kitchen knife in her chest?) Was it Rosie's Waspy neighbor
who makes brioche from scratch, using the seven-hour classic
recipe (no freezing the dough)? Or Richie's sister Carol, "Our
Lady of the Bikini Wax"? Rosie, the last-to-know wife, vows
to get the answers first. A woman whose last task as a civilian
was to grade papers on "The Gamut of Love in Pride and Prejudice"
becomes an adventurer.
</p>
<p> She has a night of wild sex with a former pupil (and, boy, does
she teach him a thing or two!). She recharges an old romance
with a fabulously wealthy financier. She eludes the entire Nassau
County police department. And, oh, yes, she catches the killer.
Isaacs' heroines are never the usual trophy wives (she can't
make a silk purse out of a Coach bag); instead they are a prize
greater than rubies. In the fight against women with skinny
thighs and no love handles, they always win (hence the fantasy
quality of Isaacs' fiction). Accents from Queens and Brooklyn
may flavor their speech, but they are aristocrats to their wisecracking
bones, and woe to the Richies, those slobs, who can't appreciate
them. Because, in her fictional universe, Isaacs plays God,
her vengeance is swift and funny, and her heroines live happily
ever after.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>