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By A Spider's Thread by Laura Lippman, 2004. Avon Books.
Private investigator Tess Monaghan uses the inter net women PI network, SnoopSisters. She wrote :
Dear S-Sisters,I have scanned three photos into the shared files, part of a missing-persons case. To say that the information is sketchy would be generous. Natalie Rubin, nee Peters, disappeared three weeks ago with three children----a boy, Isac, 9, and boy-girl twins, Efraim and Penina, 5. Police have ruled out foul play, but husband insists he never saw it coming and thinks ---- hopes----her flight may have actually been done for his benefit. What's the emotion for skepticism? I'll enter DOBs for all four into the shared files. No known aliases. No known anything, really. Assumption is they're traveling together, but who knows?
Anyone here know much about Orthodox Judaism? I'm curious because my client----Modern Orthodox, not Hasidic ---- refused to shake my hand. I knew, but forgot, about the prohibition against men touching women who are not their wives. Still, shouldn't the religion have evolved beyond this concept by now? What's the point in this day and age?
(P.32-p.33)
The suspense of chasing the mother and three children with Tess is so exciting.
But I am interesting much with the messages of the women PIs who found and chased the wife and children who are traveling around the one third area of USA. The SnoopSisters is as it were a virtual kaffeeklatsch , Lippman explains.
I don't know the word kaffeeklatsch. So I search it with Merram Webster.
Definition : an informal social gathering for coffee and conversation.
Origin : German, from Kaffee coffee + Klatsch gossip
First Known Use : 1888
If you have a chance to find this book, please get and read this suspense detective .