Monday, June 1, 2026

Here Comes the Judge; The Girl and the Gravedigger

 

"Here Comes the Judge" was a fun read. It was a teensy bit overstuffed with characters that I had a hard time keeping track of, but that's sort of how real life is too, isn't it?

Nancy Gardner lives in Newport Beach and is a local character (in the best possible way). Her father, Judge Robert Gardner, was also a colorful character in the early years of Newport. He wrote a few books about the history of the area as well as a passion of his, body surfing. 

Nancy and her dad wrote a book about a father/daughter private investigation team back in the '60s and had a publisher interested, but it didn't pan out. Nancy updated and revised the book and published it on Amazon, so it's only available as a Kindle book, but it was worth the nominal cost. 

On to the actual book! Samantha (Sam) Harris is in between jobs, so she's keeping herself busy by following her retired judge father, Jake, around town, dragging him out of bars. Jake loves his martinis and holding courtside at the local taverns, regaling the regulars with his stories. Then Jake presents Sam with an idea: they can start a private investigation firm. In fact, Jake already has a client. 

Sam protests, but ends up being dragged along for the ride. It starts off as some shady investment scheme, but people keep ending up dead. Sam and Jake travel all over: down to Mexico, over to San Bernadino (with Jake knowing every bar on the route, apparently. I would like to be Jake's best friend), in search of the truth. They have several close calls themselves, which don't seem to faze Jake, but Sam isn't as cavalier. 

Supposedly Nancy and her dad were going to make it a series if the first book did well, and I'm hoping for more. I like the characters and it's fun to read about places I know. 


Potzsch wrote a sequel to "Hangman's Almanac", which I enjoyed. I hoped there would be more. I liked this one, too. 

Rothmayer and Herzfedlt are back with another baffling case. A professor who is supposed to be in Egypt is found in the local history museum, mummified. At the same time, local young men are being murdered in the streets and brutally disfigured. And if that wasn't enough, the new zoo just opened and already one of the keepers has been killed. 

There was a lot going on, and Potzsch somehow managed to tie it all together and have it make sense. There wasn't a lot of Rothmayer in this one, but he came in just in the nick of time to help solve the various cases. It was an exciting ride.