Publisher's Weekly Review
Kahn helps readers to a full serving of Judaic wit and wisdom in this follow-up cozy to Fax Me a Bagel. This time the Eternal, Texas, rabbi's widow, Ruby Rothman, is caught up in a temple fund-raiser--selling frozen, reduced-fat matzo balls, which are being stored in the Center for Bodily Movement, the town's new gym. But when a fitness trainer is found dead behind the center with a thawed matzo ball in his pocket, Ruby gears up to help her friend police Lt. Paul Lundy investigate. As she noses around, the temple's rabbi falls madly in love with the center's spiritual adviser, just one complication in an increasingly convoluted and confusing plot. Before Ruby can warn the rabbi of her suspicions that something's not kosher at the center, the two are drugged and left to freeze in the center's walk-in refrigerator. After escaping by building a fire that alerts authorities, Ruby is now even more suspicious about the center and decides to go all out to discover its secrets. Risking her life and those of others, she uncovers murderers, illegal drugs and a smuggling scheme, never for a moment losing her sense of humor and sharp eye for the absurd. This is chicken soup for the funny bone, a bit overdone but hearty all the same. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
of any real satiric bite, just as she robs readers of the chance to find out what really went on at Eternal's Ecumenical Diet Seder.
Library Journal Review
Ruby Rothman, widow of Eternal's (TX) previous rabbi (Fax Me a Bagel), runs a bagel bakery and a software consulting business while fending off the attentions of the new rabbi. In addition, the outrageous Essie Margolis, who owns half-interest in the town's only gym, enlists her aid in a fundraiser involving low-fat matzo balls, an ecumenical seder meal, and a nearby posh fitness farm. As if that weren't enough, someone murders the gym's personal trainer. The resulting confusion is a perfect mask for Ruby's breathless and somewhat ditsy sleuthing. Good for a few chuckles. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.