Thursday the Rabbi Walked Out Audiobook By Harry Kemelman cover art

Thursday the Rabbi Walked Out

A Rabbi Small Mystery, Book 7

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Thursday the Rabbi Walked Out

By: Harry Kemelman
Narrated by: George Guidall
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About this listen

New York Times Bestseller: An anti-Semitic millionaire is murdered, and Rabbi Small must defend his congregants from false accusations …

Barnard’s Crossing, Massachusetts, is thriving. Every year, more young couples move to this cozy New England village to raise their families, and many of them join Rabbi David Small’s synagogue. But the town is jolted out of domestic tranquility when Ellsworth Jordon, the town selectman, is murdered. An outspoken anti-Semite, and one of the town’s richest and most powerful men, it seems like everyone had a reason to dislike Jordan. When he’s murdered, not even the rabbi is surprised.

Police suspicion falls on several upstanding members of the synagogue, so Rabbi Small endeavors to clear them the way only he can—with God at his back and the Talmud in hand. Surprises lurk at every turn as the rabbi narrows down the long list of suspects to find the killer.

©1978 Harry Kemelman (P)1998 Recorded Books
Mystery
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All stars
Most relevant  
This is the seventh and the series and Harry Kemelman keep them coming. Despite being 50 years old, I find the stories relevant. The characters are believable and I especially enjoy the descriptions of Judaism.

Another great rabbi small story

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Back when mysteries were being written before computers, DNA, cell phones, etc, authors had to create characters who solved them with the powers of the human mind alone. And among the best is the "Rabbi Who..." series, in which Rabbi Small applies the wisdom of his Jewish knowledge to perplexing situations that the local police dept cannot solve on their own. These are always fascinating because not only does Harry Kemelman write good stories, he weaves in a great deal of Jewish tradition and teachings, and I find that an extra bonus!

In this book, a man who is known to be an anti-Semite is murdered, and there is no shortage of possible suspects. Rabbi Small quietly goes about using his logical way of viewing situations to shed light on things, but the listener has had many different suspects to consider along the way.

I read all these books back in the 70's, but I love their recreation through the wonderful narration of George Guidall. Don't pass up this series due to its age--they were a great read at the time, and have lost nothing over the years! I really recommend them if you like your mysteries to be good whodunnits, light on violence, and combined with lots of woven in cultural interest.

Some of the older books are still great!

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As usual a well written and excellently performed mystery story. As usual the Rabbi quarrels with the Temple governing board but survives; I find this a little tiresome but the plot and general atmosphere are very good and not repetitive of previous stories.l

Another good Rabbi Small Story

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This is a delightful series from a couple of generations ago; set in the late '50s- early '60s, the reader is
led into a small town/suburb, where the women are mostly housewives, the men go to work and murders
still occur. The 'improbable hero' is the local rabbi, a scholar who isn't interested in being a community
leader, nor does he want to make a name for himself: he is a teacher, a scholar, an inspiration.
What makes this particular interesting is the conversation in the novel about bigotry, religion and
common sense. George Guidall makes this outstanding.. a visit to the past, human nature, and
the enduring wisdom of scripture.

A wonderful series, improbably hero

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