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Wednesday, April 19, 2023

A Lesson in Woo-Woo and Murder

 By David Unger, PHD


KDP     2023

232 pages     Mystery/Humor

A Lesson in Woo-Woo and Murder is the ninth “lesson” book by psychologist, David Unger. Surprisingly, the main protagonist of the book is a psychologist named David Unger. I had read several pages before I said to myself, “Wait, Who is telling this woo-woo story?” I had to start the book all over again. Apparently the main protagonist in all of David Unger’s books is aah…David Unger.

Because this is a tricky book to review, I will refer to the publisher’s synopsis to get started on this review:

David’s chakras are stimulated and he takes a skeptical step into the unknown when he’s asked for support at the Santa Monica Whole Life Expo – bad juju is coming, and positive therapeutic auras are required. Murder soon spoils the cosmic karma, and with the posse on hand to spice up the mystic mix, David’s sleuthing leads him to places he’s never been before, and most likely won’t return to.
But David is distracted – Nova, the Love Doctor, puts the “oo” in his personal woo-woo, and when a psychic foretells of romance in his future, he all but enters a different dimension. David’s special brand of voodoo-therapy-magic has never been more at home, but can he overcome his super Nova distraction for long enough to unmask the killer before anyone else gets hurt?

Not having read any of the ‘Lesson’ books by David Unger, I had no idea what I was getting into. First, the book takes place in 1985 when a “Whole Life Expo” was a “New Age, spiritual, natural health, conscious living, metaphysical, extraterrestrial, enlightening hodgepodge of vendors, speakers, and snake-oil purveyors.” David, the hero of the story, has never been to a Whole Life Expo, nor have I. After reading the book, I’m not sure I would have gone, because there is a lot of woo-woo going on at the Expo and a lot of very weird characters. Very shortly, three of the vendors are killed, and David’s curiosity gets the best of him.

David has already solved at least eight murders in previous books  with a certain amount of his karma, and the karma is very evident in the woo-woo murders as he stumbles along, trying to solve these new murders that he has indeed stumbled into. He can’t help himself, as he pursues Nova, the love doctor, at the same time he is trying to solve the mystery.

The chapters are really short and contain a lot of cringe-worthy humor. Frankly, it was the short chapters and the humor that kept me reading. The plot, in itself, is not really enough. Several times I caught myself reading and thought, “Why am I doing this?” Although not very enlightening, A Lesson in Woo-Woo and Murder is a lot of fun. It would be a perfect airplane read or a good audio book for a long ride. Fun without taking up too much intellect or concentration other than remembering the names of a lot of strange characters.

As I read, I kept thinking that David Unger must be having a really good time writing these novels, solving these crazy crimes, all the while thinking up silly jokes to include in the chapters. He has another book coming out soon, A Lesson in Dogs and Murder.

A Lesson in Woo-Woo and Murder is coming out in two weeks. Look for it. You will have a lot of fun.

David Unger PHD’s website.  On his website is an audio recording recalling how he got into the humor/mystery writing business in the first place.

1 comment:

David Unger said...

Thank you Miriam for you review I do, indeed have a really good time writing the series. You might be interested to know that George Bush and Bill Clinton listed Kinky Friedman as one of their favorite authors. Kinky is an irreverent country western singer who wrote 17 books in a mystery series where he was the main protagonist, although he relocated himself from Texas to Greenwich Village.
Take care,
David