PART OF THE SOLUTION: A MYSTERY
This week we’re headed back in time to 1978 to a cafe in Flanders, Massachusetts. We get to hang out with earth mamas, professors, handsome Indian guys, and one of these groovy people is a murderer. Let’s find out more in Part of the Solution.
Listen to an excerpt from Part of the Solution on the Books to the Ceiling Podcast.
Synopsis:

“Michelson’s first-rate mystery novel…makes for addictive reading.” âForeword Clarion Reviews
It’s 1978, and Jennifer Morgan, a sassy New Yorker, has escaped to the counterculture village of Flanders, Massachusetts. Her peaceful life is disrupted when one of her customers at the CafĂ© Galadriel is found dead. Everyone is a suspectâincluding the gentle artisan woodworker, the Yeats-wannabe poet, the town’s anti-war hero, the peace-loving Episcopalian minister, and the local organic farmer who can hold a grudge.
Concern for her community prompts Jennifer to investigate the murder with the sometimes-reluctant help of Ford McDermott, a young police officer. Little does she know that the solution lies in the hidden past.
Part of the Solution blends snappy dialogue, unconventional settings, and a classic oldies soundtrack, capturing the essence of a traditional whodunnit in a counterculture era. â
Praise for Part of the Solution:
“Sassy and soulful ⊠Part of the Solution is a gem of a mystery novel with an effusive cast, feisty language, sharp cultural insights, and a moving love story that transcends tragedy and time.”
~ Foreword Clarion Reviews, 5 Stars
“Michelson will keep readers guessing ⊠[she] defies expectations and invites contemplation about the nature of justice, and what it means to leave something in the past.”
~ Booklife Reviews, Editors Pick
“Michelsonâs strengths lie ⊠in her ability to re-create a specific cultural moment … The CafĂ© Galadriel and its eccentric patrons feel luminous and alive ⊠Michelson captures both the intimacy and the corrosive weight of long-held secrets.”
~ Kirkus Reviews
“Delightful, compelling, and unexpected.”
~ Midwest Book Review
Book Details:
Genre: Murder Mystery, Counter-Culture books
Published by: Torchflame Books
Publication Date: July 15, 2025
Number of Pages: 294 pages, Paperback
ISBN: 9781611536041 (ISBN10: 1611536049) Paperback
Book Links: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub | Torchflame Books
Read an excerpt:
Chapter One
Jennifer surveyed the cafĂ© with satisfied proprietary eyes. The freshmen at the two corner tables were an excellent sign. Having arrived in Williamstown the day before, having unpacked their carefully faded blue jeans and dispatched their carefully dry-eyed parents, having found their way to the registrarâs office and the bookstore with barely concealed terror, they had, no doubt, asked whomever they could find where, you know, it was happening. And they had been sent straight to CafĂ© Galadriel to nurse their bludgeoned intellects and wounded sexuality on Jenniferâs coffee for the next four years.
Around them, the unmatched wooden chairs and tables of the cafĂ© held the usual Monday afternoon crowd. Brownley (Philosophy) and Krasner (Sociology) sat over a game of chess. The Western Massachusetts Womenâs Anti-Violence Task Force occupied the round table in the center of the room. Samir Molchev, self-styled seeker of truth, was alone at a corner table reading Suzukiâs The Field of Zen. On the salmon walls, a pre-Raphaelite poster of the Lady of Shallot hung beside a poster of Che Guevara. It will be a great day, read the sign above Wendyâs bakery display case, when schools get all the money they need and the Air Force has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber. A tattered sofa occupied one wall of the room, the coffee table in front of it piled with backgammon sets and old copies of Ramparts magazine. A Bob Marley tape played on the stereo.
It was the moment of the year when the cafĂ© was moving into autumn, away from its summer tourist mode. Behind the cash register, Wendy was packing away the pitchers that had held iced tea and cold cider. Her summer uniform of paisley sun dresses had given way to long sleeves and flowing, ankle-length dresses. Short, with a rounded body and small face, Wendyâs size was belied by clothes that began at her shoulders and fell draping to the floor. Her curly, dark red hair followed the same line, rippling down her back and ending just above her waist. Jennifer, whose knowledge of poetry had outlasted work on her dissertation, would have occasion to wonder in the coming weeks if Wendy hadnât modeled herself on the Tennyson heroine behind her on the wall.
Jennifer herself was at her usual spot, the table by the Vermont Castings wood stove that, in the winter months, would reduce heating bills while contributing to what she thought of as the cafĂ©âs fake authenticity. She was dressed, as usual, in dungarees, Indian cotton, and the sandals she insisted on wearing until the snow fell, but her short summer haircut was growing out, and her thick brown hair was starting to take on its haphazard winter unruliness.
âI remember you guys,â Jennifer was saying. âYou were all practicing to be Leon Trotsky, and you polished your rhetoric and your steely gaze on girls like me who were stuffing envelopes for the cause.â
Beside her, Zachery Lerner grimaced.
âWe werenât really that bad. We were just showing off for each other.â
âWell, you could have fooled me. But anyway, I think itâs amazing that Williams College actually hired you to teach the impressionable young.â
Zachâs reputation had preceded him, not only at Williams but among anyone who remembered the decade just past: Berkeley in the late sixties, a first book on working class resistance to the war, three years in Leavenworth for refusing induction. Jennifer had recognized him, both by reputation and by the studious features that reminded her of all the budding revolutionaries she had always figured she would marry. His curly hair, already a premature salt-and-pepper, circled a rounded face with deep-set brown eyes and broad features. The lumberjack clothes that covered his burly frame would clearly win no friends among the board of trustees. His face, under horn-rimmed glasses, was that of a Russian Jewish revolutionary, which, at several generations removed, he was.
The front door of the cafĂ© opened with a loud kick. Annie McGantry, Flandersâ organic farmer and herbalist, wedged the door with her shoulder and pulled a trolley topped by a large, covered barrel through the doorway and into the room. She spotted Jennifer and made her way to the table. She eased the barrel off the trolley, made sure that both the trolley and the barrel were standing safely upright, and threw herself into an empty chair.
âGoddamn. Can you believe I ran out of barrels?â she greeted them. âYou should see the Kirby cukes this yearâitâs like they donât want to quit. I tell them, âCome on, how many pickles do we need? I need to finish canning the tomatoes, so stop putting out, you little sluts, and save some energy for next year.â Iâve already brought four barrels to the co-op. I canât start selling them for a weekâthey wonât be fit for eating. But at least theyâre out of my hair. Anyway, hereâs your barrel. I put them on your September bill.â
Jennifer groaned. âYou brought them here when I canât sell them for a week? Do you know how much weâve got piled up in the kitchen already? Susan Broady delivered all theââ
âI promise you youâre not as crowded as the co-op is. Iâm, like, buried. You know, I peed on the seeds before I planted them,â she reflected. âI think thatâs why everythingâs doing so well.â
Jennifer grimaced. âDonât tell me what you put in the brine, okay?â
Zach regarded Annie with curiosity. Annie was pretty, with strong, if currently grimy features, and she looked to Zachâs urban eyes to be precisely the kind of unwashed earth mother he would have expected to find in the Berkshires. He glanced briefly at the blue jeans stuffed into Wellington boots, the small breasts and narrow hips, the muscled forearms and dirty fingernails. He found himself impressed by the uncompromising look in the light grey eyes.
âAnnie manages the co-op.â Jennifer turned to Zach. âShe has a back room filled with medicinal herbs, so watch out if you get a rash in her vicinity. Three hundred years ago, she would have been burned as a witch.â
âSo,â Zach indicated the pickles. âTell me what you put in the brine. I love pickles. Or is it a secret old family recipe?â
âMy family? Shit. My motherâs only old family recipe was for spoon bread.â
âWell, my grandmother bought pickles in barrels on the Lower East Side. So, whatâs in the brine?â
âSalt, of course. Pickling spices. Apple cider vinegar.â
âMy bubbe would have been horrified at pickles made with apple cider vinegar. She would have put them in the same category as whole wheat bagels.â
Annie eyed him, suspecting that he was only half teasing her and not entirely clear about what was wrong with whole wheat bagels. Still, she liked his solidity, and she had always been partial to curly hair. He looked utterly unmovable. Annie took it as a challenge.
âShe never tried my pickles, then,â Annie drawled. Her voice took on a Southern mountain twang that did not seem quite in keeping with the ANIMALS ARE PEOPLE TOO bumper sticker on her pick-up truck. But it had, Jennifer knew, been her mother tongue. Annie was the offspring of a hard-drinking truck farmer and a deaconess in the Bethel Baptist Church, her small soul the preferred battle ground of her parentsâ adversarial marriage. In the end, her father had won. Annie had scraped the mud of Mount Haven, Arkansas, off her first pair of Birkenstocks, hitchhiked to San Francisco for the Summer of Love, and sworn she would never set foot in a church again.
âHoney, you come over one night, and Iâll teach you the art of making pickles, Annie-style. Hell, you can harvest the rest of the damned cucumbers while youâre at it. I could use the help, and you,â she regarded the intellectual paleness of his skin, âcould use some time in the great outdoors.â
There was movement at the corner table. Samir Molchev rose from his chair and placed his book in a cloth satchel embossed with Indian appliqué. Jennifer watched him come toward them, his tall body graceful in jeans and a long, white, collarless shirt.
There really was such a thing, Jennifer decided, as being too good-looking for your own good. Or anyone elseâs, for that matter. It was as if Samir knew that his body was perfect: broad, graceful shoulders, a soft swirl of hair just visible through his open collar. Soft black hair fell to his shoulders, framing pronounced cheekbones and black, slightly slanted Tartan eyes. All he needed, she thought, was a gold leaf halo and scarlet robes, and the resemblance to a Byzantine icon would be complete.
Beside her, Annie stiffened. âItâs late,â she announced. âI have to get back.â Annie rose, strode across the room and into the cafĂ© kitchen, and returned with a ladle and an empty mason jar. She raised the lip on the barrel, extracted half a dozen pickles with her fingers, and placed them in the jar. She ladled brine over them, screwed the top onto the jar, and set the jar in front of Zach on the table. âHere you are. A sample. Let it sit for a week before you open it.â
Samir came up behind her. âPeace, all.â He raised his hands in greeting and eyed Zach with curiosity.
Annie ignored him. Zach reached out a hand.
âIâm Zach Lerner. Good to meet you.â
âZachary Lerner?â Samir asked slowly. The black eyes blinked.
âYes, that Zachary Lerner,â Jennifer put in. âWilliams has stolen him away from Berkeley.â
âAnd you should hear the Eisenhower Professor of American Democracy on the subject,â Zach smiled. ââJust what we need, another draft dodger on the faculty!ââ
Samir regarded Zach in silence.
Annie stirred impatiently. âJen, I gotta go. Where should I put the barrel?â
Samir pulled his eyes away from Zach. âLet me get that into the kitchen for you.â
Annie narrowed her eyes. âDonât bother.â
âPeace, sister. Iâm just trying to help you.â
âIâm not your sister, and I donât need your help.â
âJust leave it, Annie,â Jennifer said hurriedly. âIâll get someone to help me with it later.â
Annie turned back to Jennifer as if the exchange with Samir had never happened. âThanks,â she drawled. âIâve got chickens wanting their dinner.â She nodded to Zach. âRemember, donât eat those pickles for a week.â
The three of them watched her has she grabbed onto the trolley and wheeled it purposefully out the door. None of them had any reason to suspect that forty-eight hours later one of them would be dead.
***
Excerpt from Part of the Solution by Elana Michelson. Copyright 2025 by Elana Michelson. Reproduced with permission from Elana Michelson. All rights reserved.
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Author Bio:

Elana Michelson is a New York City native who has encamped with her wife Penny to the Hudson Valley, where she writes, reads, gardens, and volunteers with local social justice organizations. After thirty-five years as a professor, she has put down a beloved career of academic writing (and student papers) in favor of writing murder mysteries. She earned a PhD in English from Columbia University, but gained her knowledge of the life and times of Part of the Solution from, well, having been there.
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