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Eakins' Mistress: A Jamie Ramsgill Mystery
 
 

Eakins' Mistress: A Jamie Ramsgill Mystery [Hardcover]

James Bradberry


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 169 pages
  • Publisher: St Martins Pr (May 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312155182
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312155186
  • Product Dimensions: 21.1 x 14.2 x 2.3 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 318 g

Product Description

From Amazon

Add James Bradberry's name to that short list of writers who can create excellent mysteries set in the art world. The trick is to balance the expertise and obvious love of the subject with a story strong enough to carry along even those readers who think of art mostly as expensive wallpaper. Bradberry's Jamie Ramsgill is an architect and teacher who is in Philadelphia to apply for a job with a top firm and to try to bond with his irritating older brother. When the head of the firm in question disappears, and Ramsgill's sister-in-law uncovers an unknown painting by Thomas Eakins with scandalous overtones, the two events come together in a deft and enjoyable burst of puzzlement. Bradberry's previous Ramsgill book, The Seventh Sacrament, is available in paperback.

From Kirkus Reviews

The author's architect/sleuth Jamie Ramsgill (Ruins of Civility, 1996, etc.) wants to give up teaching and hopes to join the commercial Philadelphia firm in which his old friend David Laycutt is a partner. Jamie has also contacted his long-estranged brother Michael, a Philadelphia lawyer married to Cate, and the assistant curator at the Philadelphia Museum. Arriving for his job interview, however, Jamie finds that Laycutt has disappeared, leaving behind an envelope with an address in the town of Jim Thorpe, taking with him a gun and most of the company's cash. All of this has to do with a painting by Thomas Eakins, once owned by a Mrs. Addison, eventually sold by her to Laycutt and collector Harold Farber. It was first declared a fake, then pronounced genuine but copied at one point by painter Major Devero, who lives in Jim Thorpe. His blackmailing letter has led to Laycutt's sudden departure. Jamie takes it upon himself to follow Laycutt to Devero's address, but he's powerless to stop the carnage that ensues. As for the Eakins painting, the peregrinations of both original and copy are lost in a dizzying morass of confusion--a description that could equally apply to a well-written but exasperating story that loses credibility with each succeeding chapter. It's a challenge to carry on to the finish. Most readers won't. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

5.0 out of 5 stars A good work by a very talented writer, May 8 1997
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Eakins' Mistress: A Jamie Ramsgill Mystery (Hardcover)
Architect and teacher Jamie Ramsgill leaves Europe to return to
Philadelphia to work for a friend, commercial architect David Laycutt.
However, instead of starting his new job, Jamie learns that David withdrew
$75,000 from the company and is now missing. Jamie, who has been successful
twice before in solving mysteries, agrees to search for his missing friend.
...... At the same time, Jamie's sister-in-law has just authenticated as an
original, a portrait of his mistress by the renowned artist Thomas Eakins.
Jamie soon realizes that the painting and his friend's disappearance are
linked, but that does not help him find David. Instead, Jamie finds himself
under suspicion for a brutal murder that he thinks David committed. If Jamie
fails to uncover the truth soon, he may find more than his reputation
tarnished. He may find himself spending some time as a guest of the city Of
Brotherly Love.
....... EAKINS' MISTRESS is a fast-paced novel that actually employs two
mysteries: a Victorian age and a contemporary period. The characters are all
fun to observe and readers will especially enjoy following the exploits of
Jamie. However, there is a bit too many turns at the very end of the book
that unnecessarily complicates the story's wrap-up. Still, fans will enjoy
the further adventures of Jamie Ramsgill in what is after all a very
interesting reading adventure.

......Harriet Klausner
 Go to Amazon.com to see the review  5.0 out of 5 stars 

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