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Masquerade
 
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Masquerade [Hardcover]

Walter Satterthwait , Satterwait
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Amazon

Walter Satterthwait writes richly detailed historical mysteries about everyone from Oscar Wilde to Lizzie Borden. In the well-reviewed Escapade, he introduced us to Pinkerton detective Phil Beaumont and his partner, a sharp and seductive Brit named Jane Turner. Masquerade brings this fascinating couple to Paris in 1923, where wealthy American dilettante Richard Forsythe and his German mistress have been found dead. The French police are calling it a double suicide, but Forsythe's mother has hired Beaumont and Turner to dig deeper. In between having amorous alliances, spotting the likes of Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and Ernest Hemingway on the street, and eating too many rich meals with a French policeman ("One can lead a horse to tournedos Rossini, but one cannot make him eat," this worthy sighs when Phil finally requests a steak, rare, with no sauces), Beaumont and Turner dip into a world of insidious aristocrats and dangerous drug dealers as they find out what really happened. Other Satterthwait pleasures in paperback: Accustomed to the Dark, At Ease with the Dead, Wall of Glass. --Dick Adler

From Publishers Weekly

Parallel stories told in the distinct voices of Jane Turner and Phil Beaumont (last seen together in Escapade) merge in this witty and beguiling mystery set in 1923 Paris. American expatriate Richard Forsythe, acknowledged dilettante and wastrel, is found dead in his hotel room with his German mistress, Sabine von Stuben. The police have ruled the deaths a double suicide, and the case is officially closed. But Richard's determined mother has hired the Pinkertons to delve into it, and Jane, a British operative who is placed undercover as governess to a different branch of the Forsythe family, gleans invaluable details from Richard's 18-year-old cousinAwho is quite smitten with her. Her wry and perceptive observations are penned to a British friend. Phil, a shrewdly observant American, narrates his side of the story in a straight first-person voice. A Pinkerton who can work equally well with corrupt Parisian police, smug aristocrats, violent drug dealers or his gourmand French counterpart, Phil produces information that definitely suggests that Richard Forsythe was murdered. The book is wonderfully rich in detail and atmosphere, offering riveting scenes in sewers and salons, as well as over-the-top cameos by Ernest Hemingway and Gertrude Stein. Best of all, when Phil and Jane finally cross paths, they provide some electrifying moments. This deftly told mystery, a delightful mix of high society and the demimonde, offers readers a terrific imaginary junket.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Pinkerton operatives Phil Beaumont and Jane Turner (Escapade, St. Martin's, 1995) search for the truth behind the supposed suicides of a rich American publisher and his German mistress in 1923 Paris. A welcome escape to an exciting time and place.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews

The official verdict on poet/publisher Richard Forsythe and his latest amoureuse, Sabine von Stuben, is that their deaths were the result of a suicide pact in their bolted Paris hotel room. But Richard's mother back in the States doesn't believe the official verdictshe's especially suspicious of the shooting of the hotel desk clerk soon afterwardand she hires the Pinkerton Agency to find out the truth. The Pinkertons, who don't do things by halves, send two operatives, experienced investigator Phil Beaumont, who'll read through police transcripts and question the witnesses, and novice Jane Turner, who'll travel incognito as nanny to Richard's cousins; but the company doesnt tell either one about the other. Since Phil and Jane have already met under other circumstances (Escapade, 1995), various complications ensue. The lazy if high-spirited detective work, however, is constantly upstaged by the cast of dragonish suspectsfrom Richard's man-eating widow to Sabine's former lover to an Agatha Christie look-alike who's been funneling donations to the infant Nazisand a nonstop parade of period cameos that include Ernest (``call me Ernie'') Hemingway (a skirt-chasing poseur), Gertrude Stein (olympian in her vanity), James Joyce, Erik Satie, Juan Gris, Pablo Picasso, Kay Boyle, Robert McAlmon, and some terrific French meals. A decorative, dizzying triflethe locked-room murder is solved with insulting casualnessthats chock-full of the stuff that made the Twenties roar. -- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Book Description

Set in "le jazz hot" Paris of 1923, the sequel to "Escapade" finds recourceful Pinkerton Phil Beaumont and ladies' paid companion Jane Turner investigating the death of a rich American publisher--along the way, running into such literary notables as Hemingway and Gertrude Stein.

From the Publisher

"[A] witty pen-in-check adventure." --The New York Times Book Review

"A complete delight...Filled with running ironies and inside gags." --The Wall Street Journal

"The only way to see Paris is the way that Walter Satterthwait invites us to see it in Masquerade: in the company of Gertrude Stein and Ernest Hemingway." --Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review

"Satterthwait does a fine job--a masterful job, one might say--with the historical scene, the literary figures, and all the elements of the traditional locked-room mystery." --Robin Winks, The Boston Globe --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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