The Art Thief
Books | Fiction / General
3.1
Noah Charney
Rome: In the small Baroque church of Santa Giuliana, a magnificent Caravaggio altarpiece disappears without a trace in the middle of the night. Paris: In the basement vault of the Malevich Society, curator Geneviéve Delacloche is shocked to discover the disappearance of the Society's greatest treasure, White-on-White by Suprematist painter Kasimir Malevich. London: At the National Gallery of Modern Art, the museum's latest acquisition is stolen just hours after it was purchased for more than six million pounds. In The Art Thief, three thefts are simultaneously investigated in three cities, but these apparently isolated crimes have much more in common than anyone imagines. In Rome, the police enlist the help of renowned art investigator Gabriel Coffin when tracking down the stolen masterpiece. In Paris, Geneviéve Delacloche is aided by Police Inspector Jean-Jacques Bizot, who finds a trail of bizarre clues and puzzles that leads him ever deeper into a baffling conspiracy. In London, Inspector Harry Wickenden of Scotland Yard oversees the museum's attempts to ransom back its stolen painting, only to have the masterpiece's recovery deepen the mystery even further. A dizzying array of forgeries, overpaintings, and double-crosses unfolds as the story races through auction houses, museums, and private galleries -- and the secret places where priceless works of art are made available to collectors who will stop at nothing to satisfy their hearts' desires. Full of fascinating art-historical detail, crackling dialogue, and a brain-teasing plot, Noah Charney's debut novel is a sophisticated, stylish thriller, as irresistible and multifaceted as a great work of art.
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More Details:
Author
Noah Charney
Pages
320
Publisher
Simon and Schuster
Published Date
2008-09-02
ISBN
1416550313 9781416550310
Community ReviewsSee all
"Despite a very intriguing premise, this book fell short. The plot was so hard to follow with location jumps within the chapters. Additionally, the author uses an excessive amount of French in which the reader left clueless about the dialogue. None of the characters are worth rooting for, and there is no sense of importance about the art either. There’s even characters who are so unimportant that they add to the confusion of the reader, but also to the confusion of other characters. This is not a book worth reading, especially if you are a fan of crime novels. 1/5 "