a. j. zerries the lost van gogh review

Have a picture of A. J. Zerries The Lost Van Gogh?, please send it to us.
 

Average Ratings
Value for Money9/10
Overall rating9.5/10
100% Recommended2 out of 2 Reviews

Review of A. J. Zerries The Lost Van Gogh

  • Review 1 of 2

By Linda Ettinger Lieberman on 27th May 2006

Linda Ettinger Lieberman's Ratings
Value for money8/10
Overall value9/10
yes Linda Ettinger Lieberman's recommendation

Good Points

Thrills and chills abound in this premiere from a new husband/wife fiction team.
Nail-biting suspense and action, especially the last 2/3 of the book.

Bad Points

Slow start but picks up its pace. It isn't The Da Vinci Code.

General Comments

The Lost Van Gogh by A.J. Zerries

The Lost Van Gogh, the inaugural work of husband/wife writing team A.J. Zerries, [ISBN 0765312506, May 2006, St. Martin's Press] is the latest in a series of adventure/mysteries which take place in the middle and latter part of the 20th century. This cosmopolitan thriller novel set in New York City, Long Island, Maine, Paris and Argentina provides us with the insider's view of the world of contemporary art collectors, dealers and famous museums.
A latter day Columbo, New York City Police Department Major Case Squad Detective Clay Ryder, former Navy SEAL, Ivy League educated art enthusiast, and a former employee of a highly regarded art dealer helps to solve several Upper West Side B & E's, a socialite's murder, and the delivery of a $50 million lost Van Gogh portrait to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Along the way, we learn the ins and outs of police procedure and politics as Ryder traces the Van Gogh painting's provenance, delving into the wholesale theft of artwork by the Nazis during their occupation of many countries in Europe during the waning months of World War II. Detective Ryder assists the Met with reuniting the painting of Monsieur Trabuc with the sole surviving heir of the original Holocaust-era owner, Dr. Rachel Preminger Meredith, an NYU professor of film studies at the Tisch School of the Arts.
The Met hastily mounts a striking exhibit entitled "The Empty Frame", which evokes the presence of looted artwork which have not been returned to the rightful owners or heirs while highlighting the return of Meredith's prize Grand Master. Action accelerates once the Van Gogh takes its place on the wall of the Merediths' Greenwich Village apartment and the professor refuses to sell it to any of the gallery directors pounding their way to her door. When Ryder investigates a series of events that befall the beautiful professor and her family, he uncovers the decades-long trail of a Nazi officer and others who will stop at nothing, including murder, to regain ownership of the Van Gogh masterpiece. Mossad agents, New York detectives, Maine policemen all combine forces to hunt down the master Nazi criminal in a breath-taking sequence of chases.
This is a first fiction work from the Zerries, but hopefully, not the last! Although it isn't The Da Vinci Code, for those who like art and culture, travel, intrigue and history all entwined with romance and social commentary, this is a great reading choice for a long daily commute or for a lakeside read this summer.

Linda Ettinger Lieberman's review has yet to be rated - Be the first!

How have you found this review?




Top Crime, Thrillers & Mystery Books
Dan Brown, Deception Point
Harlan Coben, Tell No One
James Patterson, Cross
Karen Chance, Touch the Dark
Karin Slaughter, Blindsighted
Kate Atkinson, Case Histories
Lee Child, Tripwire (A Jack Reacher Novel)
Mark Mills, Amagansett
Mary Higgins Clark & Carol Higgins Clark, The Christmas Thief
Simon Kernick, The Crime Trade
Requested reviews
Alexander McCall Smith, Tears of the Giraffe (No.1 Ladies' Detective Agency S.)
Alexander McCall Smith, The No.1 Ladies' Detective Agency (No.1 Ladies' Detective Agency S.)
Harlan Coben, Darkest Fear (A Myron Bolitar Novel)
Helen Fitzgerald, Dead Lovely
Ian Rankin, Rebus: The Early Years: "Knots and Crosses", " Hide and Seek", " Tooth and Nail" (An Inspector Rebus Novel)
James Patterson, Kiss the Girls
Lee Child, Die Trying
Lee Child, The Visitor (A Jack Reacher Novel)
Simon Scarrow, When the Eagle Hunts
Wilkie Collins, The Woman in White (Penguin Popular Classics)

Would you like to see a review that's not being listed?

View 14 more

Hot Stuff in Crime, Thrillers & Mystery Books
Crime, Thrillers & Mystery Books
  1. Bernard O'Mahoney, Essexboys,The Triple Rettendon Murders
  2. Helen Fitzgerald, Dead Lovely
  3. James Patterson, Sail
  4. Jodi Picoult, Nineteen Minutes
  5. Jonathan Hayes, Precious Blood
  6. Karin Slaughter, Fractured
  7. Kate Morton, The Forgotten Garden
  8. Kate Summerscale, The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher: Or the Murder at Road Hill House
  9. Linwood Barclay, No Time for Goodbye
  10. Robert Crais, Chasing Darkness
Web Results
Amazon.ca: Lost Van Gogh: A. J. Zerries: Books
Lost Van Gogh (Hardcover) by A. J. Zerries (Author)

www.amazon.ca
The Lost Van Gogh : A. J. Zerries : ISBN 9780765312501 - Buy.com
Excerpted from The Lost Van Gogh by Zerries, A. J. Copyright© 2006 by Zerries, A. J..

www.buy.com
The Lost Van Gogh : A. J. Zerries : ISBN 9780765312501 - Buy.com
A Van Gogh painting stolen during World War II mysteriously appears at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. While investigating the painting's past to determine its true owner, NYPD Major Case Squad ...

www.buy.com
THE MYSTERY READER reviews: The Lost Van Gogh by A. J. Zerries
The Mystery Reader? the latest reviews and news of current mystery novels.

www. themysteryreader .com