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Library | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... R.H. Stafford Library (Woodbury) | FICTION KEL | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Stillwater Public Library | FICTION KEL | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
From bestselling author Kellerman--crime writing's freshest new voice--comes a sinister and provocative thriller.
Author Notes
Jesse Kellerman was born on September 1, 1978 in Los Angeles, California. Before going to college, he took a year off to study at a men's religious seminary in Israel. He studied psychology, with an emphasis on evolution and antisocial behavior, at Harvard University and received a Master's of Fine Arts in theater from Brandeis University.
He has written numerous novels including The Executor, The Genius, Trouble and Sunstroke. He has won several awards for his writing, including the 2003 Princess Grace Award, given to America's most promising young playwright.
Jesse Kellerman co-wrrote bestseller, The Golem of Hollywood, with his father Jonathan Kellerman.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (3)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Greed gets Ethan Muller, a 33-year-old Manhattan art dealer, into hot water in Kellerman's superb third--stand-alone thriller (after Trouble). When reclusive artist Victor Cracke disappears, Muller winds up taking possession of the boxes and boxes of intense, disturbing drawings that Cracke left behind in his shabby Queens apartment. A favorable New York Times article helps fuel lucrative sales at an exhibit of Cracke's drawings at Muller's Chelsea gallery. Soon, though, Muller starts to receive cryptic, vaguely threatening letters. He also hears from a retired NYPD detective, Lee McGrath, who recognizes the face of one of the boys in a Cracke drawing as belonging to the victim of a 40-year-old unsolved murder.--That revelation turns Muller into an amateur detective as he attempts to discover how the dead boy's image-along with those of several other victims-made its way into the pictures.--Kellerman has a gift for creating compelling characters as well as for crafting an ingenious plot that grabs the reader and refuses to let go. Author tour. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Ethan Muller owns an art gallery in Manhattan's Chelsea; in his world, he's successful and connected. He acquires a treasure trove of many thousands of phantasmagoric, interlocking drawings created by a recluse who appears to have vanished. Ethan mounts a show that wows the art world, and then a retired NYPD detective tells him that the cherubs that form the drawings' center are the faces of boys murdered some 40 years before, crimes that were never solved. Ethan is drawn into the detective's search for the killer, and the resolution of the mystery is closer to home than he can imagine. From its first hip, cynical, snarky, confessional pages, this deftly plotted novel rivets the reader. It's a mystery, but like the best crime fiction, it is much more. It's a family saga of penniless German Jewish immigrants whose toil and determination make them American royals. It's a meditation on loneliness, genius, and the line between genius and madness. And it's a knowing, ironic, and at times, howlingly funny take on the art world. Kellerman, son of best-selling authors Jonathan and Faye, is a playwright, and he has a playwright's gift for creating fully fleshed, complex characters with distinctive voices. A must-buy.--Gaughan, Thomas Copyright 2008 Booklist
Library Journal Review
A cranky old artist disappears, leaving behind a treasure trove that eager dealer Ethan Muller is happy to exhibit-until it appears that the paintings may be evidence of long-ago murder. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.