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September 7, 2015
At the start of Preston and Child’s solid 15th thriller featuring FBI agent Aloysius Pendergast (after 2014’s Blue Labyrinth), Pendergast, unusually for him, agrees to accept a private case. Someone broke into the lighthouse where sculptor Percival Lake lives in Exmouth, Mass., and cleared out his wine cellar, except for one case of a very rare vintage. For reasons that are unclear to Pendergast’s ward, Constance Greene, Pendergast agrees to travel from his Manhattan home to Exmouth, where his inquiries reveal that Lake’s wine cellar contained a hidden chamber and human remains. The truth behind the crime may be connected to local legends regarding a witch colony and a demonic figure known as the Grey Reaper. Meanwhile, Pendergast looks into the stabbing murders of a local attorney and a historian researching Exmouth’s past, whose bodies were marked with the so-called Tybane Inscriptions. The genuine scares take a while to come, but when they do, readers will be reminded of the violent horror of Relic, Pendergast’s debut. Agent: Eric Simonoff, WME.
February 29, 2016
The 15th fantastic adventure of eccentric, brilliant Special FBI agent Aloysius Pendergast finds him and Constance Greene, his lovely young ward, leaving their Manhattan mansion for Exmouth, Mass., on a case unrelated to the agency—the theft of a wine cellar. This basic bit of sleuthing leads to much more: a corpse in a hidden chamber, additional murders, a colony of witches, and an unstoppable, homicidal creature that is thought to exist only in local lore. Over the years, Auberjonois has developed the perfect voice for Pendergast—seasoned, aristocratic, Southern, and, when dealing with a bully like Exmouth’s police chief, irritatingly arrogant. Auberjonois’s version of Constance, who is having difficulty hiding her desire for her older mentor (and he for her), is acceptable, but if the authors continue to expand her participation in these thrillers, a younger, female co-reader may be advisable. A Grand Central hardcover.
Starred review from November 1, 2015
Agent Pendergast is back! Taking on a case involving a stolen wine collection would seem to underutilize his superior detective wizardry, but the pay is a bottle of priceless wine. How can he resist? He and his ward Constance head to the tiny town of Exmouth on the rocky Massachusetts coast. Examining the scene of the crime shows that more than wine was stolen from that particular cellar. As Pendergast and Constance investigate the theft, a visiting historian is murdered. Odd symbols linked to witchcraft are carved in unusual places, including the historian's body. A village legend of witches escaping Salem in the 1690s is only one of the puzzles deepening the mystery. Preston and Child's (Relic, Blue Labyrinth) famous agent believes the legends are red herrings. Even when the mystery is solved, it seems that some small-town secrets are deeper than even Aloysius Pendergast had realized. VERDICT Anyone who enjoys deep intrigue with a historian's viewpoint or a touch of macabre or gothic horror will love this adventure. New readers will be hooked and scrambling to catch up with the first 14 books. Die-hard fans will add this to their must-read lists. [See Prepub Alert, 5/11/15; November LibraryReads Pick.]--Elizabeth Masterson, Mecklenburg Cty. Jail Lib., Charlotte, NC
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
June 1, 2015
Special Agent Aloysius Pendergast is back for a 15th outing, and here's a quote to whet your appetite, evidently tossed by Pendergast at a small-town police chief who lacks class: "I commend you on your poesy. But you seem to forget that a lady is present. Perhaps your mother should have applied the soap treatment more frequently to your rather orotund mouth." With a 250,000-copy first printing.
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
September 1, 2015
Amid the salt marshes near Exmouth, Massachusetts, FBI Special Agent Aloysius Pendergast finds an antique medallion of Morax, a demon. Is there a connection to the deliberate sinking of the cargo ship Pembroke Castle by desperate town folk in 1884? In Preston and Child's (Blue Labyrinth, 2014, etc.) latest, renowned sculptor Percival Lake asks the weird and wily Pendergast to find his looted wine collection. Oddly, the thieves left behind a case of the rarest vintage, Chateau Haut-Braquilanges '04. Intrigued, Pendergast and his ward, Constance, drive to seaside Exmouth, where they meet an incompetent police chief who's overlooked a skeleton long ago walled up in Lake's wine cellar. Pendergast discovers the hidden skeleton is linked to a missing suite of flawless rubies, the Pride of Africa. In the "lean winter" of 1883-84, featuring disastrous weather caused by a faraway volcanic eruption, townspeople doused the lighthouse and lured Pembroke Castle, carrying the rubies, aground. The grounding and what followed became an atrocity shadowing Exmouth history. Oenophiles will shudder as the wine theft turns sideshow after a historian tracing the shipwreck and a local attorney are killed. Both have "TYBANE" carved into their corpses. Those new to the series get no back story on Pendergast, not on FBI assignment in this case, or Constance, but the book is entertaining, spiced up with arcane words like "desuetude" and quirky descriptions-a body found with a crab "cowering in the comb-over." Employing Chongg Ran meditation and a Les Baer .45, Pendergast is an appealingly quirky hero, as when he remarks of Moby-Dick, "I, myself, am not fond of animal stories." Pendergast is a modern Sherlock Holmes, albeit one preferring absinthe to cocaine. The conclusion of this compelling two-prong mystery assures another crime conundrum is sure to wash ashore.
COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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