A Lovejoy novel. Plagued for advice by people with more money than divvying skill, Lovejoy sees his only hope as fleeing to France with horse-mad Almira. But before he knows it, he's involved in the biggest scam of all - buying every decent bit of furniture and silver that comes his way.
John Grant is an English crime writer, who writes under the pen name Jonathan Gash. He is the author of the Lovejoy series of novels. He wrote the novel The Incomer under the pen name Graham Gaunt.
Grant is a doctor by training and worked as a general practitioner and pathologist. He served in the British Army and attained the rank of Major in the Royal Army Medical Corps. He was head of bacteriology at the School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine for the University of London between 1971 and 1988.
Grant won the John Creasey Award in 1977 for his first Lovejoy novel, The Judas Pair. He is also the author of a series of medical thrillers featuring the character Dr. Clare Burtonall.
Grant lives outside Colchester in Essex, the setting for many of his novels. He has also been published in Postscripts.
I struggled to get into this book featuring an extremely randy Lovejoy (he beds more women than James Bond!). The final third was more engaging as the story actually went somewhere. Not too keen on Lovejoy hitting two of the female characters - maybe just a product of its time?
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/1976533.html[return][return][return]The plot, for what it's worth, involves Lovejoy getting embroiled in annd then helping to bust a ring of international criminals by travelling to Paris and Switzerland from his native East Anglia; his supernatural ability to tell real antiques from fakes is a key element of the conspiracy (and makes me wonder if I should classify the Lovejoy books as fantasy rather than non-genre; on a related note I lost count of the number of women who threw themselves at him, another fantasy element). [return][return]The question of real v fake in the antique world is central to Lovejoy's motivation; it is also the author's excuse for lots of trivia about antiques, most of which I have already forgotten, though the touching story of James Sandy of Laurencekirk, the disabled and bedridden craftsman who created wonderful things, will stay with me.[return][return]Anyway, not exactly profound reading, and quite a different tone from the TV series, but entertaining and I think I'll read a few more.
I had a hard time reading this book until I finally got new glasses. The font is small and I found It was interesting but since I was reading when I could I sometimes felt lost and not sure what was happening. It might be that the Lovejoy mysteries need to be read from the beginning so you know more about the main character.
Characters and twisted capers seem to fly in from left field, but the first person commentary of Gash's protagonist on antiques, women, and society at large make the majority of the books in this series worthwhile reading.