Faces in the Pool
Material type:
- 9780749008550
- F/GAS
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Colombo | F/GAS |
Available
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CA00001438 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
The nation's favourite dodgy antiques dealer is in prison - again. So when Lovejoy is offered a way out by visitor Ellen Jaynor, he jumps at it. But it soon becomes clear there is a big catch to the mad-cap scheme, involving speed-dating, marriage and the perfect robbery. Just what has the loveable rogue let himself in for this time?Forced to earn his freedom, Lovejoy must apply his vast knowledge of antiques to the treasure trove held by representatives of the Forgotten White Tribes - or Faces in the Pool, as they call themselves. Remnants of emigrant peoples from around the globe, left behind by the receding tides of time as the rest of their race moved away, the Faces in the Pool wish to have their antiques verified, before selling them and gaining enough wealth to buy themselves back into mainstream society. But events soon spiral out of Lovejoy's control and underhand dealings leave him trapped inside a burning mansion, fighting for his life. Betrayed on all sides, everything appears lost, as even those closest to him seem bent on his ruin. Lovejoy's only hope is the mysterious World Champion Pole Dancer Erosa Sexotica, whoever she may be...
£7.99
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Publishers Weekly Review
In Gash's jaunty 24th Lovejoy mystery to feature the crooked East Anglian antiques expert with a weakness for women (after 2004's The Ten Word Game), Lovejoy accepts an offer of early release from prison on condition he work for a speed-dating service run by Laura Moon, a wealthy divorcee. Part of the deal, he soon learns, is to wed Laura in a ploy to bring her ex-husband, a confidence trickster, out of hiding. Lovejoy agrees, but before the ink is dry on the marriage register, a couple of his friends suffer fatal accidents. The rambling plot involves "white tribes," people who control fortunes in old jewels and curios that could potentially flood the antiques market. While Gash makes the British slang easy to follow for American readers and throws in plenty of authentic antiques lore, this dated tale with its often grating protagonist is unlikely to win the author many new fans. (Dec.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
Gash's Lovejoy is a character straight out of an eighteenth-century picaresque novel he lives by his wits, cavorts through an exhausting series of sexual escapades, and is always falling into and out of trouble. Lovejoy is a British antiques dealer and divvy, someone with an almost eerie ability to sniff out the genuine from the fake. Antiques represent his one true love. In the latest (the twenty-fourth in the series), Lovejoy is in jail for his latest scrape with the law, but he gets an early release when a divorced millionairess pulls some strings. The millionairess has strings for Lovejoy, too. First, as payment for his release, Lovejoy is ordered to join the divorcee's speed-dating agency. Then the real scam hits: Lovejoy is coerced into marrying the woman in order to flush out her ex-husband. The action careens along amiably, but what holds it together is Lovejoy's great knowledge of antiques, which he happily dispenses to the reader. High mystery-comedy.--Fletcher, Connie Copyright 2009 BooklistThere are no comments on this title.