Tag Archives: art theft

Review: Quicksand, by Gigi Pandian

Book cover in purple and tan, featuring the title, Quicksand, and the author's name, Gigi Pandian. The main image is a hand-drawn village with what looks like a church and multi-storey buildings in an older style. There's also an empty picture frame and an open book with text and illustrations.

Quicksand, by Gigi Pandian (Gargoyle Girl Productions, 2014)

Historian Jaya Jones becomes a pawn in a criminal mastermind’s complex plan to rob the Louvre in Paris—and there’s far more at stake than she’s been told. On the plus side, she’s reunited with her mysterious sort-of-boyfriend Lane Peters for this mad heist.

Quicksand takes Jaya from her San Francisco home to Paris and then to other locations in France as she and Lane try to outwit their enemy and somehow keep from breaking the law.

This is book 3 in the Jaya Jones Treasure Hunt series, and it’s a lot of fun with quirky characters and lots of action. Definitely high-stakes physically, professionally, and emotionally for Jaya and Lane, but not the sort of scary to keep a reader up at night. (You might be up late reading just to see what comes next, but that’s a different matter!)

In addition to the Jaya Jones series, multi-award-winning author Gigi Pandian also writes The Accidental Alchemist Mysteries and The Secret Staircase Mysteries.

Visit the Gigi Pandian website for more about the author and her books. Get both a free short mystery and a recipe book by signing up for her author newsletter.

[Review copy from the public library.]


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Review: A Fool and His Monet, by Sandra Orchard

A Fool and His Monet, by Sandra OrchardA Fool and His Monet, by Sandra Orchard (Revell, 2016)

Serena Jones has a cat, and she’s single, but she’s not a spinster cat lady. She’s just too focused on her new career with the FBI’s art crimes division to have time for a love life. Serena’s passionate about art, and about the job, and she harbours a lingering hope that somewhere in her investigations she’ll find the painting stolen from her grandfather years before.

Her mother wants her to quit investigating and take a safe, factory job – until she can get married and start producing grandchildren. Her father’s quietly proud of her. And her aunt… well, Aunt Martha may truly be a crazy, cat-loving spinster, although now she lives with Serena’s parents and her cat lives with Serena.

Here’s how Serena describes her aunt:

Aunt Martha was like one of those extreme sports nuts who didn’t realize “safety harness” was a pseudonym for “hang on for dear life or you’ll die harness.” [Kindle page 235]

In the midst of this fast-paced whodunit, there’s still time for family complications, personal danger for Serena, and the beginnings of a rivalry for her attention between her trainer and her apartment superintendant. Tanner and Nate are both such nice men, I feel bad for whichever one of them loses out. Interestingly enough, at the end of the book there’s a way for readers to vote on which one she should end up with. I wonder if the vote will carry it, or if the author already knows…

I’ve read most of Sandra Orchard’s books and always enjoyed them. A Fool and His Monet is the best one yet. With a snappy delivery, characters to care about, action, and a strong thread of humour, this one may show up as one of my books of the year. Someone called it “laugh-out-loud” funny, but to me it’s the kind that gives me a satisfied grin – and endears a story to my heart.

Sandra Orchard is an award-winning Canadian author of Christian romantic suspense. A Fool and His Monet is the first in her Serena Jones Mystery series, and as mentioned, there’s a romantic thread but it’s just beginning in book 1. This is also more of a “clean read,” without an overtly Christian thread. Serena is a church-goer, but the story isn’t about a spiritual lesson so much as about a crime and about her family and relationships. Book 2 comes out in the fall: Another Day, Another Dali. For more about the author, and to find some bonus book features, visit sandraorchard.com.

[Review copy from my personal library.]

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