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Murder in Lascaux

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The cave of Lascaux may be closed to the public, but five scholars a day are allowed inside, and Nora Barnes has finagled an appointment. True, she may have fudged a bit in her letter to the authorities, but she does teach art history, and she isn't about to miss her chance to see the world's most famous prehistoric paintings. Nora and her high-spirited husband, Toby, are visiting the Dordogne, in the southern French region of the Aquitaine. Aware that the Dordogne's renown for cave art is matched only by its reputation for delicious cuisine, the couple has also signed up for a cooking class at a nearby château, but they soon find that more than food is on their minds.
During their tour of the cave, another visitor is murdered. When the local inspector pegs Nora and Toby as suspects, they embark on a mission to solve the crime, tracing strange links between a Cro-Magnon symbol and a thirteenth-century religious cult. As they match wits with the crusty inspector, Nora finds herself immersed in the notebooks of a forgotten artist who once lived in the château. In sifting through the artist's papers and uncovering old secrets, she begins to piece together the motives for the murder. But has she cooked up more trouble than she can handle?

Best Books for General Audiences, selected by the American Association of School Librarians

Best Books for General Audiences, selected by the Public Library Reviewers
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 5, 2011
      Draine and Hinden (A Castle in the Backyard, a memoir about the Périgord region) put their knowledge of France to good use in their first novel. The special tour of the Lascaux cave’s Cro-Magnon paintings that art historian Nora Barnes and her antique dealer husband, Toby Sandler, take to kick off their Dordogne vacation is abruptly cut short by the garroting of another visitor, government investigator Michel Malbert. In an effort to recover their bearings, the couple sign up for a cooking class from Marianne de Cazelle, one of the aristocratic owners of the nearby chateau where they’re staying, while Nora also conducts research on Marianne’s ancestor Jenny Marie, an obscure painter. She goes on to uncover the Cazelles’ troubled history and a possible link to Malbert’s death over the course of a whodunit that nicely balances a breezily light travelogue with urgency and suspense. Readers will hope this is the first of a series.

    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2011
      An art historian's research trip to southwest France is enlivened by her encounter with a corpse. The Dordogne valley, known to natives as Périgord, is famous for its walnuts and duck. Nora Barnes and her antiques-dealer husband Toby Sandler are exploring the quirky regional cuisine through a cooking course at the Château de Cazelle offered by Marianne, daughter of the current baron. Nora also has the family's permission to look at journals and letters left by Marianne's great-great-aunt Jenny Marie, an artist who painted alongside Manet and Morisot. And Toby has wangled the pair the rare opportunity to view the cave paintings at nearby Lascaux, which admits only five visitors per day. Unfortunately, they choose a day during which one of the five--a government official named Michel Malbert--ends up strangled, garnering them unwelcome attention from Inspector Daglan. To wriggle out from under the local detective's baleful squint, Nora seeks to find the killer by bombarding Marianne and her brother Guillaume with questions about topics they've been reluctant to discuss, including the cause of Jenny Marie's death and the rumor of Nazi loot hidden on their property. She also noses around sites they've expressly forbidden her to explore, including an old chapel used by members of the Cathars before they were purged by Rome. Will she learn to make an acceptable magret de canard before she gets booted out of the chateau, or before anyone else gets killed? Emeriti Professors Draine and Hinden's mystery debut offers a good dose of Périgord culture, but Nora's antics make you want to send an apology to her hosts.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from November 1, 2011

      When art historian Nora Barnes and her husband scored a coveted tour of France's famed Lascaux cave, they hadn't bargained for a murder at the site. Deeply shaken, they proceed to the chateau for their cooking school vacation, joined by the other couple from the tour. Police investigators suspect the four outsiders, which worries Nora and Toby. Nora's research is tied to this particular home, and as she learns more of its history, she senses that the murderer is among the guests. This densely written and marvelously detailed excursion through the Dordogne will leave you dreaming of castles, chateaus, and caves. But it's haunted with 20th-century history involving World War II atrocities and theft. VERDICT With the cooking school component, this multifaceted read will hold great appeal for art, food, travel, and, oh yes, mystery readers. It couples beautifully with Deborah Lawrenson's The Lantern. Jane Langton's mysteries also come to mind, and Elly Griffiths's fans will enjoy the archaeology angle.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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