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The Serpent In The Garden

Janet Gleeson

$14.99

Paperback

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English
Bantam
01 November 2004
Another compelling murder mystery set in the eighteenth century from the acclaimed author of The Grenadillo Box.

Summer, 1765. The renowned portrait painter Joshua Pope is eager to escape London and his unhappy past and accepts a commission to paint a wedding portrait for Herbert Bentnick and his bride-to-be, Sabine Mercier.

Joshua learns that the couple are avid horticulturalists. Bentnick's country house, Astley, in Richmond, is famous for its verdant gardens, designed by the master landscape artist Capability Brown. Sabine Mercier, who has lived most of her life in the Indies, is an expert in growing pineapples, the fruit of choice at the grandest dinner parties and an inspiration to artists and craftsmen.

But soon after Sabine begins to cultivate pineapples in the vast conservatory at Astley, she discovers a body among her plants. Why, wonders Joshua Pope, is so little attention paid to this bizarre death? Why do Bentnick's children regard their future stepmother with suspicion and fear? And what connection does Sabine's daughter Violet have with the dead man?

Outraged that any life can be valued so lightly, Joshua begins to investigate the death. But then Sabine's valuable emerald necklace disappears, and he is implicated. His need to discover what has happened at Astley suddenly becomes more pressing. Can Joshua solve the mystery before his reputation is ruined? And, more immediately, can he stay alive long enough to do so?

Following her acclaimed debut, THE GRENADILLO BOX, Janet Gleeson has written another compelling tale of murder and mystery set in an exquisitely and authentically rendered Georgian England.
By:  
Imprint:   Bantam
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 127mm,  Spine: 23mm
Weight:   274g
ISBN:   9780553815245
ISBN 10:   0553815245
Pages:   416
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 0 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Janet Gleeson was born in Sri Lanka, where her father was a tea planter. After taking a degree in History of Art and English she joined Sotheby's, and later worked for Bonhams Auctioneers. In 1991 she joined Reed Books, where she was responsible for devising and writing Miller's Antiques and Collectibles. She is the author of the Sunday Times non-fiction bestsellers The Arcanum and The Moneymaker. She is also the author of two novels, The Grenadillo Box and The Serpent in the Garden..

Reviews for The Serpent In The Garden

Switching from cabinetry to portraiture, 18th-century specialist Gleeson (The Grenadillo Box, 2004, etc.) continues to dabble-successfully-in detection by the artistically gifted. In 1763 Georgian England, it is apparently up to clever artisans to solve capital crimes. And why not? The luxury trade brought these early meritocrats into intimate contact with the moneyed consumers of their goods, giving them unique access to a rarified world. And with their artists' eyes, they were much better equipped than their aristocratic employers to observe closely the world in which they scrabble to succeed. Gleeson's proto-cop on the upper-crust crime scene, then, is successful artist Joshua Pope. Pope is in residence at Astley, the suburban London estate of Herbert Bentnick, when a vomit-stained corpse is discovered among the pineapple plants in the hothouse. The audibly horrified discoverer of the death is Sabine Mercier, also in residence at Astley. Sabine is the Barbadian double widow who snagged Mr. Bentnick when he traveled to the Indies to inspect the family plantations. There was also a Mrs. Bentnick on the voyage, but she took ill shortly after meeting Sabine, who nursed her unto death. Sabine, then, who knows an unusual amount about horticulture, including poisonous plants, is engaged to Herbert, a union celebrated in Pope's nearly complete joint portrait. The corpse is identified from letters in its pocket as John Cobb, an attorney and, like Sabine, from Barbados. Pope is put off by the family's seemingly cavalier lack of interest in the late Mr. Cobb, and he makes it his responsibility to get to the bottom of things. But his detective work is instantly complicated by the disappearance of Sabine's prized emerald necklace, a theft blamed on Pope. Clearing his name will require the artist to flirt a bit, pop in and out of London, and consult with the greatest of landscapers, Capability Brown. Agreeable. Like living in a Constable scene with a little excitement. (Kirkus Reviews)


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