Cherie Burns is the author of Searching for Beauty, The Great Hurricane: 1938, and Stepmotherhood. Her work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times Magazine, People, and Glamour, among others. She lives in Taos, New Mexico.
"""Part history, part investigative journalism, part personal quest, Diving for Starfish is filled with drama and intrigue, and peopled by a cast of characters worthy of The Maltese Falcon.""--Moira Hodgson, The Wall Street Journal ""Quick, fun, easy reading for devotees of high fashion and mystery fans, complete with wrong turns and false friends.""--Kirkus ""Cherie Burns has written a unique tale about a pin, a famous pin in fact. Part detective story, part quest, both wrapped in a mystery. It's a fascinating read. In Paris in the Thirties, a young jewelry designer created a starfish pin made of gold and covered in 71 rubies and hundreds of smalls amethysts. Juliette Moutard works for the House of Boivin and they made three of her special pins. One was owned Claudette Colbert and another by the oil heiress, Millicent Rogers. But who owned the third? No one seemed to know. Burns goes from New York to Paris to London to Hollywood and back to New York, trying to gather facts. Does she solve the mystery of the beautiful missing pin? Ahh, that's a secret that I won't reveal. Read the book. It is most intriguing."" --Barbara Taylor Bradford, Author of The Cavendon Luck ""Cherie Burns delves deeply into the sea of mystery that is the period jewelry industry. What she found is captivating and wholly satisfying. The 1930s and 40s Boivin starfish are the quintessential ornament--the most complete example of the jeweler's art. Pins and brooches do not require much to work their magic, just an audience of one is enough. These come with a fascinating narrative, patiently researched and well told by the author. The legend of these famous starfish is part of their elusive allure, as are the people whose path became part of their history. The Boivin starfish are like waves: they wash up on the shoulder of only a special few, display their rare, captivating beauty and then fall below the surface once more. As Cherie Burns explains, we never know if these glorious bits of bejeweled flotsam will ever see the light of day again."" --Lori Ettlinger Gross, jewelry historian, curator and author of Brooches: Timeless Adornment ""Cherie Burns is a dogged investigative reporter on the trail of the mythical Boivin starfish brooches once owned by the likes of Claudette Colbert, Millicent Rogers and S�o Schlumberger. Along the way, she takes us on a magical mystery tour through the world of high-end jewelry dealers and jewelry makers from New York and Paris to London, Hollywood and Miami, introducing us to dozens of intriguing characters who cater to the tastes and whims of the superwealthy. A fascinating tale told with verve and passion."" --Tom Sancton, author of The Bettencourt Affair: the World's Richest Woman and the Scandal that Rocked Paris ""Entertainment, detective work, serendipity are all here for jewelry and celebrity buffs alike.""-- Kathleen McBroom, Booklist"