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A Pinchbeck Bride

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

 

A young woman in Victorian finery is found strangled in Mingo House, a morbid brownstone and museum, a nineteenth-century time capsule in Boston's Back Bay. Dubbed the "Victorian Girl" by the media everywhere, she becomes the eye of a hurricane of publicity and speculation—and a darkness reaching back to the Mingoes' roots in England and to the builders of the mansion, a Civil War arms dealer and his séance-holding wife.

 

Boston comic Mark Winslow and the other trustees of Mingo House are divided as to whether the place is sustainable as a museum. Trustee chairman Rudy Schmitz, the brash entrepreneur, seems convinced that the porous roof and escalating rain damage will doom the place. Nadia Gulbenkian, the last of the old guard trustees, is accusing Rudy of engineering the museum's demise. Software executive Jon Kim and a dubious collector of saints' bones and art are pursuing their own clandestine agendas.

 

Mingo House itself seems cursed, for its origins in bullets and cannonballs and the family's reputation as regicides in the execution of King Charles I. 

A number of people believe its walls conceal treasure, a stolen royal monstrance, and are willing to do anything to retrieve it.

 

In this sequel to The Fisher Boy, pierced college students clash with flawed Brahmin bluebloods, and the Gothic with the high-tech. As the deaths and threats multiply, one question resounds: which will survive this summer of rain, of deluge—Mingo House or its terrified staff?


 

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    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2011

      The death of a docent in a Back Bay Boston brownstone.

      Newly named a trustee at Mingo House, improv comic and amateur historian Mark Winslow accompanies docent Genevieve Courson as she explains the museum's history, including ghostly sightings, Civil War armament dealings and the tragic death of family triplets with compromised lungs. Later she asks to meet with him privately. But when he arrives, Genevieve, in a green period gown complete with bustle, has been posed in an heirloom rocker, strangled. Whodunit, and why? Mark's lover Roberto wishes he wouldn't get involved, but since he discovered the body, Mark can't help being curious. Then an aged trustee falls into a coma, an antiques appraiser hired to evaluate the Mingo House contents is murdered and another trustee is learned to have formed a romantic liaison with yet another, despite marriage and his presumed sexual orientation. And there's more. At the time of her death, Genevieve was pregnant, her college roommate didn't bother to show up for her funeral and her best friend was known to several of the trustees for his role in a porno film. So Mark thinks he has lots to tell the police, who have their eye on Genevieve's father, a registered sex offender, as their main suspect. Matters won't come to a head till after the last crab cake has been eaten at the museum fundraiser and Mark, in self-preservation, whacks the guilty party with a fireplace poker conveniently at hand.

      A much-improved second effort from Anable (The Fisher Boy, 2008), who's created a fascinating family tree for the Mingoes and a vibrant depiction of their Victorian home so in need of rehabbing.

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

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2011
      Bostons historic Mingo House holds unnerving rumors about the family ancestry and hints of hidden, centuries-old ecclesiastical silver, as new trustee Mark Winslow, the gay stand-up comic Anable introduced in The Fisher Boy (2008), learns from college student and docent Genevieve Courson. When he finds Genevieves strangled body in a Victorian ball gown seated at the dining table, the house also becomes a crime scene. With the Victorian girl murder creating a public stir, Genevieve is found to have been pregnant, with paternity claimed by appraiser Bryce Rossi, who, in the midst of assessing the contents of Mingo House, is found bludgeoned to death in his home. An aura of foreboding descends on the house, and its future as a museum seems questionable. Winslow prowls among Genevieves friends and the other trustees for clues to the murders. The relative lack of character development makes it difficult to sympathize fully with many of the people in the story, but Anable fashions a well-crafted, fast-moving plot, including a well-placed red herring that diverts Winslow and the police.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 21, 2011
      Gay standup comedian Mark Winslow accepts a serious role as a new trustee of Mingo House, a private museum in Boston's Back Bay, in Anable's so-so follow-up to 2008's The Fisher Boy. A few days after an enthusiastic docent, Shawmut College student Genevieve Courson, gives Mark an in-depth tour of Mingo House, a time capsule of upper-class Victorian life once owned by the unfortunate Mingo family, Mark discovers Genevieve's body, elaborately dressed in vintage clothing, at the house's dining room table. Mark's efforts to learn more about the victim—in particular her promiscuous relationships with fellow students, faculty members, and Mingo House personnel—lead him into dangerous waters. Anable's eye for detail remains sharp ("A round mahogany table was covered by gilt-edged, raspberry pink-china and bewildering silverware only a Victorian would comprehend, odd little forks, threatening spoons..."), but the confusion many of his characters exhibit about their sexual orientation does little to advance the plot.

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