By 1919, Lillian Carter has spent six years posing for public sculptures across New York under the name “Angelica.” While she’s enjoyed contributing to the city’s art scene, a murder scandal involving her landlord forces her to go into hiding.
A twist of fate propels Lillian into the role of private secretary to Helen Clay Frick, the industrialist’s mercurial 31-year-old daughter, who’s torn between pursuing her own interests and seeking her critical father’s approval. Lillian proves remarkably successful in her tasks, but while she dreams of a silent movie career, a secret assignment, one that’s too temptingly profitable to resist, ensnares her in longstanding Frick family tensions.
Decades later, in 1966, English model Veronica Weber secures a lucrative modeling assignment at the Frick Collection, but after the job turns sour, she finds herself accidentally trapped in the building overnight alongside a handsome African American museum intern. Initially watchful of one another, they team up to follow clues in a scavenger hunt created long ago.
The pages breeze by as potential romances develop (maybe not the ones you’d expect) and a mystery involving the whereabouts of the Magnolia Diamond unfolds. Deeper issues also undergird both narratives, which confront stereotypes about models and explore how a tragedy can warp family relationships years later. The two narratives dovetail in a satisfying way. Mystery and art lovers should relish this exciting escape into New York’s past.
The Magnolia Palace was published by Dutton in January; I reviewed it from NetGalley for February's Historical Novels Review.
Read more about the Frick Collection at their website. Although I've been to NYC many times, I hadn't been familiar at all with this institution or the personalities surrounding it before reading this book. Now I have a long list of places to visit once travel is possible again.
Credit: Gryffindor, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia |
Read more about the Frick Collection at their website. Although I've been to NYC many times, I hadn't been familiar at all with this institution or the personalities surrounding it before reading this book. Now I have a long list of places to visit once travel is possible again.
I went to the Frick Collection several years ago, and loved it. I'd like to go back sometime. This book sounds great!
ReplyDeleteIt was a fun read. I also would recommend Lions of Fifth Avenue, the other book I've read by the same author.
DeleteI have the Lions on my TBR and this one sounds like fun - thanks for the review!
ReplyDeleteLions was fun too - imagine living in an apartment inside the New York Public Library!
DeleteHi Sarah, I was wondering if you post some recommendations or your favorite romances for some good Valentine's day reading. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteHi Tiffany, thanks for the suggestion, I'll give it some thought!
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