From Publishers Weekly
The theft from a private museum in Miami of a painting by 19th-century artist Fernando Reyes of Columbus offering his book of privileges to Ferdinand and Isabella sets off the action in this latest Washington, D.C.-insider tale from Truman (Murder at the Watergate, 1998, etc.). The bulk of the novel, however, unfolds at the nation's venerated reference institution. Gallery owner and former attorney Annabel Reed-Smith was looking forward to two months of research for her lead article of a special issue of the Library of Congress publication Civilization to be devoted to Columbus. Rumors have persisted for centuries about a possible second diary of the voyage to the New World written by Bartolom? de Las Casas, the explorer's confidant and friend. Annabel's work takes on greater urgency when she comes upon the dead body of pompous Las Casas expert and LC employee Michele Paul in the cubicle next to hers. Back in Miami, journalist Lucianne Huston is assigned to cover the art theft, during which a guard was killed. When she learns of Paul's murder, the reporter suspects a connection between the two crimes, as does Annabel, who discovers that another Las Casas expert disappeared about eight years ago. Meanwhile, the day-to-day operation of the Library proceeds full-tilt as Cale Broadhurst, the current Librarian, has his hands full dealing with Huston and the rest of the press, not to mention members of Congress. Truman shows readers the art theft at the start of the book, so the mystery centers around who killed Paul and how his demise is connected to the art heist. A clue to the murderer is tipped clumsily; the discovery of the killer's identity comes as something of an anticlimax, but the fun of the book is getting to it. The Library is the real star, and D.C., as always in Truman's mysteries, proves fertile ground for intrigue. (Nov.) Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
The murder of a Hispanic scholar at the Library of Congress just might concern a long-lost diary of Christopher Columbus. Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
Murder At The Library Of Congress ($25.00; Nov.; 336 pp.; 0-375-50068-5) Truman's 16th helping of sedate mayhem amid among D.C.'s monuments sets gallery owner Annabel Smith (Murder at the Watergate, 1998, etc.) on the scent of a rumored diary by one of Columbus's crewmen. Her competition? A well-heeled collector, a corner-cutting TV reporter, and somebody who doesn't mind eliminating other competitors root and branch. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Review
“A first-rate mystery writer.”
–Los Angles Time Book Review
“TRUMAN CAN WRITE SUSPENSE WITH THE BEST OF THEM.”
–LARRY KING
Review
?A first-rate mystery writer.?
?Los Angles Time Book Review
?TRUMAN CAN WRITE SUSPENSE WITH THE BEST OF THEM.?
?LARRY KING
Murder at the Library of Congress FROM THE PUBLISHER
Margaret Truman looks inside one of D.C.'s great institutions, the Library of Congress, the place where much of the wisdom of the nation is collected, and finds blood on the floor.
Was there a second diary, beyond the one Columbus kept, describing his voyage to the New World? Leading scholars at the Library of Congress think so, and Annabel Smith, with her pre-Columbian interests, has been commissioned by the library's magazine, Civilization, to write about it.
She is not the only person interested. Word comes through the rare-books black market that a wealthy bibliophile has been offered the second diary: He'd not only pay, he'd almost kill to possess it. Starting her search in the library itself, Annabel soon finds herself competing with an ambitious TV journalist. As both women come closer to finding the hidden documents, other questions creep up. Was the murder of the library's most prominent Hispanic scholar connected to the missing diary? Further research leads them deeper into barely explored corners of the library and closer to having to face their own mortality.
Murder in familiar yet surprising surroundings- a great library- leads to a surprising conclusion in this latest Capital Crime novel.
FROM THE CRITICS
Library Journal
The murder of a Hispanic scholar at the Library of Congress just might concern a long-lost diary of Christopher Columbus. Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
Murder At The Library Of Congress ( Nov.; 336 pp.; 0-375-50068-5) Truman's 16th helping of sedate mayhem amid among D.C.'s monuments sets gallery owner Annabel Smith (Murder at the Watergate, 1998, etc.) on the scent of a rumored diary by one of Columbus's crewmen. Her competition? A well-heeled collector, a corner-cutting TV reporter, and somebody who doesn't mind eliminating other competitors root and branch.