Book Description
When fashion columnist Lacey Smithsonian learns that a new fashion museum will soon grace decidedly unfashionable D.C., it's more than a good story-it's a chance to show off her vintage Hugh Bentley suit. And it's not long before the dapper designer himself spots Lacey in the crowd. A reporter at heart, she manages to get all the juicy details about his past-including a long-unsolved mystery about a missing employee. Could it be linked to the disappearance of a Washington intern or the recent Bentley boutique robbery? Lacey sets out to unravel the murderous details in a fabric of lies, greed-and (gasp!) very bad taste...
Designer Knockoff: A Crime of Fashion Mystery FROM OUR EDITORS
The Barnes & Noble Review
Ever since reading Killer Hair, the debut volume in Ellen Byerrum's Crime of Fashion mystery series, I've been eager to see what the wily and whimsical author would invent for her likable protagonist, fashion reporter Lacey Smithsonian, to investigate as the latest crime trend in Washington, D.C.
Lacey is quick to claim that she never wanted to cover the fashion beat, but she can't deny that she enjoys the power -- over politicians, lobbyists, socialites and D.C. wannabes -- that her column, "Crimes of Fashion," gives her. Nonetheless, covering plans for the capital's new Bentley Museum of American Fashion seems like a pleasant diversion from reporting on the pros and cons of "Power Suits" versus "Capital Camo" or offering fashion tips for the "Prematurely Serious." She's thrilled when her vintage-chic style catches the eye of Hugh Bentley himself, the roguish patriarch of what the local press calls the Royal Family of American Fashion. She's quick to use her unexpected access to the powerful designer to gain the inside track on the story; then a trio of well-dressed bandits target a pricey Bentley boutique.
The more she learns about Bentley, the more Lacey senses a scoop in the making. Her incurable curiosity soon leads her into danger as she explores the chilling parallels between the case of a missing congressional intern who hoped to become Bentley's new spokesmodel and the long-unsolved mystery of a talented young fashion apprentice who had also disappeared while working for the fledgling fashion house during WWII. Lacey calls in favors from sources as varied as an online conspiracy clearinghouse, a top-flight Washington lawyer, and a retired seamstress -- as she pieces together a story that could make her reputationᄑdead or alive. Sue Stone
FROM THE PUBLISHER
When fashion columnist Lacey Smithsonian learns that a new fashion museum will soon grace decidedly unfashionable D.C., it's more than a good story-it's a chance to show off her vintage Hugh Bentley suit. And it's not long before the dapper designer himself spots Lacey in the crowd. A reporter at heart, she manages to get all the juicy details about his past-including a long-unsolved mystery about a missing employee. Could it be linked to the disappearance of a Washington intern or the recent Bentley boutique robbery? Lacey sets out to unravel the murderous details in a fabric of lies, greed-and (gasp!) very bad taste...