"Suspensful Stand-Out Novel"
Fairstein once again draws on her own experiences with
protagonist Alexandra Cooper, who works as the head of the
Sex Crimes Unit of Manhattan D.A.'s Office, a position
previously held by the author. A party at New York's
Metropolitan Museum of Art soon leads to a murder
investigation when director Pierre Thibodaux enlists Alex's
help to find out why an ancient Egyptian sarcophagus,
awaiting shipment to Egypt from a New Jersey pier,
inexplicably contains the well-preserved remains of a young
woman, not an Egyptian princess as presumed, but a twenty-
first century woman. When the photograph of the deceased woman identifies
her as Katrina Grooten by Thibodaux's assistant, Cooper and
Detective Mike Chapman attempt to discover who would have
had access to the sarcophagus in which she was buried and
why anyone would have wanted the young museum employee
dead. Working at the Cloisters, where the Met housed its
medieval art, Katrina was part of a project that included
the Museum of Natural History in a joint bestiary exhibit
studying ancient monster type beasts. While the varied descriptions of the museum exhibits
and the vastness of the holdings may serve for dry reading,
Ms. Fairstein keeps the pace flowing with her study of the
interpersonal relationship between Detective Chapman and
Alex, in an especially touching reminiscence of the
aftermath of September eleventh. Fairstein's first-hand
knowledge of the Manhattan D.A.'s office allows her to
imbue her main character with realism, as she chronicles
Alex's complex and ever expanding caseload. This truly
stand out read will have readers reaching for more Alex
Cooper novels and eagerly anticipating future ones.
Reviewed by Sheri Melnick
Posted January 20, 2004
SummaryThe New York Times bestselling author and renowned former
Manhattan prosecutor follows her Nero Award-winning The
Deadhouse with a mesmerizing new Alexandra Cooper novel set
at the crossroads of big money, high culture, and murder...
The Bone Vault begins in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's
glorious Temple of Dendur, where wealthy donors have
gathered to celebrate a controversial new exhibit.
An uneasy mix of scholarship, showbiz, and aggressive
marketing, "A Modern Bestiary" will be a joint venture of
the Met and the American Museum of Natural History. With
its IMAX time trips and Rembrandt refrigerator magnets,
the "Bestiary" has raised fierce opposition from some of
New York's museum elite.
Assistant DA Alexandra Cooper, off duty for the evening,
observes the developing tensions with bemused interest
until Met director Pierre Thibodaux pulls her aside. He
needs her advice. There's an urgent problem out at a
loading dock on a New Jersey pier.
A Twelfth Dynasty mummified princess, enclosed for eternity
in a huge stone sarcophagus, is about to take a long voyage
to Cairo as part of a routine museum exchange. But
Cleopatra is missing, and in her place is the not-so-
mummified body of a woman many centuries younger than her
royal predecessor.
Who is this woman with the small physique, the dark hair,
and the shiny barrette? What is her connection, if any, to
the rarefied world of priceless art and objects? And how
and when did she become entombed in the sarcophagus?
Teaming with cops Mike Chapman and Mercer Wallace, Alex
must explore behind the scenes at the elegant but severe
Metropolitan, travel uptown to the remote setting of the
Cloisters and its medieval trove of funerary art, and on to
the massive array of beasts and bones at the Museum of
Natural History. Somewhere deep within the bowels of one of
these great cultural centers, a killer may wait.
Atmospheric, chilling, and rich with the kind of procedural
authenticity that only Linda Fairstein can provide, The
Bone Vault is a page-turning tour de force from one of
crime writing's brightest stars.
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