Fri 2 Dec 2016
Reviewed by Barry Gardner: AARON ELKINS – Old Scores.
Posted by Steve under Bibliographies, Lists & Checklists , Characters , Reviews[3] Comments
AARON ELKINS – Old Scores. Chris Norgren #3. Charles Scribner’s Sons, hardcover, 1993. Fawcett Gold Medal, paperback, 1994.
One thing about Elkins, he picks widely varying specialties for his series characters. Though he;s best known for his “bone doctor” series about Gideon Oliver, the Norgren books seem to be pucking up steam. Chris Norgren is curator at the Seattle Art Museum, and who’d have thought the world of acquisitions would be so hazardous?
A famous French collector wants to give the museum a Rembrandt — great, hein? Well, maybe. There are a couple of catches: the painting has no provenance, and no scientific tests will be allowed. Chris’s director wants him to go to France and make an accept/reject decision. Chris wants to reject it out of hand, but goes anyway, at the cost of some discombobulation to his already shaky love life. Things are even weirder than expected in France, the situation turns nasty, and murder is done. Well, hell, what did you expect?
I don’t believe for a minute that any museum would even consider accepting a master painting without provenance and/or testing, but what do I know about museums? Aside from that, this was the kind of entertaining tale I’ve come to expect from Elkins. I like Norgren as a character, and find the artistic background interesting and edifying. Elkins tells a good story, and creates a good set of supporting characters. His stories fall somewhere between cozy and hard-edged, and while I don’t think anyone would call them memorable, they provide an enjoyable read.
The Chris Norgren series —
1. A Deceptive Clarity (1987)
2. A Glancing Light (1991)
3. Old Scores (1993)
December 2nd, 2016 at 11:31 am
One has to wonder why Elkins dropped the Norgrem series with this book — only the three and done. It seems to me that he was far from exhausting the possibilities of hanky-panky in the world of art acquisition.
December 2nd, 2016 at 6:48 pm
Usually when an author drops a series, it’s sales.
December 2nd, 2016 at 9:09 pm
You’re probably right, but thinking back, my sense is that the series was popular, with quite a few enthusiastic readers. Elkins was a Big Name Author at the time, and I would have thought his name alone would have sold a lot of books. It may have been that the Norgren books just didn’t sell as well as Gideon Oliver, and why not go with what pays the bills.