An investigator who recovers stolen insured jewelry steps into a web of international deceit and murder in New York Times–bestselling author Gerald A. Browne’s spellbinding tale set in New York City’s world-renowned Diamond District A woman steps out of a limousine on the Upper East Side, her jewels glittering brightly, and the doorman looks her over. A few phone calls later, the heist is planned. Thieves descend on the woman’s home, planning to swipe the jewels and depart silently. Instead the robbery turns violent. Mitch Laughton doesn’t intend to solve a murder case, but he will find the stolen jewels. A professional investigator of stolen gems, he is hired by the victims’ insurance company to recover the $6 million haul. But in pursuing the missing swag, Mitch learns about a pair of emeralds worth far more—enough to turn thieves into killers. Now not only will he have to face down dangerous informants, he will have to tangle with a gang of murderous thugs and two very different but vicious mobsters.
Gerald Austin Browne (born 1924, in Connecticut, USA) is an American author and editor. Browne was raised in Litchfield County, Connecticut. He attended the University of New Mexico, The Sorbonne and Columbia University, where he won several literary awards. His first novel, It's All Zoo, was written while he was living in Paris and working as a fashion photographer. His bestselling novels include 11 Harrowhouse, Green Ice, 19 Purchase Street, Stone 588, and Hot Siberian, several of which have been made into films. He lives in New York with his wife, Merle, a model and actress, as well as the co-author of a novel entitled The Ravishers.
Once I discovered this author, I read nearly everything of his that I could lay my hands on. This was another gem-packed thriller.
His books will get your heart racing as the protagonist does the nearly impossible barely escaping with his life and the jewels.
Having read it oh-so-long-ago, the details are a bit fuzzy at this point so I picked up a copy from a Friends of the Huron Public Library only to discover I read it before. While I may re-read it some time in the future, for now, this review is as good as it gets. (Approximate date read...may be off by a year or so, but based on the time frame and recall of where I was working at the time).
This book was a little different than others I've read, but since I really liked Green Ice, I was interested on how the author would write this story. It is a story of a man involved with recovering "swag" (stolen jewels) for the % of the recovery, and well-known by the two mob bosses at each end of West 47th in New York. What I loved more than anything was how much in love he was with his blind excentric rich wife, and how their relationship was intertwined with this story. The risk of dealing with dangerous people put them in some tough situations. I like reading Gerald Browne and wil...
This is my favorite G. Brown, and I have read many. The characters are somewhat realistic, exciting, and quirky. The picture one gets of the NYC diamond business is eye opening to say the least. Description of the stones…I want to see in person. The tale is told with good timing, a page turner for sure, and care is taken at the end to resolve carefully, not in a big rush, that leaves the reader satisfied!
2 out of 4 Stars Mitch Laughton recovers stolen jewels for the jewel district in NY, based around W. 47th St. He is married to Maddie, rich and blind. In trying to recover the Kalili jewels, he crosses an old time mob guy, Riccio, who tries to kill them. They set a trap at Maddie's Uncle Straw's estate. A rival mob boss, Visconti, secretly helps Mitch and Maddie. Everyone is after the 25 million dollar reward Iran is offering for the 2 emeralds - Mitch and Maddie recover them but lose them to the Iranian. Maddie tries to secretly give Mitch the 25 million - he knows, but will he let on?
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I didn't expect to enjoy this slightly seedy thriller so much! It's about jewel thievery and recovery and the mafia. Fun yet challenging proofing with lots of foreign terms. I highly recommend the audio version- the narrator does like a hundred voices in excellent NYC accents.