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The Serpent in the Garden
The Serpent in the Garden
Author: Janet Gleeson
Publisher: Bantam Books
Category: Book

List Price: $14.45
Buy New: $9.90
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New (5) from $9.90

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 2590502

Media: Paperback
Pages: 416
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 0.9

ISBN: 0553815245
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780553815245
ASIN: 0553815245

Publication Date: September 1, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new Item. CD, DVD, Book, VHS more than 400 000 titles to choose from. ALL days Low Price !

Also Available In:

  • Unknown Binding - Serpent in the Garden
  • Paperback - The Serpent in the Garden: A Novel
  • Hardcover - The Serpent in the Garden
  • Kindle Edition - The Serpent in the Garden: A Novel

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
She opened the shagreen box. Couched in gray silk was an emerald necklace, one he had not seen for twenty years. The stones were just as he recalled them: a dozen or more, baguette cut and set in gold links, with a single ruby at the center. Flashes of verdigris, orpiment, and Prussian blue sparkled in the candlelight. The form of this necklace was as disturbing as ever. It had nearly cost him his life.

It is the summer of 1765. The renowned and exquisitely dressed portrait painter Joshua Pope accepts a commission to paint the wedding portrait of Herbert Bentnick and his fiancee, Sabine Mercer, to whom Bentnick has become engaged less than a year after the death of his first wife. Joshua has barely begun the portrait when a man's body is found in the conservatory. A few days later, Sabine's emerald necklace disappears, and Bentnick accuses Joshua of theft. The painter is suddenly fighting not only for his reputation but for his life. With a sure understanding of period detail and character, Janet Gleeson creates a richly nuanced tale of greed and revenge that plays out in the refined landscapes and dark streets of eighteenth-century London.


Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars disappointing   June 30, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

the plot really had promise, but the writing was very simplistic, and the characters didn't grab me. I stopped reading after 70 pages - I just didn't have the interest to go any further.


4 out of 5 stars An historical mystery with a twist   May 28, 2005
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

The author of The Serpent in the Garden was trained in art, and has worked at Sotheby's in London-so it should come as no surprise that the protagonist of this book is an artist who pays attention to the small details. Although Janet Gleeson does indeed pay attention to detail, she tends to skimp on the plot, especially the mystery itself. However, this is a highly original book, and it was fun to read.

Joshua Pope is a fictional artist living in 18th- century London. Commissioned to paint a wedding portrait of Sir Herbert Bentnick and his bride Sabine Mercier at their estate Astley, Pope immediately encounters a mystery of a singular kind: the death of a man purported to be a Mr. Cobb, in a greenhouse on the estate. Sabine Mercier, originally hailing from Barbados, is an avid cultivator of pineapples, a fruit that was in vogue in the mid-18th century in Europe. The death allegedly was by poison; since poison is thought to be the weapon of choice by women, could Sabine or her daughter Violet be the murderer? Its a tangled, twisted mystery that Joshua gets involved in, especially when no one in the family seems concerned over the death of a stranger on their property.

Coinciding with the death is the mysterious disappearance of a necklace that belongs to Mrs. Mercier- in the curious shape of a serpent, with the head clasping the tail. The serpent, a serpent of temptation, is the subject of a legal dispute which affects everyone in the Mercier/ Bentnick family. What amazed me, in following Pope's investigation, is how he trusts every untrustworthy person in the book, and mistrusts everyone who he should trust. For someone who claims to be an observer of human character, this feature of the book seemed out of character.

If you have read other reviews I have written on this site, you'll know that I'm an avid reader of historical fiction, as well as mysteries. While The serpent in the Garden is neither the best historical fiction nor the best mystery I have ever read, it is certainly well crafted. I can't wait to read other novels by Janet Gleeson.



5 out of 5 stars interesting, very interesting   May 16, 2005
 7 out of 8 found this review helpful

I wont' try to sum up the events of this book as the other reviewers have done, I believe it is not my place to do so. I will simply give my opinion of it and my feelings towards the piece.

It is a very ineresting book, that kept my thoughts occupied for some time. The language is very nice and a murder mystery never hurt anyone, so if you're looking for a book that u want to entice you, I recommend this one among others to set you back in time and live the life of a successful portrait painter looking to solve a mystery.



5 out of 5 stars intriguing Georgian who-done-it   February 15, 2005
 6 out of 11 found this review helpful

In 1766, Herbert Bentnick, a widower of under a year, is betrothed to two time Barbados widow Sabine Mercier. Herbert commissions renowned portrait artist Joshua Pope to paint their wedding picture at his Astley estate. However, Sabine, a horticulturist working with her fiance's pineapple plants, finds a corpse in the hothouse.

While the engaged couple and his family seem unconcerned that someone was murdered on their estate, a shocked Joshua takes it upon himself to investigate. He assumes the deceased is Barbados attorney John Cobb based on documents the dead man was carrying. Joshua also learns that Herbert's wife was still alive and with him when he met Sabine, but died shortly afterward. Finally, he realizes how knowledgeable Sabine is when it comes to plants. Joshua's sleuthing efforts prove fruitless and he now must prove he did not steal Sabine's valuable emerald necklace while the family points their accusing fingers at him.

As with THE GRENADILLO BOX (different artisan detective - cabinetmaker Nathanial Hopson, but similar theme and era), THE SERPENT IN THE GARDEN is an intriguing Georgian who-done-it with the emphasis on the 1760s England. The story line is loaded with historical detail providing the audience a close look at the upper class mostly through the eyes of the moralistic artist. Joshua is a fine protagonist; however the two antagonists will fascinate readers. Is Herbert a besotted fool or a clever killer and even more intriguing is Sabine as Joshua's circumstantial evidence implicates her as the culprit in at least two deaths.

Harriet Klausner



3 out of 5 stars Hot-house horrors   September 13, 2004
 8 out of 11 found this review helpful

Renowned portrait painter Joshua Pope, is commissioned to paint a wedding portrait of Herbert Bentnick and his exotic bride-to-be, Sabine Mercier. Sabine is an expert in the horticultural art of growing pineapples and has coaxed Herbert to devote most of his conservatory space to the cultivation of this crop. Sabine is the owner of an emerald and gold necklace in the form of a serpent which both fascinates and repels Joshua as a beautiful but evil jewel.
The body of a stranger is found among the plants in the conservatory and Joshua, who is of a very enquiring nature, deduces that he has vomited after ingesting unripe pineapple and that the excessive heat of the conservatory has virtually cooked him while he was unconscious. The serpent necklace is found to be missing and Herbert blames Joshua for its absence. He insists that Joshua solves the murder and the theft and threatens to ruin his reputation as a painter and to destroy him artistically as well as financially. It's a wordy and very descriptive novel which would appeal mor to lovers of historical fiction.


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