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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
fantastic, surprising, disturbing,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Art of Murder (Hardcover)
It took me two chapters before I realised that I had completely accepted the implausable concept of hyperdramatic art. People working as canvasses and ornaments are described so well, I was caught up in a very strange world!I bought this book looking for a good crime thriller. This is so much more. Easily the best book I've read this year
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Original ideas,
By
This review is from: The Art Of Murder (Paperback)
The story is based in the art world of Europe. The most popular art is hyperdramatism, where people are the canvas. The canvases are painted daily and hold their positions, without moving, every day for 10 hours in museums or private collections. There is large demand to be canvases especially for the masters such as Bruno van Tysch and people go on training courses, take drugs to stop bodily functions and practise holding positions for the honour to become a masterpiece worth millions of dollars.However there is a dark side to the hyperdramatic movement, with the illegal creation of ornaments where canvases are turned into everyday objects e.g. lamps, chairs, the kidnapping of children to be used as canvases and in this book the murder of some of Bruno van Tysch's finest pieces. Although this is a murder mystery book I didn't think of it in that way. I was so absorbed in how well the hyperdramatic movement was explained and developed through the book (I could actually believe it really existed) that I very rarely thought about who the murder could be. The debate on morality throughout the book was also fascinating; is hyperdramatism cruel even though people want to be canvases, and were the victims murdered people or destroyed pieces of art. I really enjoyed this book as the ideas were so original and I would recommend it to others to read although I'm not sure I would read it a second time. I didn't realise it was a translation till I was near the end of the book, so I think the translator did a fantastic job as the story flows brilliantly.
20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Art of Murder, Jose Carlos Somoza,
By
This review is from: The Art of Murder (Hardcover)
Reading a lot of crime fiction, the thing I tend to prize above all else, the thing that will most immediately impress me, is originality. And that is a quality Jose Carlos Somoza has in spades. On the evidence thus far, anyway. I hesitate to call The Athenian Murders a masterpiece, but I shouldn't really be so reticent, because it is. A completely brilliant murder mystery that turned into an examination of Plato and a shocking philosophical puzzle. It won the Gold Dagger, and the CWA will probably never make such an inspired decision again.The Art of Murder (the Spanish title, Clara and Shade, is both better and far more effective considering the context of the novel) is similarly original, yet not quite as brilliant. It certainly won't win the Dagger again, but it'll probably still end up as one of the best novels of the year, due to its concept and the obvious intelligence that lies behind every single page. The year is 2006, and the latest craze in the art world is "hyperdramatism". Human beings become the canvases, the art, and are exhibited in museums, bought and rented by collectors. Young men and women queue up for the privilege of being turned into "works of art", painted and signed; made famous. Individualism has gone out of the window; people are turned into a celebrated commodity. The most acclaimed artist of all is Dutch master Bruno van Tysch, reclusive and enigmatic. However, when Annek Hollech, a model in his exhibition "Flowers", is abducted and killed, the lines between the canvas and the person behind it become confusingly blurred. Agents from van Tysch's security agency, April Wood and Lothar Bosch, are assigned to investigate the murder. Their job is made harder by the secrecy that the investigation has to be kept in - news must not get out or there would be outcry and panic. On top of that, van Tysch is about to launch a major new exhibition in Amsterdam - based on 13 of Rembrandt's masterpieces - and suspicions are rife that the murdered is about to strike again. This novel succeeds admirably on several levels. Firstly, it succeeds as a knowing critique of a society which invests so much in appearance, in humans as a commodity. It also succeeds, hugely, as an investigation into everything concerned with art - its relevance, its morality (this strand stretches far out of art though, and encompasses humans in general), its future, its importance. He raises large questions, and you'd never think that such an abstract a topic as "art" could form such solid foundations for a novel ideas, which is partly what this book is. It's sharply written and well-translated, and you get the sense of a formidable intelligence behind it all - as with his previous book. Possibly it is slightly too long. As a whole, it is not quite as good as The Athenian Murders, a cerebral masterpiece, and it's end isn't as stunning (none are, though) but that doesn't mean it isn't great. Apparently there are no more books immediately scheduled to be translated, but I dearly hope that that state of affairs will change. Somoza's prize-winning, boundary-smashing novels should all be translated into English, and I for one will gladly read them as they are.
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