Imatge de l'autor

Joan Hess (1949–2017)

Autor/a de The Painted Queen

53+ obres 8,715 Membres 151 Ressenyes 18 preferits

Sobre l'autor

Joan Hess was born in Fayetteville, Arkansas in 1949. She received a bachelor's degree in art from the University of Arkansas in 1971 and a master's degree in education from Long Island University in 1974. For several years, she taught art in a private preschool. Her first book, Strangled Prose, mostra'n més was published in 1986. She was the author of the Claire Malloy Mystery series and the Arly Hanks Mystery series. A Diet to Die For won the American Mystery Award for best traditional novel of 1989. A short story, Too Much to Bare, received the Agatha Award in 1990 and the McCavity Award in 1991. She also wrote the Theo Bloomer series under the pseudonym Joan Hadley. She finished the final Amelia Peabody novel, The Painted Queen, using the notes of Elizabeth Peters and their conversations to finish the book. It was published in 2017. She died on November 23, 2017 at the age of 68. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra'n menys
Crèdit de la imatge: Joan Hess with Dewey Lambdin in Nashville

Sèrie

Obres de Joan Hess

The Painted Queen (2017) 454 exemplars
Strangled Prose (1986) 359 exemplars
Malice in Maggody (1987) 304 exemplars
Dear Miss Demeanor (1987) 280 exemplars
A Holly Jolly Murder (1997) 277 exemplars
A Diet to Die For (1989) 271 exemplars
Busy Bodies (1995) 264 exemplars
A Really Cute Corpse (1988) 263 exemplars
Damsels in Distress (2007) 262 exemplars
Poisoned Pins (1993) 261 exemplars
Tickled to Death (1994) 257 exemplars
murder@maggody.com (2000) 250 exemplars
Death by the Light of the Moon (1992) 249 exemplars
Closely Akin to Murder (1996) 240 exemplars
Mischief in Maggody (1988) 237 exemplars
A Conventional Corpse (2000) 226 exemplars
Roll Over and Play Dead (1991) 225 exemplars
The Goodbye Body (2005) 221 exemplars
Misery Loves Maggody (1999) 218 exemplars
Mortal Remains in Maggody (1991) 217 exemplars
Much Ado in Maggody (1989) 216 exemplars
Mummy Dearest (2008) 215 exemplars
Out on a Limb (2002) 214 exemplars
Madness in Maggody (1991) 213 exemplars
O Little Town of Maggody (1993) 212 exemplars
Martians in Maggody (1994) 212 exemplars
Maggody in Manhattan (1992) 205 exemplars
Malpractice in Maggody (2006) 196 exemplars
The Maggody Militia (1997) 195 exemplars
Maggody and the Moonbeams (2001) 189 exemplars
Muletrain to Maggody (2004) 176 exemplars
Miracles in Maggody (1995) 173 exemplars
The Merry Wives of Maggody (2010) 146 exemplars
Deader Homes and Gardens (2012) 133 exemplars
Murder as a Second Language (2013) 119 exemplars
Pride v. Prejudice (1601) 85 exemplars
The Deadly Ackee (1988) 36 exemplars
The Night-Blooming Cereus (1986) 27 exemplars
Crime After Crime (1998) — Editor — 13 exemplars
Future Tense (1987) 6 exemplars
Red Rover, Red Rover (1987) 5 exemplars
Claire Malloy (2017) 3 exemplars
Dead on Arrival (1994) 2 exemplars

Obres associades

Women of Mystery (1992) — Col·laborador — 126 exemplars
Once Upon a Crime (1998) — Col·laborador — 124 exemplars
Cat Crimes II (1992) — Col·laborador — 119 exemplars
Sisters in Crime 4 (1991) — Col·laborador — 105 exemplars
Sisters in Crime 2 (1990) — Col·laborador — 100 exemplars
Malice Domestic 3 (1994) — Col·laborador — 73 exemplars
Murder for Revenge (1998) — Col·laborador — 70 exemplars
Master's Choice, Volume 1 (1999) — Col·laborador — 61 exemplars
Mom, Apple Pie and Murder (2000) — Col·laborador — 60 exemplars
A Modern Treasury of Great Detective and Murder Mysteries (1994) — Col·laborador — 58 exemplars
A Confederacy of Crime: New Stories of Southern-Style Mystery (2001) — Col·laborador — 37 exemplars
Irreconcilable Differences (1999) — Col·laborador — 33 exemplars
First Cases 2: First Appearances of Classic Amateur Sleuths (1997) — Col·laborador — 32 exemplars
Deadly Allies II (1994) — Col·laborador — 27 exemplars
Vengeance Is Hers (1997) — Col·laborador — 26 exemplars
Women of Mystery - Book 3 (1998) 24 exemplars
Murder Most Postal: Homicidal Tales That Deliver a Message (2001) — Col·laborador — 22 exemplars
More Malice Domestic: An Anthology of Original Mystery Stories (1997) — Col·laborador — 16 exemplars
Crimes of Passion: Twenty-Three Tales of Love and Hate (1993) — Col·laborador — 8 exemplars
Felonious Felines (2000) — Col·laborador — 5 exemplars
First Cases [Unabridged Audiobook] (2002) — Col·laborador — 3 exemplars

Etiquetat

Coneixement comú

Membres

Ressenyes

It's light entertainment; she's heavy on the cliches, but can write a decent story line and develop her characters; no real surprises.
 
Marcat
alanac50 | Hi ha 3 ressenyes més | Feb 27, 2024 |
This episode was begun by Peters before her death and finished by her friend and fellow author Joan Hess.

It's 1912 and the Peabody/Emerson clan has two problems to solve. One has to do with an exquisite bust of Nefertiti and the many forged copies of it floating around Cairo. The other problem has to do with semi-incompetent assassins with monocles who are chasing after Amelia and Ramses.

The missing bust problem brings in potential German goals of disrupting the Egyptian government so that Egypt can be conquered by Germany. There are drugs and drugged archaeologists and a hirsute missionary who is trying to convince the Copts to start a revolution. Ramses and David spend a lot of time in Cairo trying to chase down the original Nefertiti and running afoul of the German embassy.

Meanwhile, Amelia is supposed to be under close supervision to thwart any more assassination attempts while they are digging at Amarna, but she's her usual intrepid and headstrong self and gets into and out of many dangerous situations.

This was an other excellent episode in an engaging historical mystery series.
… (més)
 
Marcat
kmartin802 | Hi ha 19 ressenyes més | Nov 15, 2023 |
I have been eagerly awaiting the final installment of the Amelia Peabody series ever since I heard that the late author Elizabeth Peters had one final book in the works. Thanks to the gracious folks who responded to my request at William Morrow/Harper Collins Publishers, I was able to get my hands on this advance reader's edition, and you may be sure that I devoured it!

For those who may be coming to this book with no prior knowledge of the series, even though this book is #20, it fits chronologically about two-thirds of the way into the series and fills in a gap between previously published books. The Painted Queen will certainly be most meaningful to you if you have read the books that precede it, but I think it would stand up even if you came to it without that context.

That being said, here are my thoughts:

This is a stellar addition to the Amelia series. On page one, I admitted to myself some reservations. Joan Hess is the co-author for this work; I wondered, how would the collaboration flow? Would I really recognize my favorite characters? Would I be able to suspend disbelief and go along on their adventures with the same thrill I've gotten in many of Elizabeth Peters' other works?

I realized by about page seven that the answer to all of those questions was YES! In fact, this book may actually mark the series' peak of comedy, derring-do, and suspense. It's very, very funny, and the action is tightly plotted without any slow bits.

I love the premise, which is absurd and therefore sits fair and square in Amelia's world. Without any apology whatsoever, she OWNS the fact that her life is straight out of the most sensational of novels. She and her family of archaeologists are just beginning their latest venture in Egypt when a villain with a monocle bursts into her bath chamber, gasps "Murder!" and collapses in a dead heap on the floor moments before he would have strangled her. Naturally, she hoists herself out of the tub and begins going through his pockets. When she and her husband Emerson begin speculating about the presence of the monocle, she immediately informs him that it must be the insignia of a secret society, and that assassins sometimes travel in gangs.
"Assassins do not travel in gangs," says Emerson.
(They are the perfect duo!)
This is the point at which I began to dissolve into fits of chuckling.

And that is just the beginning of an adventure that involves a whole parade of monocled men named after the great traitors of history. Also, you know the iconic treasure sitting in a museum in Berlin, the Nefertiti bust? The Emerson family is seamlessly inserted into that historical narrative. (I love the way Elizabeth Peters has always had them at or near the scene of great discoveries, but always in such a way that real history is left intact...they get their hands all over the story, but in the end they leave no trace!)
So, yes, the Nefertiti bust has been discovered, but then it vanishes, but then it reappears again...and again...and again...how many of them can there be? Amelia's son Ramses and his best friend David traverse Cairo hunting down each new copy.
This keeps Ramses mostly away from Nefret, the Emerson family's ward, now a grown woman with a tragedy in her past. Readers of The Falcon at the Portal and He Shall Thunder in the Sky know that since this new book is filling in that chronological gap, the relationship tension must be kept intact. It simmers ever so slightly below the surface.

I must mention one other big thing that I adored in this book....the appearances of the Emerson family's perpetual nemesis (actually, at this point, "frenemy" is probably a more accurate description). Yes, it's Sethos, or as Amelia likes to call him, the Master Criminal. His disguises and plots are ongoing joys of the series. When he shows up in The Painted Queen, it's with greater panache than ever before. There are thundering hooves. There are dramatic interventions. It's glorious. Those who know the rest of his story will revel in these moments.

So, in review, this book is everything I wanted the last Amelia Peabody novel to be. I'm sad that there won't be any more of her adventures, but I'm happy that The Painted Queen is such a fitting swan song. I am totally elated to have read it, and you will be too. It goes on sale July 25!

***SO MANY THANKS to William Morrow/Harper Collins Publishers who provided me with this free advance copy in exchange for an honest review
… (més)
 
Marcat
Alishadt | Hi ha 19 ressenyes més | Feb 25, 2023 |

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Autors associats

Ed Gorman Editor
Nancy Pickard Contributor
Robert J. Randisi Contributor
Selima Ikram Archaeological consultant
Sarah Shankman Contributor
Lia Matera Contributor
Marcia Talley Contributor
Agatha Christie Contributor
Carolyn Wheat Contributor
Alan Russell Contributor
Teri Holbrook Contributor
Susan B. Kelly Contributor
Gwen Moffat Contributor
David August Contributor
Marjorie Eccles Contributor
Susan Moody Contributor
Edward D. Hoch Contributor
Jan Burke Contributor
Kate Charles Contributor
Sara Paretsky Contributor
Donald E. Westlake Contributor
Reginald Hill Contributor
Marcia Muller Contributor
Robert Barnard Contributor
Bill Pronzini Contributor
Simon Brett Contributor
Dorothy Cannell Contributor
Ed McBain Contributor
Charles Todd Contributor
Ann Granger Contributor
S. J. Rozan Contributor
John Lutz Contributor
Anne Perry Contributor
Ruth Rendell Contributor
Sam Pizza Contributor
Maude Miller Contributor
Sam Pizzo Contributor
Monica Quill Contributor
David Corn Contributor
Jon L. Breen Introduction
Brendan DuBois Contributor
James Grady Contributor
Ben Perini Cover artist
Fritz Metsch Designer
Phill Singer Cover artist
Richard L. Aquan Cover designer
Hana Černá Translator
C. J. Critt Narrator
Walt Beasley Author photo

Estadístiques

Obres
53
També de
28
Membres
8,715
Popularitat
#2,745
Valoració
½ 3.4
Ressenyes
151
ISBN
372
Llengües
5
Preferit
18

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