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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Workmanlike mystery with Leonardo as the detecxtive. It is set during the time Leonardo was working as artist and engineer for the Duke of Milan. His cousin is killed, and the duke asks Leonardo to solve the crime, which he does with the help of his apprentice Dino. Worth a read, don't know if it will be a series. Milan, Lombardy, 1483, and Ludovico Sforza, duke of Milan, is employing Lorenzo da Vinci as a military engineer and a master of fresco painting, but when a count, dressed as a bishop for a live chess game is found murdered in the garden, the duke, Il Moro, puts him in charge of discovering the murderer. Lots of twists and turns follow, with details of Renaissance life, food, painting, and more added in. The only implausible part, to me, was that the very observant Lorenzo doesn't detect his painting apprentice Dino's secret. The cover is symbolic, showing us pieces from the chessboard, rather than characters in the book. Leonardo Da Vinci and his apprentice, Dino, investigate the murder of one of their master's family during a live chess match. Narrated by Dino, we see much of life in Renaissance Milan, and the inner workings of Leonardo's studio. The Leonardo of this book is a young man and that is very different from the way we often think of him. I found this mystery very interesting. I enjoyed the details of Renaissance life. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:53 -0400)
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THE QUEEN'S GAMBIT is Diane Stuckart's first book in the Leonardo di Vinci mystery series, and I have to say that it is the most unique idea for a mystery series that I have encountered. That uniqueness hooked me from page one, but the strengths of this novel just keep the reader anxiously turning pages.
Strength number one: the characters. Leonardo di Vinci is the epitome of the Renaissance man. History has documented that, so it isn't difficult to believe that he has a multitude of talents. Plus, Stuckart doesn't give him unbelievable talents like some of our modern-day superman-like protagonists. The choice of Leonardo as a protagonist is rather ingenious, actually. Stuckart's fictional sidekick, Dino, is equally wonderful. Dino is the narrator of THE QUEEN'S GAMBIT and the reader sees the plot much like one sees it in a Nero Wolfe, Sherlock Holmes, or John Ceepak mystery. Like Archie, Watson and Danny, Dino worships his mentor, and obviously that injects a bit of a bias in the point of view.
My favorite character would definitely have to be the tailor, Luigi. His hard shell exterior is covering a sentimental, fatherly interior, and he injects comedy into the plot. Only one in a cast of excellent minor, supporting characters ranging from the poor servants up to the royalty.
Strength number two: the historical setting. I'm not a historian, so I don't know all the minor details of fifteenth century Milan, but from an amateur's eye, Stuckart did a great job of setting the scene. The description of clothing, Leonardo's experiments, the art supplies used to paint, even the evolution of chess. One of the elements I had the most fun with was the dialogue. Obviously the book is written in English, but Stuckart makes a nice blend so that the reader can have a taste of the time period but not a difficult time interpreting. I think I may add "Saint's Blood!" to my vocabulary.
Strength number three: the plot. The mystery of this novel is multi-layered, and the characters are often working in circles to try to figure out why their clues are leading them to the wrong conclusions. Chess was the perfect game for Il Moro to choose to enact with live people. The actual game was analogous to Leonardo and Dino's investigation: complex, intelligent and often deceiving.
While I've pulled out and listed these strengths individually, the blending of them is what makes the entire book work so well. While I didn't want the book to end, I was assuaged by the fact that I already have the next book in this fun series, PORTRAIT OF A LADY. I'm looking forward to rejoining Leonardo and Dino in yet another fifteenth century adventure! (