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Chasing Cézanne by Peter Mayle
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Chasing Cézanne

by Peter Mayle

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Quick read. Interesting story of the art world and the world of art forgers. Takes place in Paris and NYC. Enjoyable. ( )
  ilovemycat1 | Feb 28, 2009 |
An enjoyable summer read with one of Mayle's typical laid back protagonists who stumbles into a mystery, where fine food and wine become crucial to the outcome. ( )
  kewing | Sep 18, 2008 |
Author Peter Mayle never pretends to be anything other than an entertainer (he was in advertising for years, after all) and that makes his books perfect when the only time you get to read is 30 minutes before you fall asleep.

I try to keep a cache of novels on my shelf that I call my veggie books, a category I find grows with each passing year, and a new (to me) Mayle always gets a place on that shelf. These are the books I read when I want to smile while reading.

There are loads of books on the market that purport to do just this, entertain without taxing the cognitive faculties too hard. But my other criteria is that such a book be well-written, a criteria far more difficult to attain. Peter Mayle does this very well, however. His prose has a nice spring to it. His sentences are economical and pointed. He draws a character in just a few words without the burden of superfluous physical description unless it's necessary to a character's character (if you will). Along the way, you get to vicariously enjoy another place on the planet (in the case of Mayle, it's always France) and chuckle over his clear-eyed and cynical view of the glossy-magazine industry.

So -- a good read, not too deep. A good choice for those times when the reality of what passes for mainstream media is just so awful that you need a good break from it. ( )
  RavennaDavies | May 4, 2008 |
Chasing Cezanne by Peter Mayle is enjoyable for the same reasons his memoirs recounting his life living in Provence are so pleasurable to read: namely, his rich and colorful descriptions of this gorgeous area. Mr. Mayle is not as deft at spinning a smart and suspenseful mystery. He never quite manages to create that suspenseful charge that true mystery authors know how generate. However, I would definitely and without hesitation recommend Chasing Cezanne to everyone who counts themselves a fan of his Provence books. Mayle’s writing is fluid and descriptive. While reading this novel, I wished that I was sipping champagne in Paris or shopping for a baguette in Aix. He is truly without parallel in his ability to convey the essence of France. ( )
  briannahaggard | Apr 2, 2008 |
witty, light novel about art forgery by the “Year in Provence” author, great prose
  xestobium25 | Mar 24, 2008 |
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 067978120X, Paperback)

Our hero, glamorous art photographer Andre Kelly, is on assignment for glamorous DQ Magazine--run by the glamorous Camilla Porter--in Cape Ferrat on the (you guessed it) glamorous Côte d'Azur. Snooping around an ancestral pile for some snaps, by chance he spies Old Claude, the ancient retainer of the immensely wealthy Denoyer family, packing the family Cezanne into a plumbing van. Puzzled, Andre investigates, and the game is afoot. Peter Mayle's latest effort, Chasing Cezanne, is a whodunit that shows good manners and impeccable taste. It takes its characters--graduates of all the best schools, of course--to some of the world's most posh locales. The plot device is high rent, too: a purloined painting worth a cool $30 million. To call this book lightweight seems unfair and boorish besides. There's lots of travel, lots of opulence, lots of opportunities for Mayle to describe Paris and Provence, and all the yummies you'll find in both places. Who can worry about a mystery when the food's so delectable?

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400)

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