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In an ancient tunnel underneath New York City a charnel house is discovered. Inside are thirty-six bodies all murdered and mutilated more than a century ago. While FBI agent Pendergast investigates the old crimes, identical killings start to terrorize the city. The nightmare has begun. Again.Tags
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I really liked this installment of the Pendergast series and I think it's my favorite so far. I made the mistake of reaching the final act when I was planning on going to bed and found I couldn't put it down. This is also the first book where I feel Pendergast starts taking center stage. There were a couple shaky aspects to the plot, but I read books for enjoyment and try not to overanalyze them too much. It was very suspenseful, with plenty of plot twists and angst. I'm definitely going to continue the series.
What a wonderful book! I'm fairly new to Peston & Child and this is my first Pendergast novel, and I was delighted to experience something a little different.
Cabinet of Curiosities is named after the old freakish collections people used to have before the days of big, fancy museums. They were places where people stored both real scientific objects of note, as well as a great many fakes and sensationalist items, like two-headed babies and alleged historical artifacts. The book itself is written very much in the vein of its subject matter with extensive description of such morbid and fassinating curiosities. Great fun!
The story is a mystery. When a long-buried charnal house is uncovered in NYC with 36 bodies, Agent Pendergast show more mysteriously arrives to investigate, in a manner rather unofficial. An archeologist, a reporter and a policeman are recruited to help and they combine forces to discover everything they can about the man behind these grissly murders and - his quest to prolong human life. That quest becomes vital when a series of brand new murders with the same MO begin happening around the city.
There are some neat twists and turns and the the authors do a marvelous job of teasing the suspense out of some of the tense moments, when killers are lurking in the shadows or chasing victims. There are also a couple of laugh-out-loud moments that give the book a good change of pace from thrills to laughs to horror.
The characters were not at all as I expected. Too many novels today sport characters which are disgustingly perfect, ace-shots, brilliant, handsome, perfect at everything they do, the best investigators and the best fighters. Everyone wants to be Bond. They're completely unrealistic and rather tiresome after a while. While Pendergast himself is a brilliant mind, he is definitely quirky. Nora, the archeologist was quite realistic, a strong female type. The reporter is both great at his job and a total flop in other ways; quite amusing. But not as funny as the captain of the police, who's a hilariously bumbling idiot and it was a riot to watch him work.
It's a great book, something with depth and intricasy, well written and fun. Especially if you're a fan of the 19th century and Halloween-type grusesome fare. Those Cabinets of Curiosities are halfway museum, halfway witch's house full of eye of newt and other weird things. I'd love to visit and I'm glad this book gave me a glimpse into that bizarre world. I'm excited to read the other Pendergast novels and more from Preston & Child. show less
Cabinet of Curiosities is named after the old freakish collections people used to have before the days of big, fancy museums. They were places where people stored both real scientific objects of note, as well as a great many fakes and sensationalist items, like two-headed babies and alleged historical artifacts. The book itself is written very much in the vein of its subject matter with extensive description of such morbid and fassinating curiosities. Great fun!
The story is a mystery. When a long-buried charnal house is uncovered in NYC with 36 bodies, Agent Pendergast show more mysteriously arrives to investigate, in a manner rather unofficial. An archeologist, a reporter and a policeman are recruited to help and they combine forces to discover everything they can about the man behind these grissly murders and - his quest to prolong human life. That quest becomes vital when a series of brand new murders with the same MO begin happening around the city.
There are some neat twists and turns and the the authors do a marvelous job of teasing the suspense out of some of the tense moments, when killers are lurking in the shadows or chasing victims. There are also a couple of laugh-out-loud moments that give the book a good change of pace from thrills to laughs to horror.
The characters were not at all as I expected. Too many novels today sport characters which are disgustingly perfect, ace-shots, brilliant, handsome, perfect at everything they do, the best investigators and the best fighters. Everyone wants to be Bond. They're completely unrealistic and rather tiresome after a while. While Pendergast himself is a brilliant mind, he is definitely quirky. Nora, the archeologist was quite realistic, a strong female type. The reporter is both great at his job and a total flop in other ways; quite amusing. But not as funny as the captain of the police, who's a hilariously bumbling idiot and it was a riot to watch him work.
It's a great book, something with depth and intricasy, well written and fun. Especially if you're a fan of the 19th century and Halloween-type grusesome fare. Those Cabinets of Curiosities are halfway museum, halfway witch's house full of eye of newt and other weird things. I'd love to visit and I'm glad this book gave me a glimpse into that bizarre world. I'm excited to read the other Pendergast novels and more from Preston & Child. show less
“One can reach the gates of hell just as easily by short steps as by large.”
Staying in New York, this third novel deals with the museum and archaeological finds again. This time it's closer to home when tearing down structures for new business reveals hidden bones and horrors beneath cement walls, telling a tragic story of the past. A modern killer is up to no good, however, bringing out Special Agent Pendergast, returning character journalist Bill Smithback, and struggling archaeologist Nora Kelly.
While the mystery angle is different, this book has a lot in common with the previous two, Relic and Reliquary, because of so much time spent in the museum, using similar research to unearth mystery, and trailing New York City to show more unmask a killer. Unlike the other two, Pendergast is more front and center focus. There's something about the detective that's addictive - he's unique and in some cases downright odd. He has an almost unrealistic, uncanny ability to determine the truth of the matter and smooth his way past conventional legal channels. Still, even if he's not wholly realistic, he's just awesome and steals every page scene he graces. Kudos to the author for making him more of a focus and regular. He stood out in the other books but he just wasn't there enough before. As inhuman and otherly than he could appear in previous books, he gets a fuller fleshing out this time, even with glimpses of his personal life and family.
The new addition of a down-on-his-luck cop was a gift. O'Shaughnessy was my favorite when you remove Pendergast from the story. At first he seemed like he would be another one layered addition to the corrupt, laziness of the system, but it's a pleasant surprise to find instead that he was pretty epic in his own, slower manner.
The killer is a demented being and the big reveal of what's at stake is intriguing. It certainly raises the implications of this being another mass murderer killing for mere psychosis out of the bag. There's a horrible death at the end that soured the taste of the of the book for me, though - I was just sitting there with a 'no, they didn't go' there face. Cleverly twisted with suspenseful spots, I can't fault the mystery story itself other than the pacing of the book lagging, waxing and waning at random times.
I started getting weighed down with Nora and Bill especially. I think if a lot of the scenes with Bill were removed, the book would have improved its pacing and interest because he went from annoying to boring. Nora wasn't really that interesting either - I dug some of her inner political struggles and liked how the ending of the book worked out for her, but she didn't hold a high degree of chemistry with me. show less
Staying in New York, this third novel deals with the museum and archaeological finds again. This time it's closer to home when tearing down structures for new business reveals hidden bones and horrors beneath cement walls, telling a tragic story of the past. A modern killer is up to no good, however, bringing out Special Agent Pendergast, returning character journalist Bill Smithback, and struggling archaeologist Nora Kelly.
While the mystery angle is different, this book has a lot in common with the previous two, Relic and Reliquary, because of so much time spent in the museum, using similar research to unearth mystery, and trailing New York City to show more unmask a killer. Unlike the other two, Pendergast is more front and center focus. There's something about the detective that's addictive - he's unique and in some cases downright odd. He has an almost unrealistic, uncanny ability to determine the truth of the matter and smooth his way past conventional legal channels. Still, even if he's not wholly realistic, he's just awesome and steals every page scene he graces. Kudos to the author for making him more of a focus and regular. He stood out in the other books but he just wasn't there enough before. As inhuman and otherly than he could appear in previous books, he gets a fuller fleshing out this time, even with glimpses of his personal life and family.
The new addition of a down-on-his-luck cop was a gift. O'Shaughnessy was my favorite when you remove Pendergast from the story. At first he seemed like he would be another one layered addition to the corrupt, laziness of the system, but it's a pleasant surprise to find instead that he was pretty epic in his own, slower manner.
The killer is a demented being and the big reveal of what's at stake is intriguing. It certainly raises the implications of this being another mass murderer killing for mere psychosis out of the bag. There's a horrible death at the end that soured the taste of the of the book for me, though - I was just sitting there with a 'no, they didn't go' there face. Cleverly twisted with suspenseful spots, I can't fault the mystery story itself other than the pacing of the book lagging, waxing and waning at random times.
I started getting weighed down with Nora and Bill especially. I think if a lot of the scenes with Bill were removed, the book would have improved its pacing and interest because he went from annoying to boring. Nora wasn't really that interesting either - I dug some of her inner political struggles and liked how the ending of the book worked out for her, but she didn't hold a high degree of chemistry with me. show less
Even if this book was terrible, the subject matter was so interesting to me, that it still would have gotten an okay rating. Thing is, the book wasn't terrible, it was a pretty good book also. Agent Pendergast was an interesting character, a little too secretive to join my pantheon of favorite literary characters (John Corey, et al), but enough that I bought more of the Pendergast series to read more about him. My caveat here is that this book is the third in the series, so maybe we learned more about Pendergast in the first two books, or maybe not, I'll let you know after I read the first two. Anyway, in regards to this book, great plot, interesting subject matter, like I said, keeps you guessing about the identity of the "bad guy" til show more the end. A thoroughly well done book, if you ask me. show less
A construction crew in New York City uncovers a buried charnel house containing 36 skeletons. Agent Pendergast, a pale and strange man, appears at the New York Museum of Natural History, and pulls Archaeologist Dr. Nora Kelly into the 100-year old murder case. From the clothing and personal effects, Kelly ascertains all the remains are of poor people -- street, kids, factory workers, prostitutes -- and all were killed in the same way. Their spinal cords were severed and some portions extracted. Their investigation soon causes an avalanche of anger within the NYC political powers-that-be. A wealthy developer, city hall, the mayor's office, the police commissioner and even the museum director want the investigation stopped. Dr. Kelly is show more up to her neck in hot water and the case, when new corpses begin showing up, killed in the same gruesome manner. Agent Pendergast gathers a team consisting of a NYC cop, a NY Times reporter and Dr. Kelly to help him solve the case before more people are killed. It turns out that much, much more is at stake than just murder victims. If they fail, the future of the entire human race might be threatened.
This book is the 3rd in the Agent Pendergast series by Preston & Child. I read the first two books years ago -- Relic and Reliquary -- and loved them. Now years later while perusing my local library's digital offerings, I checked out Brimstone, only realizing then that it was the 5th book in the series. I am seriously OCD about reading a series in order, so I backed up to read The Cabinet of Curiousities and Still Life With Crows first. I'm so glad I found this series again! I love a good creepy mystery -- and The Cabinet of Curiousity was exactly what I adore!
Agent Pendergast is a strange, almost supernatural character at times, and very human at others. The character is portrayed as almost unknowable -- like The Shadow from old radio and televison serials. I am a total OTR addict, so I was sucked right into the story immediately. The plot moved at a good pace, and the supporting characters were believable enough to keep a sense of reality. The strange, supernatural, or magical qualities of Pendergast did not overwhelm the story, but enhanced it.
The end result was a creepy thrill-ride that I couldn't put down. I was totally engrossed in the story.
There are 16 books in the Agent Pendergast series. Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child also co-author the Gideon Crew series. There was a movie version of the first Pendergast novel released in 1997. The movie had good box-office reception and reviews, but on their website the authors state it wasn't a good representation of their main character, Agent Pendergast. I don't remember much about the movie other than it was thrilling and enjoyable. I do remember feeling at the time that the book was better. But -- isn't that always the case?? :)
If you like creepy, supernatural-feel, thrillers -- read this series!! There are some important plot points and character introductions in the earlier books....so read them in order to get the full effect. They aren't quick reads, but mindful, engrossing stories so be prepared to set aside uninterrupted brain-time!
I don't normally give books a 5....for me, a 5 is like an A and not something to award without extreme perfection. This book came close....solid 4.5. show less
This book is the 3rd in the Agent Pendergast series by Preston & Child. I read the first two books years ago -- Relic and Reliquary -- and loved them. Now years later while perusing my local library's digital offerings, I checked out Brimstone, only realizing then that it was the 5th book in the series. I am seriously OCD about reading a series in order, so I backed up to read The Cabinet of Curiousities and Still Life With Crows first. I'm so glad I found this series again! I love a good creepy mystery -- and The Cabinet of Curiousity was exactly what I adore!
Agent Pendergast is a strange, almost supernatural character at times, and very human at others. The character is portrayed as almost unknowable -- like The Shadow from old radio and televison serials. I am a total OTR addict, so I was sucked right into the story immediately. The plot moved at a good pace, and the supporting characters were believable enough to keep a sense of reality. The strange, supernatural, or magical qualities of Pendergast did not overwhelm the story, but enhanced it.
The end result was a creepy thrill-ride that I couldn't put down. I was totally engrossed in the story.
There are 16 books in the Agent Pendergast series. Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child also co-author the Gideon Crew series. There was a movie version of the first Pendergast novel released in 1997. The movie had good box-office reception and reviews, but on their website the authors state it wasn't a good representation of their main character, Agent Pendergast. I don't remember much about the movie other than it was thrilling and enjoyable. I do remember feeling at the time that the book was better. But -- isn't that always the case?? :)
If you like creepy, supernatural-feel, thrillers -- read this series!! There are some important plot points and character introductions in the earlier books....so read them in order to get the full effect. They aren't quick reads, but mindful, engrossing stories so be prepared to set aside uninterrupted brain-time!
I don't normally give books a 5....for me, a 5 is like an A and not something to award without extreme perfection. This book came close....solid 4.5. show less
This was my first of their Pendergast series of books, but I confess that I didn't select it because of Agent Pendergast, even though he is the most popular series the authors' offerings. I got hooked on the Nora Kelly book series. Kelly is an interesting and complex character and I first met her in the book "Thunderhead" which intrigued me because of its subject matter. I was hooked and proceeded to devout additional books in the Nora Kelly series not realizing that she was in this one. But now I've met Pendergast and I understand why he is so popular! He is intriguing and remote in mamy ways as well as both analytical and emotional. The plot in this book was amazingly complex, the characters very well developed and the adventure was show more compelling. The Surgeon, a serial killer recently operating in New York City, is on everyone's mind, but is he a copycat, or is he somehow a serial killer from 100 years ago who managed to extend his life through diabolical human experiments. Kelly, Smithback, and Pendergast race against time and put their lives on the line to find answers and discover the identity of the Surgeon. I confess that I didn't know whodunit until 2 pages before the authors revealed it. Bravo! Excellent read if you are into mystery, actio, adventure, and scientific based thrillers. show less
Yet another wonderful Preston/Child mystery. A story that involves the quest for eternal life on earth and where science has gone wrong. Beginning in the 19th century Five Points area of Manhattan, a doctor must kill people in order to extract a protein from the human spine while alive. In order to do this he must kidnap innocent people and tie them down inside his hidden lab to perform the extraction, afterwards succumbing to death. But, does this doctor actually achieve success, and years later is he still alive acting out these bizarre murders? Pendergrast and his cohorts team up to find this doctor and his mysterious lab and attempt to bring an end to this injustice.
Never a dull moment, nor is it predictable. Full of mystery, show more intrigue, suspense, and action. I highly recommend this book to Preston/Child fans especially to those who always enjoy Agent Pendergrast and his witty nuances. show less
Never a dull moment, nor is it predictable. Full of mystery, show more intrigue, suspense, and action. I highly recommend this book to Preston/Child fans especially to those who always enjoy Agent Pendergrast and his witty nuances. show less
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Author Information

116+ Works 85,424 Members
Douglas Jerome Preston was born on May 20, 1956 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He received a B.A. in English literature from Pomona College in 1978. His career began at the American Museum of Natural History, where he worked as an editor and writer from 1978 to 1985. He also was a lecturer in English at Princeton University. He became a full-time show more writer of both fiction and nonfiction books in 1986. Many of his fiction works are co-written with Lincoln Child including Relic, Riptide, Thunderhead, The Wheel of Darkness, Cemetery Dance, and Gideon's Corpse. His nonfiction works include Dinosaurs in the Attic; Cities of Gold: A Journey Across the American Southwest in Pursuit of Coronado; Talking to the Ground; and The Royal Road. He has written for numerous magazines including The New Yorker; Natural History; Harper's; Smithsonian; National Geographic; and Travel and Leisure. He became a New York Times Best Selling author with his titles Two Graves and Crimson Shores which he co-wrote with Lincoln Child, and his titles White Fire, The Lost Island Blue Labyrinth and The Lost City of the Monkey God. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

91+ Works 77,969 Members
Lincoln Child was born in Westport, Connecticut in 1957. He received a degree in English from Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota. After graduation, he obtained a position as an editorial assistant at St. Martin's Press and eventually became a full editor in 1984. He left St. Martin's Press in 1987 for a job at MetLife and began writing. show more Child has co-written numerous books with Douglas Preston including Relic, White Fire, Cold Vengeance, Riptide, Thunderhead, The Wheel of Darkness, Cemetery Dance, Gideon's Corpse, Blue Labyrinth, and Two Graves. In 2003, he published his first solo novel entitled Utopia. His other solo works include Death Match, Deep Storm, Terminal Freeze, The Third Gate, and The Forgotten Room. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Cabinet of Curiosities
- Original title
- The Cabinet of Curiosities
- Original publication date
- 2002
- People/Characters
- Aloysius Pendergast (FBI special agent | great grandson of Hezekiah's son Boethius); Nora Kelly (PhD., archaeologist); Enoch Leng (19th century serial killer | Shottum's tenant); Captain Sherwood Custer (NYC police 7th Precinct); Commissioner Karl Rocker (NYC police); William Smithback, Jr. (NY Times reporter) (show all 63); Sergeant Patrick Murphy O'Shaughnessy (assigned to be Pendergast's NYPD liaison); Roger C. Brisbane III (New York City Museum of Natural History First Vice Pres. & General Counsel ); Aunt Cornelia Delamere Pendergast (Pendergast's institutionalized great-aunt); Reinhart Puck (Museum of Natural History Central Archives); Pee Wee Boxer (construction worker); Dr. Frok; Dr. Weidenrick; Ed Shenk; Sally; Dr Van Bronck (Medical examiner); Mary Greene (one of Enoch Leng's victims | 19 yr old workhouse orphan); Tinbury McFadden (19th century Museum of Natural History curator who disappeared); Oscar Gibbs (Museum of Natural History Osteology Dept. | assists Reinhart Puck as needed); Anthonhy Fairhaven (Moegen-Fairhaven Group real estate dev. | brother Arthur died of progeria); Dr. Sophia Wellesley (Met Museum of Art | world's foremost authority on the history of dress); Prof. Hiram Howlett (corresponded with T. McFadden from 1871-1873); Dr. Ferdinand Huntt (corresponded with T. McFadden from 1869-1879 | native sex practices interest); Dr. Frederick Watson Collopy (Director, Museum of Natural History); Mary Hill (Miss | the mayor's African-American spokesperson); Mayor Edward Montefiori (New York); Dr. Lofton; Catherine; Miss Kite (Anthony Fairhaven's former high school teacher); Bryce Harrison (New York Post reporter | Smithback's professional rival); Karl C. Rocker; John Canaday Shottum (displayed a collection of curiosities from 1852-1881); Doreen Hollander (tourist from Pine Creek, OK | 1st current murder victim); Paul Karp (17-yr-old hoping to get lucky); Dr. Bill Dowson (pathologist doing the autopsy on Doreen Hollander); Sue (nurse assisting Dr. Dowson and deflecting his flirting); Mandy Eklund (model | 2nd current murder victim); the man in the derby hat (serial killer); Clara McFadden (Tinbury McFadden's 95-yr-old daughter); Constance Greene (Mary Greene's 6-yr-old sister); Ms. Perez ('New York' magazine reporter); Mr. Diller ('Newsday' reporter); Ms. Epstein (WNBC anchorwoman); Ling Lee (from whom Nora rents the basement apartment at 99 Doyers St in Chinatown); Mrs. Lee (Ling Lee's formidable wife); Proctor (Pendergast's chauffeur); Francis (New York Public Library guard); Wren (knows where all the lost treasures of the New York Public Library are); Jack Manetti (Museum of Natural History security director); Lieutenant Detective Cannell (NY police | assisting Captain Custer); Lieutenant Detective Piles (NY police | assisting Captain Custer); Dr. Ostrom (doctor on duty when Pendergast visited his great-aunt); Antoine L. Pendergast (son of Hezekiah & Constance | Pendergast's great-grand-uncle); Marie LeClare (Antoine's elderly mentor in the Cajun voodoo of Obeah); Police Sergeant Paul J. Finester (assisting Captain Custer); Sergeant O'Grady (Finester's partner); Johnson (guard at the Dakota); Sergeant Herbert Noyes (Captain Custer's brown-nosing personal assistant); Millie Locke (real estate agent showing Bill and Nora an apartment); Mrs. Surd (Dr. Collopy's secretary); Bulger (Old Records guard | Museum of Natural History); O'Neal (Old Records guard | Museum of Natural History); Clara McFadden's black cat
- Important places
- New York, New York, USA; Manhattan, New York, New York, USA; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; 7th Precinct; Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York, USA; London, England, UK (show all 35); Room 1501, St. Luke's Roosevelt Hospital, 1111 Amsterdam Ave, New York, New York, USA; Museum of Natural History, New York, New York, USA; Lower East Side, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA; Café des Artistes, 1 W 67th Street, New York, New York, USA; J. C. Shottum's Cabinet of Natural Productions and Curiosities (once stood where the bones were); Central Archives, New York Museum of Natural History, New York, New York, USA; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA; construction site at the corner of Henry & Catherine Streets where the bones are found, New York, N; Arnthony Fairhaven's office atop the Metropolitan Tower, Manhattan,New York, New York, USA; the ramble, Central Park, New York, New York, USA; Smithback's cubicle, New York Times Building, 242 W 41 St, New York, New York, USA; P.S. 1984, Amsterdam Avenue, New York, New York, USA; Tompkins Square Park, E 10th St, New York, New York, USA; Chinatown, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA; Pendergast's apartment, the Dakota, 1 W 72nd St, New York, New York, USA; 16 Water Street, Lower East Side, New York, New York, USA; Peekskill, New York, USA; Clara McFadden's house, Peekskill, New York, New York, USA; Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York, USA; 1 Police Plaza, Civic Center, Manhattan, New York, New York, USA; basement apartment 99 Doyers Street southeastern edge of Chinatown, New York, New York, USA; Blarney Stone Tavern, New York, New York, USA; New Amsterdam Chemists, East Twelfth Street, New York, New York, USA; New York Times morgue, New York, New York, USA; 7th level of Stacks, New York Public Library, New York, New York, USA; Old Records, Museum of Natural History, New York, New York, USA; 891 Riverside Drive, New York, New York, USA (Beaux Arts mansion a block long); Mount Mercy Hospital for the Criminally Insane, Little Governor's Island, New York, USA; Gates of Heaven Cemetery, 10 W Stevens Avenue, Hawthorne, Westchester County, New York, USA
- Dedication
- Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child dedicate this book to the teachers, professors, and librarians of America, most especially those who have made a difference in our own lives.
- First words
- Pee-Wee Boxer surveyed the jobsite with disgust.
- Quotations
- [From Shottom's 1881 letter to McFadden]
It was, I knew now, not gas escaping from a corpse. And this was not the work of a man who trafficked with body snatchers, with corpses stolen from graveyards. This poor creature... (show all) on the table was still alive. Leng practiced his abominable work on those who still lived. (Section 2, chapter 5)
[Pendergast is visiting via memory crossing]
What the old monks had used this subterranean vault for, Pendergast never learned. But almost two hundred years before, this place had become the Pendergast family necropolis.... (show all) Here, over a dozen generations on both sides of the family -- the fallen line of French aristocrats, the mysterious denizens of the deep bayou -- had been buried or, more frequently, reburied. Pendergast walked on, hands behind his back, staring at the carved names. Here was Henri Prendregast de Mousqueton, a seventeenth-century mountebank who pulled teeth, performed magic and comedy, and practiced quack medicine. And here, encased in a mausoleum bedecked with quartz minarets, was Eduard, a well-known Harley Street doctor in eighteenth-century London. And here, Comstock Pendergast, famed mesmerist, magician, and mentor of Harry Houdini.
Pendergast strolled farther, passing artists and murderers, vaudeville performers and violin prodigies. At last he stopped beside a mausoleum grander than those around it: a ponderous conflation of white marble, carved into an exact replica of the Pendergast mansion itself. This was the tomb of Hezekiah Pendergast, his own great-great grandfather. (section 9, chapter 1) - Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Thank you, Nora," he said quietly.
- Original language
- English
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