Lost and found in Paris A novel

Lian Dolan

Book - 2022

Joan Blakely had an unconventional childhood: the daughter of a globe-trotting supermodel and a world-famous artist. Her artist father died on 9/11, and Joan--an art historian by training--has spent more than a decade maintaining his legacy. Life in the art world is beginning to wear on her--and then one fateful afternoon her husband drops a bombshell: he's fathered twins with another woman. Furious but secretly pleased to have a reason to blow up her life, Joan impulsively decides to get out of town, booking a last-minute trip to Paris as an art courier: the person museums hire to fly valuable works of art to potential clients, discreetly stowed in their carry-on luggage. Sipping her champagne in business-class, she chats up her seatm...ate, Nate, a good-looking tech nerd who invites her to dinner in Paris. He doesn't know she's carrying drawings worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. But after a romantic dinner and an even more romantic night together, Joan wakes up next to her new lover to discover the drawings gone. Even more shocking is what's been left in their place: a sketch from her father's journals, which she thought had been lost when he died on 9/11, and a poem that reads like a treasure hunt. With Nate as a sidekick, Joan will follow the clues all over Paris--from its grand cathedrals to the romantic bistros to the twisty side streets of Monmarte--hoping to recover the lost art, and her own sense of adventure. What she finds is even better than she'd expected.

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Dolan Lian
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Dolan Lian Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Domestic fiction
Published
New York, NY : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Lian Dolan (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
308 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780062909022
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Nearing the tenth anniversary of her father's death on 9/11, Joan Blakely gets a nasty surprise: her husband has been living a double life, and he has five-year-old twins who were born halfway through their marriage. Joan immediately cuts ties and contemplates next steps. As an art courier--and the child of two famous artists--she has strong ties to France and the glitzy life her parents led there. She takes on a job delivering a valuable set of sketches depicting her namesake, Joan of Arc, to Paris. But when the sketches are stolen from Joan's hotel room, and Joan learns that her father's precious art notebooks may be somewhere in the city, she must go on an unlikely journey to excavate her past and create her own future. Dolan (The Sweeney Sisters, 2020) spins a story that is both heavy and light, spanning continents and exploring relationships. With a hint of Dan Brown and a splash of Jamie Brenner, this book will appeal to a variety of readers, especially those who enjoy character-driven fiction.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Dolan's clever latest (after The Sweeney Sisters) follows a newly single art courier as she ends up on a scavenger hunt after losing the work in her care. After Joan Blakely's social-climbing husband, Casey, reveals he's fathered twins with his former assistant, Joan accepts an assignment to deliver a series of sketches by a 19th-century French painter depicting Joan of Arc from a Pasadena, Calif., museum to a collector in Paris. The obscure works are meaningful to Joan, whose namesake was revered and often referenced by her late father, Henry, a famous artist who died in the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Joan meets smart, thoughtful Nate on the flight to Paris, and later, in an attempt to forget about Casey, she hooks up with him. The morning after, she discovers the sketches are missing from her hotel room safe. Joan grills Nate about the theft and determines he wasn't the culprit. Then, envelopes appear that contain elaborate clues along with a page from Henry's priceless notebooks, long thought to be lost in the plane that crashed into the North Tower. Dolan successfully sells most, but not all, of the far-fetched reasons for the mystery of the envelopes, and does a fantastic job depicting Joan's love for her father and heartache over his death. This has a bit more substance than the standard Parisian romp. (Apr.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Daughter of a prominent artist whose legacy she has tended since his death on 9/11, art historian Joan Blakely is so enraged when she learns of her husband's infidelity that she decides to get out of town, accepting a job as art courier and carrying valuable drawings to Paris in her overnight bag. After hooking up with handsome techie Nate, whom she met in business class, she awakens to find the drawings gone and a long-lost work by her father in their place. Now she's got mysteries to solve, with Nate's help. Billed as a "thinking woman's ultimate escapist adventure in Paris"; with a 50,000-copy first printing.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A 31-year-old Los Angeles--area woman finds herself caught up in intrigue when the artworks she's delivering to Paris are stolen. Joan Blakely might be the daughter of an internationally famous artist tragically killed on 9/11 and a supermodel, but she's nothing like either of her parents, while being exactly like both. Hardworking, focused, beautiful, working at an art museum, and almost 10 years into what she thought was a happy marriage to a photographer, Joan is pretty OK with how her life has turned out. But then her husband drops a bombshell as he's heading out of town: Not only did he have an affair, he has 5-year-old twin sons who are starting kindergarten and live not five miles away. Joan can either join the big blended family he envisions with his former assistant--cum--baby mama, children, and her, or the marriage is over. Joan doesn't have to think twice, and the locks to their--really her and her mother's--house are changed and divorce proceedings started while he's out of town. The story follows Joan's efforts to reclaim her life, trying to rediscover the self she lost 10 years previously when her father was killed aboard American Airlines Flight 11 when it hit the North Tower of the World Trade Center. She agrees to personally courier a set of Joan of Arc--related sketches from the museum where she works to Paris so that an interested buyer can take a look at them. One thing leads to another, and the sketches are stolen. An inexplicably lighthearted lark of a treasure hunt develops as Joan follows clues that lead her to various locations of personal importance to her, her father, and her mother as she tries to find the sketches. A quirky novel that deals with weighty topics and emotions without taking itself too seriously. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.