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Mansions of the Dead (Sweeney St. George Mystery)
 
 
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Mansions of the Dead (Sweeney St. George Mystery) [Mass Market Paperback]

Sarah Stewart Taylor (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 31, 2005
Sweeney St. George concedes that having lunch in Boston's Mount Auburn Cemetery might be a bit macabre. Yet the graveyard fits her interests as an art professor with a specialty in cemetery statuary and mourning jewelry. And although she doesn't yet realize it, this historic burial ground is one of the last places on earth her favorite student, Brad Putnam, scion of a famous Boston family, sees before someone murders him.

Because of her expertise, the Boston police ask Sweeney to help them track down the antique jewelry found with Brad's body. Her investigation soon leads to chilling information about the influential Putnams, an earlier death, and Brad's secrets. Complicating everything is her attraction to Brad's rakishly charming older brother Jack. Now, Sweeney St. George is about to walk a dark and dangerous path...where passion can be dangerous and where a killer waits.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In Taylor's engrossing second mystery to feature art history professor Sweeney St. George (after 2003's O' Artful Death), one of her students, Brad Putnam, is found dead wearing an odd assortment of mourning jewelry. Called in by Detective Timothy Quinn to help identify the artifacts, Sweeney dates them to the Civil War era and is later fascinated to find irregularities in the birth and death dates of one of Putnam's long dead relatives. Since Brad was the scion of one of Boston's wealthiest and most powerful families, Quinn and the Cambridge, Mass., police department must tread lightly as the family closes ranks—just as it did five years earlier when Brad's youngest brother was killed in a car crash. After two hit-and-run incidents come on the heels of Brad's untimely demise, Sweeney and Quinn are convinced the deaths are linked but have no evidence to support their beliefs. Both become immersed in an increasing web of lies, love triangles, politics and money. Sweeney's researches into the cultural mores of death provide an unusual backdrop, while Tim Quinn is deeply affecting as a young father trying to juggle his work and home lives. More skillfully plotted than O' Artful Death, this moody, atmospheric novel will appeal to fans of darker cozies.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

Sweeney St. George, with her titian hair, Ph.D. in art history, and complicated parentage, is a vibrant and deeply attractive heroine. When one of her students is murdered, his body adorned with the nineteenth-century mourning jewelry her seminar has been studying, she is caught up in the search for his killer and his own family complications. The dead student was a Putnam, of the Boston and Newport Putnams, deeply tied to real estate, politics, and very old money. Although the story may move along at a leisurely pace, it is Sweeney who mesmerizes, as she explains the shift in American mourning practices and the making of hair mementos to wear in memory of the dead. She tries to explain herself, too, as family demons of suicide, alcoholism, and depression manifest themselves in other characters in this vivid drama and thus illuminate her own. An intelligent tale, leaving readers begging to know more. GraceAnne DeCandido
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Paperbacks (May 31, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312985959
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312985950
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 4.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #839,246 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Murder of the Rich and Famous, July 12, 2004
By 
Mark Baker (Santa Clarita, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Mansions of the Dead (Hardcover)
When Sweeney St. George is asked by the police to help identify some mourning jewelry found on a murder victim's body, she never dreams that the victim was also one of her students. Brad Putnam was quite interested in burial customs and Sweeney really liked him. Naturally, she is quite upset when she learns of his death.

Brad was a member of a powerful and well known family in Boston whose influence goes back generations. As Sweeney helps the police, she finds herself drawn into other aspects of the case. Why was the jewelry left on Brad? What was he so upset about the night he was killed? And does it have anything to do with his research for her class?

I enjoyed Ms. Taylor's debut mystery and was looking forward to this book as well. I wasn't disappointed. Sweeney is as interesting a character as before, and I find her knowledge of burial and mourning customs fascinating. The plot is well paced with clues and red herrings scattered throughout. Since this book focuses on the past of only one family, I had an easier time keeping the historic characters straight this time around. I must admit to being a little confused as to why one sub-plot was in the story, but it was an interesting balance to one of the characters. The book is slightly darker then much of what I read, but I really enjoyed it for a change of pace. The writing style in engaging, inviting the reader in and making it hard to put the book down.

With a fresh writing style, interesting main character with a unique interest, and intricate plot, this is a series not to be missed.

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What the stones reveal., September 18, 2004
By 
Jack Grimm (Louisville, KY) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Mansions of the Dead (Hardcover)
Sarah Stewart Taylor's Mansions of the Dead, is a very well crafted, insightful novel reflecting the long lost comfort and fascination that earlier generations had with death and the hereafter. She reveals her skill and knowledge of the "death arts" while unwinding a modern day tale of murder and secrets kept by those whose money and social privilege gave occasion to lies, mystery and misfortune. She is skillful at drawing all the essential elements together, revealing the stark reality of murder, commited for reasons not unlike many before and since; power and position. I look forward to her next venture!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sweeney St. George investigates the death of one of her students, October 30, 2005
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This review is from: Mansions of the Dead (Sweeney St. George Mystery) (Mass Market Paperback)
For me the chief charm of Sarah Stewart Taylor's Sweeney St. George is not as an amateur sleuth but as a college art professor with a specialty in cemetery statuary, graveyard iconography, and mourning rituals. Given a choice between being in the room when she reveals the identity of the murderer or taking her Mourning Object seminar, or even Looking at Culture: Art and Social History, sign me up for the latter. I do not have anything close to Taylor's expertise on such things, but I certainly have the interest. So when Sweeney starts explaining the origin of mourning jewelry as it relates to the death of both Queen Victoria's mother and husband as well as the American Civil War I am just fascinated.

However, "Mansions of the Dead" is a murder mystery and not a seminar paper, although the two are linked. Because of her expertise on mourning jewelry Sweeney is asked by the Boston police to look at some pieces found on a dead body. Sweeney obliges but is rocked when she learns that the victim was Brad Putnam, one the students in her seminar. That not only means that this time it is personal, but also that it is political, because Brad is one of "the" Putnams, a Kennedy-like clan in terms of not only their wealth and connections, but also in the way that personal tragedy has touched their family.

The elements that we enjoyed in "O' Artful Death" are once again all present in Taylor's second novel. Sweeney's expertise gives her insights into a murder investigation that leads to an entirely different path of evidence and reasoning than what is being pursued by the police. She has questions, a lot of questions, and this habit of continuing to question the answers she gets to the original questions. There is always a paragraph in one of these novels where Sweeney asks herself a half-dozen questions in a row, which I like, because it means she is getting serious. There is also the vacuum of Sweeney's love life, as she tries to move towards filing the vacuum in her life left by Colm's death, and finds herself drawn to someone who intrigues her but has the downside of being a suspect in the murder at hand.

What is different is that Taylor has made a concerted effort to flesh out the rest of the characters in the story. Everybody in the Putnam clan has a chapter or two in which we get to find out what they are up to away from Sweeney's investigation, and the same applies to some of Sweeney's students and Detective Timothy Quinn, whose home situation is not really germane to this mystery but which may (or may not) portend something down the road for our heroine, assuming that future adventures take place in the greater Boston area and not in other parts of New England (although a friend on the police will certainly not hurt). Some of this is character development and part of it is clues, which means red herrings are involved as well, but clearly Taylor is trying to expand the scope of her storytelling.

Again, "Mansions of the Dead" is not one of those mysteries where you have a chance of figuring out things before the heroine. Taylor lays out all of the clues before you and so when Sweeney makes all of the pieces fit you will know exactly what she is talking about. We know from the start that the mourning jewelry figures in Brad's death, so the big question is "how?" Just keep in mind that the way Taylor writes a mystery is like those logic puzzles you did back in school, where you had to find out who lives in the green house and what the Italian drinks: evidence that eliminates possibilities is as important as evidence that points an incriminating finger. You have to remember that Sweeney St. George is a neophyte when it comes to being an amateur sleuth and part of her charm is that she has not really realized she is a character in a series of mystery novels.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The first thing Becca Dearbome noticed was Brad's angelfish. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
mourning jewelry, ritual killer, mourning objects, mourning brooch, tunnel project
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Brad Putnam, Back Bay, Charles Putnam, Jack Putnam, Belinda Putnam, Mount Auburn, Andrew Putnam, Melissa Putnam, Paddy Sheehan, Camille Putnam, Alison Cope, Cliff Walk, Edmund Putnam, Bellevue Avenue, Civil War, Detective Quinn, Sarah Stewart Taylor, Kitty Putnam, Ocean Drive, Cliff House, Senator Putnam, Blue Carbuncle, Newbury Street, Senator John Putnam, Bob Philips
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