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Artscape (Ike Schwartz Mysteries) (2004)

par Frederick Ramsay

Séries: Ike Schwartz Mysteries (1)

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Ike Schwartz thought he could return to his hometown and ditch the demons that pursue him. More than anything, he wanted to blot out the pain and anger that came when his wife of less than a month was gunned down in a CIA foul-up. So he buried himself as sheriff in rural Picketsville, Virginia, a community indistinguishable from any of the hundreds of small towns that hang like beads on Interstate 81 running from Pennsylvania down to Georgia. Aside from its Civil War history, Picketsville's only real claim to fame is Callend College, a private women's school located just within its corporate limits. The college is notable, in turn, for housing one half of the billion dollar Dillon art collection, carefully secured in an underground bunker originally built in the late 1950s as a super bomb shelter. It's bad news for both Dr. Ruth Harris, the newly hired president of the college, and for a shadowy group whose services have been contracted by Middle Eastern fanaticsâ??The New Jihadâ??when the collection is scheduled to be removed to New York. The plan is to steal the half billion dollars worth of fine art and statuary, and ransom it back for millions. With the closure of the facility imminent, the operation must be moved forward, which, in turn, creates unanticipated risks and problems. And everyone dismisses Ike Schwartz as a stereotypical rural sheriff. He is, however, a man with uncommon skills, a tough hide, and a notable pastâ??all of which make an arresting first no… (plus d'informations)

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The prestigious Dillon art collection, housed at Callend College, a private woman’s college in rural Virginia, is about to be moved in its entirety to New York City. This unexpected news forces the thieves who’ve targeted the collection to change their plans; now they’ll need to strike long before the original July 4th holiday date they’d chosen for their assault on the underground vault where the collection is secured with a state of the art security system. Despite a hitch or two in their plans . . . and a state of the art security system . . . the daring for-hire thieves manage to empty the vault and make off with the entire collection.

Can Sheriff Ike Schwartz find the thieves and recover the collection? And who hired the thieves in the first place?

Engaging characters and an intriguing plot help build the suspense in this likeable tale. Beneath his laid-back demeanor, Ike is decisive, tough, and capable; readers are likely to find themselves rooting for the sheriff as he matches wits with the professional thieves and the mastermind behind the crime.

Recommended. ( )
  jfe16 | Oct 27, 2015 |
After reading the synopses to Frederick Ramsay's books, I downloaded two titles to my Kindle because they certainly sounded like the sort of books I enjoy reading. Unfortunately both titles languished there until I happened to attend an author event for his latest book featuring Ike Schwartz (Drowning Barbie). After being completely charmed by his knowledge and wit, I came home and dialed up Artscape.

The mystery is a good one, and I relished the details of how the group of thieves planned to circumvent all the college security measures and steal the collection. Ramsay's writing style made for vivid mental visuals as the chapters flew by. More importantly, the characters-- in particular Sheriff Ike Schwartz, college president Dr. Ruth Harris, and a young female college student-- came to life. Plenty of sparks fly in the early scenes between Schwartz and Harris, and I liked how Schwartz dealt with Harris' razor-sharp tongue and preconceptions. Both characters are complex, and I am really looking forward to future meetings between the two.

This is one series that I really want to follow, and I would recommend that you do, too, if you like well-written, fast-paced mysteries with excellent characterization. ( )
  cathyskye | Mar 15, 2014 |
Ike Schwartz is the sheriff of Picketsville, Virginia, and a former CIA Agent. While on his honeymoon in Paris and during a supposedly easy meet with an informant, his bride, Eloise, is killed by an un-seen shooter along with the informant. Ike leaves the CIA and flees to his hometown of Picketsville. Three years have lapsed, and Ike is working hard at not thinking about his past. Then a fortune of art is stolen from local Callend College. Throw in a murder and a double kidnapping and, for a small-town sheriff, Ike has quite the case on his hands. His romantic interest in Dr. Ruth Harris, the college president, stirs up painful memories but he perseveres. There is even a former crush, now married and wealthy and still beautiful, that openly regrets missing her chance in high school with Ike. The supporting cast to Sheriff Schwartz is interesting enough that I hope to see some of them in the sequels. The author tacks on a couple of teaser story-lines after the case is solved - a rather ham-handed ending for the book - but they bode well for future plot lines. ( )
  TDoug1853 | Feb 12, 2012 |
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Fiction. Mystery. HTML:

Ike Schwartz thought he could return to his hometown and ditch the demons that pursue him. More than anything, he wanted to blot out the pain and anger that came when his wife of less than a month was gunned down in a CIA foul-up. So he buried himself as sheriff in rural Picketsville, Virginia, a community indistinguishable from any of the hundreds of small towns that hang like beads on Interstate 81 running from Pennsylvania down to Georgia. Aside from its Civil War history, Picketsville's only real claim to fame is Callend College, a private women's school located just within its corporate limits. The college is notable, in turn, for housing one half of the billion dollar Dillon art collection, carefully secured in an underground bunker originally built in the late 1950s as a super bomb shelter. It's bad news for both Dr. Ruth Harris, the newly hired president of the college, and for a shadowy group whose services have been contracted by Middle Eastern fanaticsâ??The New Jihadâ??when the collection is scheduled to be removed to New York. The plan is to steal the half billion dollars worth of fine art and statuary, and ransom it back for millions. With the closure of the facility imminent, the operation must be moved forward, which, in turn, creates unanticipated risks and problems. And everyone dismisses Ike Schwartz as a stereotypical rural sheriff. He is, however, a man with uncommon skills, a tough hide, and a notable pastâ??all of which make an arresting first no

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