The Secret Portrait has not yet been reviewed at ParaNormalRomance Reviews.
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"solid amateur sleuth"
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted April 8, 2005 on The Best Reviews
SummaryJean Fairbairn is a burned-out American academic working for
a Scottish travel and history magazine. She writes articles
on, as she puts it, how the legend meets the road and often
blows a tire. In The Secret Portrait, an old man comes to
her with a three hundred year old gold coin he's just
discovered in the Western Highlands-where, he adds, he
trained as a commando during World War II. Jean knows that
one of Scotland's most famous (or infamous) historical
figures, Bonnie Prince Charlie, hid barrels of gold coins in
that area, coins that were never found. She and her
ambitious partner/editor decide she should write about the
coin. But the old man won't tell where he found it. Did he
find it on the property of an American dot-com millionaire,
Rick MacLyon, who's just rebuilt an old house in the area?
Jean heads for the Highlands, and finds not a hoard of gold
coins but a murderand a police detective named
Alasdair Cameron. Alasdair is an intelligent cop who is
suffering from his own case of burn-out. At first he's
suspicious of Jean. Soon, though, he realizes she's an
innocent bystander, one who has historical knowledge
essential to solving the case.
Jean however, doesn't see herself as innocent. The more
questions she asks, the more she's afraid she had a role,
however unwitting, in the murder. She has a moral obligation
to face whatever danger she attracts by helping Alasdair-and
to face the ghost that walks the mansion's dark corridors.
The solution to the mystery is rooted not just in
contemporary tartan fantasy, but also in events dating back
to World War II and beyond, all the way to 1745 and Bonnie
Prince Charlie's rebellion. That solution brings Jean and
Alasdair together personally as well as professionally.
Emotionally burned as they both are, though, togetherness is
as difficult as finding a murderer.
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