----------------------------Original message---------------------------- Don't forget _Sixteen Pleasures_ by Robert Hellenga. At 01:23 PM 3/11/99 EST, you wrote: >----------------------------Original message---------------------------- > >Dear Colleagues: > >I am interested in knowing if anyone in ARLIS/NA has created a >bibliography, or knows of one created elsewhere, of art-related fiction -- >especially art-related mysteries. One thinks of _Murder in the National >Gallery_ by Margaret Truman, James Bradbury's _The Seventh Sacrament_ >(involving an architecture competition, George Herman's _Tears of the >Madonna_ in which Leonardo da vinci is a central character, Brian >johnston's books featuring architectural historian, Winston Wyc, _Murder >at the Gardner_ by Jane Langton, such John Malcolm books as _Whistler in >the Dark_, Iain Pears's books like _The Titian Committee_, The Bernini >Bust_ and _Giotto's Hand_, Thomas Swan's _Cezanne Chase_ and the Jonathan >Gash series featuring Lovejoy. > >But, there are others. Do you know of a bibliography? Or do you know of >other art-related mysteries? > >Thanks in advance for your help! I am willing to post the results to the >list if there is enough interest. > >Ray Anne Lockard > > Ray Anne Lockard > Head, Frick Fine Arts Library > University Library System > University of Pittsburgh > Pittsburgh, PA 15260 > Voice: 412-648-2410 > Fax: 412-648-7568 > E-mail: [log in to unmask] > > A book should be a ball of light in one's hands. > Ezra Pound > > Nancy Mactague, MA, MSLIS Reference/Extended Services Librarian Aurora University 347 S. Gladstone Ave. Aurora, IL 60506 USA Phone (630) 844-5443 Fax (630) 844-3848 "Archaeology provides the chronological framework for art history." Munby, BAR, 1977