@Priyajsridhar
What's my favorite piece of fiction with a museum?
A lot of books with museums are great fun. I recently re-read The Mixed-Up Files and it holds up pretty well.
My favorite piece of fiction set in and around a museum is Relic by Preston and Child, set in the wonderful Museum of Natural History in NYC. One of the authors worked there and it rings with authenticity.
It also introduces Special Agent Aloysius X.L. #Pendergast, and contains more than 20 books.
Good morning. 📔📖📕
10 March 2026
I finished my latest read last night—Pendergast: The Beginning, by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. It’s part of the long‑running Pendergast series, and if you’re a fan, you’ll definitely want to pick this one up.
If you’re new to the series, it follows a peculiar FBI agent named Aloysius Xingu Leng Pendergast, often shortened to A.X.L. Pendergast. Most people simply call him Pendergast; only his closest friends dare use Aloysius. He’s described as tall and pale, with blond, almost white hair and icy, pale blue eyes. He dresses in a black suit regardless of the weather. His manner is formal, even odd, and his skill as a special agent is an almost preternatural blend of forensic brilliance, psychological insight, and unshakable calm—qualities that make him one of the FBI’s most formidable investigators. His cases nearly always carry a faint supernatural edge.
This book takes you back to his early days in the Bureau and his very first case, where he’s paired with senior agent SA Chambers, whom Pendergast later calls his FBI mentor. Together, they go a bit rogue as they try to solve a string of strange murders in the swamps just across the Louisiana border in Mississippi.
The story eventually lands in familiar territory, borrowing a chapter from the very first Pendergast novel, Relic, which was adapted into a movie. Oddly enough, the film left out the main character—Pendergast himself. Strange choice, isn’t it? Perhaps they simply couldn’t figure out how to cast him.
“Condemnation without investigation is the height of ignorance.” — Albert Einstein
“The truth is often hidden in plain sight, waiting for the right eyes to see it.” — C. Auguste
“The question that haunted every investigation was ‘why.’” — Louise Penny
#photo #photography #photographer #photographylovers #nature #morning #flowers #book #pendergast
La chronique de "La cité hantée", de Douglas Preston et Lincoln Child.
http://caliban.canalblog.com/archives/2023/12/07/40134584.html
#Bibliotaphe #mastolivre #lacitéhantée #douglaspreston #lincolnchild #pendergast #livre #lire #roman #lecture #read #books
#PrestonAndChild, #Pendergast book "The Cabinet of Curiosities" page 97.
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He's investigating a 100 year old murder where a young woman knows she'll be killed, cuts a body part with a splinter and writes her name and address on paper in her own blood. You don't write much when you're using your own blood as ink is his point later on in the book.
"Ink of that sort does not encourage prolixity."