Publisher's Weekly
Sapir (The Far Arena offers a modern retelling of the quest for the Holy Grail. It's a pleasure to watch his heroine, Claire Andrews, grow from an innocent, Tennysonesque, ``castle-bound'' maiden into a self-confident woman. Her lover, NYPD detective Artie Modelstein, becomes her reluctant Percival; their part-adversary, part-ally, Captain Harry Rawson of her Majesty's Argyle Sutherlanders, is the flawed knight Lancelot. After the murder of her father and theft of his jewel-encrusted Elizabethan saltcellar, Claire decides to track and reclaim the treasures. Artie, far from embracing Claire's voracious quest, wants an easy life. Like Claire, Rawson lays claim to the missing saltcellar, whose jewels begin mysteriously appearing in New York just as a series of sadistic murders rocks the city. The novel is laced with some well-turned historical flashbacks, suspense and humor. For the most part, the Grail allegory works, but eventually it becomes, like Rawson's character, a victim of overplotting. The contrived upbeat ending is particularly disappointing, since it deprives the appealing Claire of opportunities for further development.
Sapir (The Far Arena offers a modern retelling of the quest for the Holy Grail. It's a pleasure to watch his heroine, Claire Andrews, grow from an innocent, Tennysonesque, ``castle-bound'' maiden into a self-confident woman. Her lover, NYPD detective Artie Modelstein, becomes her reluctant Percival; their part-adversary, part-ally, Captain Harry Rawson of her Majesty's Argyle Sutherlanders, is the flawed knight Lancelot. After the murder of her father and theft of his jewel-encrusted Elizabethan saltcellar, Claire decides to track and reclaim the treasures. Artie, far from embracing Claire's voracious quest, wants an easy life. Like Claire, Rawson lays claim to the missing saltcellar, whose jewels begin mysteriously appearing in New York just as a series of sadistic murders rocks the city. The novel is laced with some well-turned historical flashbacks, suspense and humor. For the most part, the Grail allegory works, but eventually it becomes, like Rawson's character, a victim of overplotting. The contrived upbeat ending is particularly disappointing, since it deprives the appealing Claire of opportunities for further development.
Used availability for Richard Ben Sapir's Quest
See all available used copies of this book at: Abebooks UK or Abebooks US
Hardback Editions
August 1987 : Hardback
| Title: Quest Author(s): Richard Sapir ISBN: 0-525-24548-0 / 978-0-525-24548-3 (USA edition) Publisher: Dutton Adult Availability: Amazon Amazon UK More details... |
Paperback Editions
July 1988 : Paperback
| Title: Quest Author(s): Richard Sapir ISBN: 0-451-40076-3 / 978-0-451-40076-5 (USA edition) Publisher: Onyx Availability: Amazon More details... |
January 1988 : Paperback
| Title: Quest Author(s): Richard Sapir ISBN: 0-7088-3645-3 / 978-0-7088-3645-3 (UK edition) Publisher: Futura Pubns. Availability: Amazon Amazon UK More details... |
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