The Flanders Panel - Book Review,
by ARTURO PEREZ-REVERTE

Amazon.com Julia, a young Madrid art restorer, is pulled into a shadowy world of metaphor when she discovers a long-covered inscription on a Flemish painting: Who killed the knight? Art, chess and murder are intertwined in this elegant, seductive mystery in the manner of The Name of the Rose.
From Publishers Weekly When an art restorer sets out to solve the riddle of a 15th-century masterpiece in this uneven but intriguing, multilayered thriller, she finds that one murder begets another, down through five centuries. Young, beautiful art expert Julia works in Madrid for the Prado as well as for various local galleries and auctioneers. Her painstaking cleaning of The Game of Chess , by Flemish master Pieter Van Huys, uncovers a Latin inscription--painted over by the artist--with the question "Who killed the knight?" Julia explores this mystery with the aid of Cesar, a middle-aged, homosexual antiques dealer who has become something of a surrogate father figure for her; Alvaro, her art professor ex-lover; and Munoz, a mildly antisocial chess master. When Alvaro dies--possibly murdered--Van Huys's riddle becomes relevant not only to the figures and chess pieces represented in his painting but also to Julia and her friends in this rather seamy art community. The author, a TV journalist in Spain, makes interesting use of the chessboard as metaphor for various human interactions, and his characters' sleuthy analysis of the painting's symbols and the details of its frozen chess game is clever and quite suspenseful. But the characters themselves are carelessly drawn cartoons--perhaps distorted in translation--and prone to rather sophomoric pronouncements on aesthetic and philosophical issues. And--highbrow pretensions aside--the whodunit aspect of the narrative is resolved unconvincingly, with disappointing conventionality. Film rights to Filmania. Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal "Who killed the knight?" This single phrase, inscribed in Latin on a 15th-century Flemish panel depicting a game of chess, has been hidden for centuries beneath a layer of paint. Now beautiful, indepedent Julia, who restores art for a living, has discovered the inscription. She lets only a few people in on the secret: Menchu, her friend and the dealer who expects to make a bundle on the painting; the elegant Cesar, her protector since childhood; and Alvaro, her former lover and an art history expert. Soon after Julia meets with Alvaro, he is found dead, and a peculiar game begins. The murderer circles Julia, signaling every lethal move with clues taken from the chess game depicted in the panel, and Julia and Cesar must enlist the aid of a chess genius to figure out what their moves should be. This intelligent mystery, blending art historical insight with the intellectual pleasures of chess, moves at a good pace and comes up with a satisfying twist at the end. For The Name of the Rose crowd, though this book is not as rigorous; readers not looking for intellectual challenge will enjoy the suspense and deft characterization.Barbara Hoffert, "Library Journal"Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
The Philadelphia Inquirer A beguiling puzzle -- a game within a game within a game -- solved in perplexing but entertaining fashion.
From Booklist For mystery fans who yearn for literate, intelligent, sophisticated whodunits, Spanish author P{}erez-Reverte's highly acclaimed story fills the bill perfectly. Already a best-seller in Spain and France and destined to become a film in 1994, the novel, set in Madrid, tells the story of Julia, a young, beautiful art-restoration expert, and the chain of sinister events set off when she discovers a strange inscription hidden beneath layers of paint and varnish on a fifteenth-century Flemish painting. The painting depicts a chess game between the duke of Flanders and his knight, Roger de Arras. In her quest to solve the mystery behind the hidden inscription, Julia becomes entangled in a contemporary puzzle that involves a bizarre chess game (whose action is mirrored in the painting), art theft, murder, and deception. An inventive plot, gripping suspense, fascinatingly complex characters, and innovative incorporation of art, literature, and music will enthrall readers looking for something a little different. Emily Melton
Review "Paradoxes and puzzles abound. A sleek, sophisticated, madly clever chamber mystery about chess, life, and art."--The New York Times Book Review
"Entertaining, taut, well-plotted."--Elle
Review "Paradoxes and puzzles abound. A sleek, sophisticated, madly clever chamber mystery about chess, life, and art."--The New York Times Book Review
"Entertaining, taut, well-plotted."--Elle
Book Description Julia is a young art expert in Madrid. Her specialty is the restoration of paintings about to go up for auction. But her latest project could also be her last. A fifteenth-century masterpiece, the painting depicts a chess game between the Duke of Flanders and his knight, as a lady in black velvet sits in the background. What makes this project different is the hidden inscription Julia discovers in the corner: Quis Necavit Equitem. Translation: Who killed the knight? Breaking the silence of five centuries, Julia's hunt for a Renaissance murderer leads her into a modern-day game of sin, betrayal, and death--every move calculated with devilish precision. And as the stakes rise, Julia finds herself exposed and vulnerable to attack from everywhere. Unsure whether she is a player or just a pawn, all she knows for certain is that her passion for art has made her an object of deadly obsession. In a mystery of eloquence, wit, seduction, and suspense which marks the debut of a writer Europeans are already comparing to Umberto Eco, the solution is a tour de force of intrigue.
Language Notes Text: English (translation) Original Language: Spanish
From the Inside Flap Julia is a young art expert in Madrid. Her specialty is the restoration of paintings about to go up for auction. But her latest project could also be her last. A fifteenth-century masterpiece, the painting depicts a chess game between the Duke of Flanders and his knight, as a lady in black velvet sits in the background. What makes this project different is the hidden inscription Julia discovers in the corner: Quis Necavit Equitem. Translation: Who killed the knight? Breaking the silence of five centuries, Julia's hunt for a Renaissance murderer leads her into a modern-day game of sin, betrayal, and death--every move calculated with devilish precision. And as the stakes rise, Julia finds herself exposed and vulnerable to attack from everywhere. Unsure whether she is a player or just a pawn, all she knows for certain is that her passion for art has made her an object of deadly obsession. In a mystery of eloquence, wit, seduction, and suspense which marks the debut of a writer Europeans are already comparing to Umberto Eco, the solution is a tour de force of intrigue.
From the Back Cover "Paradoxes and puzzles abound. A sleek, sophisticated, madly clever chamber mystery about chess, life, and art."--The New York Times Book Review"Entertaining, taut, well-plotted."--Elle
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