In the novel A Fool and His Monet by Sandra Orchard, Serena Jones is a new member of the FBI Art Crime Team. She was motivated by the death of her grandfather during an art theft and hopes her new position will help her find his killer.
Serena’s friend, Zoe, the temporary head of security at the local art museum, brings Serena in to report the theft of two paintings in storage, a Monet and a Rijckaert. Since the paintings were in storage, the theft had not been noticed immediately. So the case was already somewhat cold. But Serena immediately begins interviewing museum employees. Her trainer, Tanner, joins her on the case. Oddly, her supervisor makes her stop investigating her lead suspect.
Serena’s mother pesters her to get a nice, safe, normal job and give her grandchildren. Her aunt fancies herself an amateur sleuth and offers Serena advice. The aunt even inserts herself into some of Serena’s investigation.
Though the book has some serious and touching moments, it’s somewhat a comedy of errors. But the case eventually gets solved with many twists and detours along the way.
I enjoyed several art-related details sprinkled throughout the book, especially one quote from Stella Adler: “Life beats down and crushes the soul and art reminds you that you have one.”
There’s a light faith element: a few mentions of God and prayer.
This isn’t my usual genre of book. But that’s one nice thing about Kindle sales: trying something you might not have otherwise.
I admit I got a little lost on some of the details. And I wasn’t fond of Serena’s aunt’s involvement. But overall this was a fun book. If you like figuring out mysteries with comedic undertones, you might like this one.

It sure sounds like an imaginative book! The author has come up with a unique story I have never come across before!
I immediately thought of “The Talented Miss Farwell,” which I read and enjoyed. It was about a small-town lady who got caught up in the art world. I knew nothing about that world but wow, it was eye-opening! This one sounds interesting too. Thanks for putting it onto my radar!
Thanks for the review! I’ll keep an eye out as I like this genre 🙂
Unrelated, but I thought of you as I read a book absolutely chock full of your writing pet peeve. I found myself skipping aaaallll the text between dialogues just to keep with the thread of the conversation, then going back to see if those sections were worth it. Ugh. It was a slog.
This book is the first of a series–I think of three. So if you like it, you might like the sequels as well. This one did wrap up well without a cliffhanger, except I think the search for her grandfather’s killer will arch over the three books.
That’s a good idea in those long asides to just look for the dialogue to connect the flow of conversation. It’s amazing to me that writers fill in so much backstory or description in a conversation–and that editors let it go.
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