Product Details
The Judas Pair (Lovejoy Mystery)

The Judas Pair (Lovejoy Mystery)
By Jonathan Gash

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Product Description

Lovejoy knows that the legendary Judas Pair of flintlock pistols are just that--a legend. Or are they? By the time he finds out the truth, two people are dead, and Lovejoy has to pull a nifty scam to avoid the same fate. First in the Lovejoy series.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #678254 in Books
  • Published on: 1989-11-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 22 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"One of the most likable rogues in mystery history" – Chicago Sun-Times -- Chicago Sun-Times

“One of the most likable rogues in mystery history” – Chicago Sun-Times --Chicago Sun-Times


Customer Reviews

The beginning of the collection4
I finally found the first Lovejoy mystery--not that it is necessary to start reading these wonderful books here, but for the anal retentive like me who must read things in order, it's dreadfully important. The series starts off wild and wooly, too, quickly establishing both the method of Lovejoy's madness (an almost insatiable love for antiques) and his obvious mastery and gift for it. It also establishes what is to become the heart of the books, that wise-cracking attitude of Lovejoy's, direct to the reader, in which he doesn't hesitate to tell you his and the antiques world's trade secrets. Lovejoy isn't afraid to pass this info on because he knows it is of no matter-- the public (i.e, the reader, you and me) is still so dumb that even knowing how things work, we'll still be rubes.

For people whose only experience of Lovejoy is from the A&E series, the books may come as sort of a jolt. While some of the same characters are here, the tone and the interactions are very different (I'm reminded of the difference between Spenser: For Hire and the Parker novels). In this book, Lovejoy has a nervous breakdown, is almost burned and buried alive, and fights a duel with flintlocks in one of the most surprising endings of a mystery novel that has come along in a while (well, this was written in 1977, and I missed it then, so let's just say that it's one of the most surprising endings that I've read in a while).

I feel the urge upon me--read these books!--an urge that hasn't hit me in many years. It's the same urge that put me on to reading all of the Rex Stout and P.G. Wodehouse books. Lovejoy would be pleased--it's the urge of the collector.

a delight for an aquired taste!!5
This was the first Lovejoy, but I warn American viewers of the Lovejoy telly series NOT to expect the books to be like Ian McShane's Version. This Lovejoy is not quite so loveable. He is shifty, ready to cheat anyone, ready to step over the line if he thinks he cannot get caught, he has a temper, kids shove him around, all his old girlfriends - and there are legion - use him as babysitter. He has a very odd selection of friends - most of the telly characters do not show up to late in the series of books - he has very little respect for women as a whole, other than how he can use them, he barely pays his bills, loves animals, is a big mooch and lives on fried bread and tomato sandwiches. He lets people shove him around, only to turn around and stick up for the underdog.

All in all, at times you might find Lovejoy very unloveable if not downright disgusting.

Ah, but to those that stick with it, you soon find that Lovejoy is an acquired taste that can leaving you howling.

This first one revolved around a pair of missing antique dualing pistols. If you get through to the end and find yourself enjoying the book, you will want to read the rest in the series...though you will always find Lovejoy at times rather disgusting!!

Highly recommended for those wishing their mysteries laced with Brit wit and humour, and that is off the beaten path.

Antiques and Mystery4
Jonathan Gash has created a mystery series in which the "detective" is a somewhat shady English antiques dealer named Lovejoy. I have no great knowledge of or interest in antiques, but I found Mr. Gash's discussions of antiques and of the antiques business fascinating. The books in this series are worth reading as an introductory course in antiques. In the later books in the series, Lovejoy's irrational and self-destructive behavior may bother some readers. Lovejoy's treatment of women is likely to bother feminists.

The Judas Pair is an early Lovejoy mystery. A man who claims to own a legendary set of matching dueling weapons is murdered, and the weapons are not found in his collection. Lovejoy is hired by the victim's brother to look into the situation. Lovejoy is not an armchair detective; sex and violence attend the search for the murderer.