Hellstrom’s Folly
A Man of Taste
by
Book Details
About the Book
There was nothing simple about Bruce Kellner. He wasn’t an artist, but he was a man of paintings—an art sleuth and a finder of missing treasures. Having just closed the file on a stolen Picasso art caper that had taken him to France, England, Mexico, and the Sabine Hills of Italy at Rocca Sinibalda, he is celebrating with an evening out on the town.
While enjoying an aged Chateuneuf du pape at a restaurant in Nice, Kellner is approached by Comtesse Marie-Claude de Hautefort, a French countess who wishes to hire him to locate a missing work of art. It’s a drawing said to have been penned by Leonardo da Vinci in the late fifteenth-century and now it’s missing from the countess’s thirteenth-century chateau.
Intrigued, Kellner takes on the case and interviews friends, family, and police about the robbery during a tour that takes him to some of Europe’s greatest treasures. Though Kellner has always been most successful at his job, this case leads him to more than he bargained for—a discovery he couldn’t have imagined in his wildest dreams.
About the Author
Arnie Greenberg graduated from Macdonald College, Concordia and McGill University. He taught history and humanities in the Montreal area mostly at Vanier College. He wrote texts, novels, plays and more than 1000 half hours of television for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. He also operated a group tour company to Europe and Asia after his retirement. He and his wife, Dana, now live in Vancouver, British Columbia and continues to write travel articles for sites in France and California.