Ghirlandaio's Daughter
A Novel
John Spencer Hill

Publication Data
  • Hardcover   (Britain)
    London:   Constable & Company Ltd.            
    Publication date:   November 1996

  • Hardcover   (United States)
    New York:   St. Martin's Press
    Publication date:   Spring 1997

  • Hardcover  (Canada)
    Toronto:   McClelland & Stewart
    Publication date:   Spring 1997
British dust jacket


Domenico Ghirlandaio       (pronounced "Gear-lan-DIE-oh")

woodcut of GhirlandaioDomenico Bigordi, better known as Ghirlandaio, was an Italian painter born in Florence in 1449.   He died in 1494, at the age of forty four, when, in Vasari's words, he was about to begin "some very considerable works at Pisa and Siena . . . [but] fell sick of a fever, which carried him off in five days."   His works include the Storie di santa Fina (1475) in the Collegiata of San Gimignano, as well as works in the Vatican Library and the Sistine Chapel.   But his greatest work remains in his native Florence:   the fresco cycle in the Sassetti Chapel on the life of Saint Francis (Storie di san Francesco, 1480) and the later Storie della Vergine e di san Giovanni Battista, executed, between 1486 and 1490, in the Capella del Coro of Santa Maria Novella.

Click button to read Vasari's Life of Ghirlandaio (1568)


Ghirlandaio's
Domenico Ghirlandaio:

  The Last Supper  

Refectory of Ognissanti


[Photo credit: FirenzeByNet]


Dust Jacket Blurb:

The figure lay on its back, arms flung wide, with the bronze spear of a Mycenaean warrior planted squarely in the middle of its chest.
      Nigel Harmsworth, septuagenarian and ex-patriate English painter, stared at the splayed corpse in disbelief.   That he should find himself surveying the body of a dead American in the garden of the beautiful Tuscan villa owned by his friend and patron Sir Richard Danvers, an international art dealer, was extraordinary enough.   More unsettling still were the events that were to follow, and the secrets that would emerge from the past . . . .
      Peter Morgan, a senior partner in a prestigious Philadelphia law firm, had inadvertently stumbled upon certain details about a Renaissance painting and had come to Italy to pull off the scam of the century.   What he had uncovered was worth millions of dollars, conveniently dwarfing his gambling debts, and Morgan was prepared to tap into a lucrative conspiracy that ran its tentacles into half a dozen countries and touched some of the richest men in the world.
      What no one anticipated, however, were the prodigious deductive powers of Detective-Inspector Carlo Arbati, visiting the medieval town of Lucca to receive an award for his most recent volume of poems.   When the poet- detective is drawn into the case, justice is certain to triumph -- but more blood must flow before Arbati is able to unweave the tangled web of intrigue and deceit that has baffled the local authorities.
      Ghirlandaio's Daughter, John Spencer HILL's successor to his impressive first crime novel, The Last Castrato, displays once again his ability to elevate a story of detection and suspense above the restrictive confines of the genre.


Domenico Ghirlandaio:

  Adoration of the Shepherds  

Sassetti Chapel, Santa Trinita


[Photo credit: FirenzeByNet]
Ghirlandaio's




Blue Morpho butterfly
Read Chapter One of Ghirlandaio's Daughter
(including many photographs of Lucca, the gorgeous town in Italy where the novel is set)
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20 September 1996

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