An Italian tenor in Gilded Age New York City gets caught up in a high society mystery in this historical debut—“A dazzler” (Arizona Daily Star).
“A compelling plot and lush deception. . . . An involved tale of wealth, power, secrets, and surprise in high society.” —Susan Vreeland, author of The Passion of Artemisia
New York City, 1894. To Gramercy Park, bordered by elegant town houses, cloistered behind its high iron fence, comes Mario Alfieri, a celebrated tenor and the toast of Europe. Poised for his premier at the Metropolitan Opera, the summit of society, Alfieri needs a refuge from the clamor of New York's elite—and from the eager women who rule it. He finds it, he thinks, at Gramercy Park, in the elegant mansion of the recently deceased Henry Ogden Slade. The house is available, but not quite empty. Clara Adler, Slade's former ward, lives there still, friendless and alone.
Who is this bewitching young woman? Why did Slade take her into his home only to leave her penniless at his death? And what tragedies and terrors have left Clara little more than a pale and frightened ghost, haunting the deserted mansion? Mystified, then enchanted, Alfieri is soon involved in an intrigue that spans two decades and pits him against a vicious enemy who swears to destroy both him and the woman he loves—with weapons of scandal, murder, and the revelations of Clara's past.
“Leave[s] us amazed at her ability to re-create a vital, graceful, almost elegiac world. . . . An excellent piece of historical imagination.” —Chicago Tribune
“High society, mystery, and opera merge in Cohen’s haunting first novel.” —New York Daily News
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