Monday, January 12, 2026

Review: The Lost Van Gogh

The Lost Van Gogh The Lost Van Gogh by Jonathan Santlofer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Apparently this is a second book in a series. I did read the first book, but was long ago enough that I have forgotten the characters. No wonder I felt off-kilter with the characters and background. I didn't realize it until listening to the author's note at the end. Otherwise, the story was too much of spy-type book for my liking.

The gist of the story is Alexis Verde buys a painting at an antique store. Turns out underneath that painting is another, a Van Gogh self-portrait. The boyfriend Luke Perrone, also an artist and figures as the main character. Before Alexis can get someone to authenticate the painting it is stolen from her by some street thugs, on behest of someone that had been tracking the painting. Luke and Alexis go to his friend who was with INTERPOL to help track it down. There are more characters involved as well, but these are the main ones.

The odd thing about this book was the shifts in POV, some chapters were in first person, some in second, while most chapters being in third person. It was jarring, particularly when some of the characters were assumed the reader knew who they were with defined backstory.

The author’s note at the end discussed aspects that were based in facts, but a second self-portrait by Van Gogh is not one of them. Other aspects of stolen/looted art being traded internationally is something that is not fiction.

I listened to the audiobook, but the print version includes at the end of the book sketches the author did, as he is an artist himself. The pencil sketches relate to this book, such as places that are important in the book and some of Van Gogh, and Amsterdam.

Book rating: 2.75


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