cover image The Nude

The Nude

C. Michelle Lindley. Atria, $26.99 (272p) ISBN 978-1-6680-3295-4

Lindley’s enticing first novel explores the seamy side of the antiquities market. Soon after a fisherman reels in a stunning marble figure near a small Greek island, Dr. Elizabeth Clarke, a 30-something American specialist in female Hellenistic statues, arrives to assess it. The nude form, which is missing two arms, could be the perfect focal point at the Los Angeles museum where she’s an assistant curator. Her boss, William, pressures her to make the acquisition, claiming that if she fails, her “coldness will be to blame.” The stress exacerbates her chronic migraines, but her mood improves after she meets her translator, Niko, and his wife, Theo. Eager to connect with the enchanting Theo, Elizabeth pretends to understand her elliptical statement about the statue being“complicit” in its “un-freedom.” Elizabeth loses herself to the island and the couple, imagining they want to sleep with her and failing to grasp Theo’s much different ideas about what should be done with the statue (the details come out later). Things take a turn when one of the statue’s missing arms mysteriously appears and vandals begin breaking into local museums. Lindley expertly dials up Elizabeth’s paranoia and keeps the reader guessing as her mission’s true purpose is thrown into question. This one’s hard to shake. (July)