News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Rudy Franchi Releases MURDER ON THE ROAD SHOW

By: Dec. 21, 2015
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

Rudy Franchi's just published mystery novel, Murder On The Road Show (Henchman Press, Somerville, MA) is the latest entry in the "accidental detective" genre. In this example, the amateur sleuth is Carlo Parigi, a roguish New York collectibles dealer who wangles his way onto a new TV program, Antiques On The Road.

At the show's very first stop, Cincinnati, Carlo discovers a rare 1930s movie poster. On his way to taping this treasure, he discovers a dead body. It is a show guest who has been run through with a Civil War sword that has just been evaluated as very valuable.

A local detective cites Carlo as the chief suspect and he is forced to try and solve the murder to clear himself. The discovery of the bloody body also unleashes a cascade of strange and dangerous characters, chief among them his fellow appraisers, whose forced smiles reveal pearly teeth.

During all this, Carlo continues to travel from city to city, sharing numerous appraisals of pop culture collectibles, ranging from Mickey Mouse memorabilia to vintage Coca-Cola signs.

In conversations with fellow dealers, the AOR'S guests and in asides to the reader, Carlo shares some well-guarded trade secrets. Among them are how to really buy low and sell high (also known as "euchring the punter"); why the vast majority of movie star-signed 8 x 10 glossies are totally worthless and exactly what is the notorious "box call."

Also revealed are the backstage machinations of Antiques On The Road, chief among them the tricks appraisers use to convince the producer to put the Holy Grail they just discovered on TV.

Carlo has several personal obsessions: a fervent love for New York, word play of all kind, especially puns and anagrams, and a passion for fine clothing. It is the latter that helps him solve the murder, while lying in a sex-wrecked bed, watching the sun rise over Bismarck, North Dakota.

Author Rudy Franchi was an on-air collectibles appraiser with the PBS series Antiques Roadshow, from its first season in 1997 through 2011, when he retired to spend less time with his family and more time working on his website (http://www.posterappraisal.com), plus even more time writing.

There are, so far, to be two more books in the Carlo Parigi Collectibles Mystery series: The Normandie Encryptions, in which Carlo is swept into the world of high-end Art Deco collectors and dealers when he is tasked with finding a history-shattering message hidden in the large glass artworks in the famed ship's Grand Salon. This is to be followed by A Flea-Bitten Corpse in which Carlo, attending a large outdoor market, finds a dead body in a rather shabby, large Art Moderne cupboard.

Born and raised in New York, Mr. Franchi lives in Los Angeles, where he poisons palm trees, pines for New York and spends an inordinate amount of time online ordering from Zabar's.

Contact: Rudy Franchi
rudy(at)posterappraisal(dot)com
617 216 5511



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.






Videos