New York Books – the list is growing!

photo: pd4pic.com
photo: pd4pic.com

I didn’t realize until now just how many books I’ve read
that are set in New York.  If you’re in “a New York state of mind,”
take a look at some of my favorite Big Apple books!


Just added a new one:
Manhattan Beach by Jennifer Egan
Great 5-star read!


The American Heiress by Daisy Goodwin  – light 1800s historical fiction about billionaire American families who match up their daughters with poor European dukes and princes.

 


Billy Bathgate by E. L. Doctorow – intelligent and well-written historical fiction about 1930s organized crime in New York City

 


Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote – a character sketch of a lonely nineteen-year-old girl trying to escape a sad past

 


Brooklyn by Colm Toíbín – moving love story in which a young Irish woman leaves home for a better life in Brooklyn

 


Brooklyn on Fire by Lawrence H. Levy – second book in the entertaining Mary Handley Mystery series about New York’s first female detective

 


The Burgess Boys by Elizabeth Strout – story about a buried secret and painful family dynamics between adult siblings

 


The Dressmaker by Kate Alcott – historical fiction about a young English maid and seamstress who survives the Titanic

 


Empty Mansions by Bill Dedman and Paul Clark Newell, Jr. – fascinating biography of Huguette Clark, a reclusive heiress who spent the last twenty years of her life in a hospital bed and gave away huge amounts of money to her caretakers and advisers

 


The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand – terrific story about a talented New York architect who refuses to collaborate

 


 

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald – classic love story about a mysterious tycoon during the wild party atmosphere of the Roaring Twenties

 


The Hours Count by Jillian Cantor – great historical fiction about Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were the only civilian Americans to be killed for spying for the Russians

 


The Immortals by Jordanna Max Brodsky – a modern-day Artemis solves a murder in New York in a world of mortals, gods and goddesses

 


The Impossible Lives of Greta Wells by Andrew Sean Greer – Time traveling love story about finding happiness in an alternate life

 


The Inquisitor’s Mark by Diane K. Salerni – second book in an exciting Young Adult series about a secret eighth day where allies and adversaries abound

 


The Interestings by Meg Wolitzer – a look at the lives of six talented teenagers who meet at a summer camp for the arts in 1974


Manhattan Beach by Jennifer Egan – fantastic historical fiction during the Depression and World War II. Egan’s characters try their best to navigate between right and wrong.


My Name Is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout – How do you put the hushed experiences of your childhood into words?  Character reflections on family, marriage and friendships.

 


Reconstructing Amelia by Kimberly McCreight – debut novel about the secret life of teenagers at an elite private school in Brooklyn

 


Rules of Civility by Amor Towles – working class girl meets a handsome banker and climbs the social ladder in Post Depression New York.

 


Second Street Station by Lawrence H. Levy – first book in an entertaining historical fiction murder mystery series about New York’s first female police detective

 


The Swans of Fifth Avenue by Melanie Benjamin – great book about Truman Capote and his relationship with high society socialites in New York.


Tell No One by Harlan Coben – fast-moving, highly entertaining crime thriller set in the suburbs with a wild chase scene in New York


The Transcriptionist by Amy Rowland – interesting a story about an emotionally unsettled newspaper woman and a commentary on the business of reporting news

 


We Are Not Ourselves by Matthew Thomas – a look inside a family struggling with Alzheimer’s disease

 


Youngblood Hawke by Herman Wouk – terrific story of a young author from Kentucky who arrives in New York and becomes a hugely successful and prolific novelist – Book Club Mom’s All-Time Favorite! (Click here to view Book Club Mom’s Top 10 Faves.)


I think it’s fun to sort my books by different categories.
Do you often read about the same place?

Thanks for visiting – come back soon!

New York Books – Something for Everyone!

photo: pd4pic.com
photo: pd4pic.com

I didn’t realize until now just how many books I’ve read
that are set in New York.  If you’re in “a New York state of mind,”
take a look at some of my favorite Big Apple books!


The American Heiress by Daisy Goodwin  – light 1800s historical fiction about billionaire American families who match up their daughters with poor European dukes and princes.

 


Billy Bathgate by E. L. Doctorow – intelligent and well-written historical fiction about 1930s organized crime in New York City

 


Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote – a character sketch of a lonely nineteen-year-old girl trying to escape a sad past

 


Brooklyn by Colm Toíbín – moving love story in which a young Irish woman leaves home for a better life in Brooklyn

 


Brooklyn on Fire by Lawrence H. Levy – second book in the entertaining Mary Handley Mystery series about New York’s first female detective

 


The Burgess Boys by Elizabeth Strout – story about a buried secret and painful family dynamics between adult siblings

 


The Dressmaker by Kate Alcott – historical fiction about a young English maid and seamstress who survives the Titanic

 


Empty Mansions by Bill Dedman and Paul Clark Newell, Jr. – fascinating biography of Huguette Clark, a reclusive heiress who spent the last twenty years of her life in a hospital bed and gave away huge amounts of money to her caretakers and advisers

 


The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand – terrific story about a talented New York architect who refuses to collaborate

 


 

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald – classic love story about a mysterious tycoon during the wild party atmosphere of the Roaring Twenties

 


The Hours Count by Jillian Cantor – great historical fiction about Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were the only civilian Americans to be killed for spying for the Russians

 


The Immortals by Jordanna Max Brodsky – a modern-day Artemis solves a murder in New York in a world of mortals, gods and goddesses

 


The Impossible Lives of Greta Wells by Andrew Sean Greer – Time traveling love story about finding happiness in an alternate life

 


The Inquisitor’s Mark by Diane K. Salerni – second book in an exciting Young Adult series about a secret eighth day where allies and adversaries abound

 


The Interestings by Meg Wolitzer – a look at the lives of six talented teenagers who meet at a summer camp for the arts in 1974


Manhattan Beach by Jennifer Egan – fantastic historical fiction during the Depression and World War II. Egan’s characters try their best to navigate between right and wrong.


My Name Is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout – How do you put the hushed experiences of your childhood into words?  Character reflections on family, marriage and friendships.

 


Reconstructing Amelia by Kimberly McCreight – debut novel about the secret life of teenagers at an elite private school in Brooklyn

 


Rules of Civility by Amor Towles – working class girl meets a handsome banker and climbs the social ladder in Post Depression New York.

 


Second Street Station by Lawrence H. Levy – first book in an entertaining historical fiction murder mystery series about New York’s first female police detective

 


The Swans of Fifth Avenue by Melanie Benjamin – great book about Truman Capote and his relationship with high society socialites in New York.


Tell No One by Harlan Coben – fast-moving, highly entertaining crime thriller set in the suburbs with a wild chase scene in New York


The Transcriptionist by Amy Rowland – interesting a story about an emotionally unsettled newspaper woman and a commentary on the business of reporting news

 


We Are Not Ourselves by Matthew Thomas – a look inside a family struggling with Alzheimer’s disease

 


Youngblood Hawke by Herman Wouk – terrific story of a young author from Kentucky who arrives in New York and becomes a hugely successful and prolific novelist – Book Club Mom’s All-Time Favorite! (Click here to view Book Club Mom’s Top 10 Faves.)


I think it’s fun to sort my books by different categories.
Do you often read about the same place?

Thanks for visiting – come back soon!

Empty Mansions Update

empty mansions picThanks to Bill Dedman, co-author of Empty Mansions, for sending me this update about the book, the Clark estate and the upcoming film!

I very much enjoyed reading this book about Huguette Clark, a reclusive millionaire heiress who, by choice, lived in a New York hospital for twenty years.  Clark died in 2011, just short of her 105th birthday.  Her will was hotly contested by the Clark family when they discovered that Clark had given away a large portion of her $300 million fortune to her caregivers, personal assistant, accountant, the hospital and other non-family members.  Dedman and Paul Clark Newell, Jr. tell Huguette Clark’s story in this fascinating best-seller.  (Click here to read my review of Empty Mansions.)

The release of video excerpts of testimony, new pictures of Clark’s childhood home and additional court rulings make this an ongoing story.

Here’s Dedman’s update for readers of the Huguette Clark stories and the No. 1 bestselling book “Empty Mansions: The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune”.

  • Huguette’s inner circle speaks: Interesting new videos are online. Watch 25 video excerpts from testimony by the reclusive copper heiress’s nurse, personal assistant, goddaughter, attorney, and accountant.
  • Court rules against Clark estate: A judge in New York has rejected an attempt by the Clark estate to recover millions in gifts and fees paid by Huguette Clark to Beth Israel Medical Center. Litigation continues against two doctors and a nurse. Half of any proceeds from the lawsuit would flow to the Clark relatives, who previously received $37 million from the estate settlement. See an article on the legal action in The New York Times.  The relatives have also established a charity, the Huguette Clark Family Fund or Protection of Elders.
  • Events and discussions of “Empty Mansions” are planned in Cedar Falls, Iowa; in Los Angeles; in Santa Barbara; in St. Paul, Minnesota; and in Philadelphia. See our events page and let me know if you’d like one of us to speak (via Skype or in person) to your book club or association.
  • Photos from the Clark home in Butte: Here are striking photos of W.A. Clark’s first great house, the Copper King Mansion in Butte, Montana, built 1884-1888. Take the full photo tour. The interior photos are by Daniel Hagerman, who granted permission for us to post these photos at EmptyMansionsBook.com. The Clark home in Butte is now a bed and breakfast, with tours and rooms for rent. Thank you to owners Erin Sigl and John Thompson for being such a friend to “Empty Mansions.” They have copies of the book, signed by the authors, for sale at the mansion. Plan a book club retreat at The Copper King Mansion .
  • Bellosguardo Foundation update: We’re waiting for news of an agreement with the IRS on the unpaid gift taxes owed by the Clark estate. That agreement will determine how much money flows to the Bellosguardo Foundation, which will receive the Clark home in Santa Barbara. That foundation now has a board of directors but has announced no decisions on whether or not to open the home to the public. Click here to see the names of the board members.
  • Book revisions: An update on the settlement of the Clark estate was added to later printings of the book, and all paperback copies. You can see those updated pages, Nos. 348-350, in a PDF file here,  “Empty Mansions” has gone back to press for its 14th hardcover printing and its 10th paperback printing, passing 250,000 copies sold.
  • Hundreds of photographs of the Clark family and their homes have been added to the galleries. Click here to view two videos from C-SPAN and other programs about “Empty Mansions”.
  • Signed first printings of “Empty Mansions” are for sale on the AbeBooks website. The first printing was quite small, but a bookseller in California has books signed by both authors.
  • Film news: “Empty Mansions” has been optioned for a feature film by Hollywood producer Ryan Murphy (“Glee,” “American Horror Story,” “The Normal Heart”). We’re awaiting word on cast, director, etc.
  • The Pulpwood Queens book clubs, with more than 650 clubs in 15 countries, named “Empty Mansions” its nonfiction book of the year. Click here to see the announcement.   .
  • Watch for updates on our blog, at , and on Facebook.

Thanks to everyone for reading and contributing to the Clark story.

Regards,

Bill

Bill Dedman
Bill@PowerReporting.com

And be sure to click on the links below to visit my earlier posts about the book, including an interview with Bill Dedman:

“Some updates on Empty Mansions – the book and the movie!”

“Author interview with Bill Dedman of Empty Mansions”

“More Empty Mansions updates!”

“Update from Empty Mansions author Bill Dedman”

Thanks for visiting – come back soon!

Some updates on Empty Mansions – the book and the movie!

empty mansions pic

I got an email from Bill Dedman yesterday. He’s a senior writer at Newsday and co-author with Paul Clark Newell, Jr. of Empty Mansions: The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune. He told me about two recent developments in the Huguette Clark story:

  • Paramount Studios and Ryan Murphy Productions are moving forward with the film about Huguette Clark. Dedman just returned from a trip to Paramount and tells me that they have a great team working together on this exciting project.
  • The Pulpwood Queens Book Club recently selected Empty Mansions as its Nonfiction Book of the Year. The Pulpwood Queens Book Club is the largest book club in the world, with more than 650 chapters. Here’s a description of the club, taken from the Empty Mansions blog:

    “The Pulpwood Queens is the largest “meeting and discussing” book club in the world with more than 650 chapters nationwide and in 15 foreign countries. Founded in 2000 in Kathy Murphy’s hair salon in Jefferson, Texas, the Pulpwood Queens don’t take themselves seriously, with their signature outfits of hot pink and leopard print, but they do take their reading seriously. Their motto is “where tiaras are mandatory and reading good books is the rule!” Their mission is to help undiscovered authors get discovered in a big way and to help promote authors, books, literacy, and reading. Each month they read the main selection that their founder selects, and for the voracious readers the bonus selections too. A film about the group is in the works from Dreamworks Entertainment, based on Murphy’s book The Pulpwood Queen’s Tiara-Wearing, Book-Sharing Guide to Life.”

I really enjoyed Empty Mansions. Be sure to check out my Book Club Mom review of Empty Mansions from December 29, 2013.

Thanks for visiting – come back soon!

A video tour of Huguette Clark’s California mansion and a preview of items up for auction

empty mansions pic

I never get tired of looking inside Huguette Clark’s homes.  Bill Dedman, co-author with Paul Clark Newell, Jr. of Empty Mansions, sent me a link to a video tour of the Bellosguardo mansion in California.  Christie’s has prepared this video tour to promote the auction of Clark’s artwork and other items and to generate interest in the Bellosguardo estate.

The Music Room at Bellosguardo
The Music Room at Bellosguardo

Here’s the link:  http://www.emptymansionsbook.com/-video/

This link also takes you to a video showing the items being sold at Christie’s, including a Monet and three Renoirs.

"Water Lilies" from the series by Monet
“Water Lilies” from the series by Monet
Renoir's "Girls Playing Battledore and Shuttlecock"
Renoir’s “Girls Playing Battledore and Shuttlecock”

This Renoir is my favorite – I’d buy it if I could afford it!

Renoir's "Woman with Umbrella"
Renoir’s “Woman with Umbrella”

Thanks for visiting – come back soon!

Author interview with Bill Dedman of Empty Mansions

Bill DedmanBill Dedman

empty mansions pic

I am very pleased to post my recent interview with Bill Dedman, co-author of Empty Mansions – The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune. Bill and his co-author, Paul Clark Newell, Jr., are very excited about the reader response to this fascinating story. In addition to hardcover, audio and e-book formats, Empty Mansions is now available in paperback form.

Here are Bill’s responses to the questions I prepared.

BCM: Empty Mansions began as a story about an empty house in Connecticut. When did you discover that this was a big enough story to be a book?

BD: The reader response to my series of articles on NBC’s website was surprising. I received more than 2,000 emails and letters, and it was the most popular story ever on the site. What began as a feature about empty mansions and a mysterious owner named Huguette Clark turned into an investigation of the people managing her money, and then a fight over her money. It seemed to me that early on there was enough information and mystery for a book. It would have been enough to have a child of a forgotten Gilded Age tycoon living in a hospital for the last twenty years of her life, while her fabulous homes full of treasures and art sat unoccupied. But then Huguette Clark’s story became stranger. Add in a nurse who received $31 million in gifts, a felon accountant, an attorney who is in the will, a grasping hospital, a fiancé in France, and relatives seeking her fortune. It was the story that never ended.

BCM: You conducted a massive amount of research to prepare to write Empty Mansions. And I read that your research was ongoing during the entire writing process. How big was your team of researchers and experts?

BD: Paul and I did most of the research. (Paul is Paul Clark Newell, Jr., my fellow author and Huguette’s cousin, who spoke with her frequently over a period of nine years.) We had help from a student who took on tasks, such as reading 20,000 pages of medical records and flagging days in the nurses’ notes that seemed different. Many institutions and individuals contributed memories and documents.

BCM: Was it difficult to decide when to end the story?

BD: We decided to end it before the trial, to get the book out before the trial was scheduled. Otherwise, much of our material would have been given away in daily news coverage of trial testimony and documents. And we couldn’t be sure whether a trial would begin on time. As it turned out, that was the right decision. A trial began, but was cut short after a day of jury selection, as the parties reached a settlement. The paperback edition of Empty Mansions includes an update on the settlement, and my news articles about the case are at http://nbcnews.com/clark/.

BCM: People are naturally drawn to stories about the wealthy and their lifestyles.   W.A. Clark certainly fits the bill for an engrossing read, before we even meet his daughter. Huguette was a very interesting person too, so shy, but nevertheless very interested in people. I liked that about her and think others must have felt the same way. I think her unusual way of coping with shyness made her all the more endearing. Besides the mystery of her empty homes and apartments, when did you know you were onto a special story about her?

BD: I was surprised, and pleased, that she turned out to be so fascinating, so alive and lively. For a recluse, she had a lot of friends, pen pals, telephone friends. She was a maintainer of relationships, keeping alive her family’s friendship and support of friends from generation to generation. She was relentlessly generous, and loved sending not only her “little gifts,” as she called them, her checks for $20,000 or $30,000 or $40,000, but also toys for children — so long as the children sent a photograph of themselves with the gift.

BCM: I’m sure having the input from your co-author, Paul Clark Newell, Jr., was very valuable, especially his telephone conversations with her. How did you and Paul first come in contact with each other?

BD: Paul and I were introduced by one of the relatives. Paul is not, as you know, one of the relatives who challenged Huguette’s last will and testament. He’s not a nephew, not in line to inherit if the will were thrown out, but a cousin. (His father and Huguette were first cousins. To put it another way, Paul is descended not from Huguette’s father but from Huguette’s father’s sister.) I have to say a word for Paul, who has been a wonderful equal partner in this book: One might expect that a relative would try to shade the story to protect the reputation of Huguette’s father, Sen. W.A. Clark, whose name is remembered mostly for political corruption, but Paul was steadfast in saying, let’s get it right, let’s make sure it’s accurate.

BCM:  I read that before you met Paul, he had been working to finish a book his father had started about the Clark family. Is he still working on this separate book.

BD: We’ve discussed the possibility of doing a book just on the senator. The question is, did we already tell the most interesting 90 pages of his story, or should he have his own full biography. There is a lot of political and financial history that we left out or summarized.

BCM: Is there audio of Paul’s conversations with Huguette? If so, are these conversations available to readers?

BD: Yes, the audio version of our book includes about 20 minutes of Paul and Huguette in conversation. Empty Mansions is available in four flavors: a hardcover book, a paperback, the electronic book (such as Kindle or Nook), and an audio book that can be downloaded from iTunes or Audible or similar services. On the audio book, readers can hear Huguette describe how she and her family had tickets on the Titanic’s return trip, and how, as she explains matter-of-factly, “We had to take another boat.” And she remembered that ship’s name, too. She was incredibly lucid and elegant, with a good sense of humor and an iron will.

BCM: What’s interesting to think about is whether Huguette was happy in her life. While reclusive in many ways, she did reach out to people and had many meaningful relationships. My impression of her hospital years was that she was actually quite happy there. And I do think she cared about a great many people. Do you think she led a happy life during these years?

BD: Yes, people often assume, incorrectly I believe, that she became a recluse by going into the hospital. You have it right: She was quite reclusive for years, and going into the hospital made her be more sociable, with visitors and doctors and nurses. If she was ever sad, she didn’t show it. Her conversations with Paul, her correspondence — none of it is sad, and all of her circle of friends and staff and independent doctors and nurses describe her as chipper and full of good memories.

BCM:  You leave the reader to decide whether the people Huguette was close to during her hospital years took advantage of her. What’s your opinion?

BD: It’s not my job to have opinions. We tried to leave room for people to choose their own sides. For example, consider Huguette’s daytime private-duty nurse, Hadassah Peri, whose family received $31 million in gifts from Huguette over two decades. If someone wants to be outraged that the nurse received so much in gifts, that’s OK with me. If they want to stress that she worked for Madame for 20 years, much of that time for 12 hours a day, seven days a week, being away from her own children, that’s fair. And even the hospital’s grasping, which we detailed under the heading “Shakedown,” doesn’t surprise me — the temptation would have been so great; and any mention of the hospital’s efforts has to be balanced by pointing out how little effect it had, if any, on the writing of the will. The hospital had to be the least excited recipient of a $1 million bequest.

BCM: What’s new with the foundation that is being set up to house Huguette’s doll collection and other art in the Santa Barbara home? Will it be a private exhibit or a museum that’s open to the public?

BD: It’s too soon to say. The arts foundation, the Bellosguardo Foundation, doesn’t have board members appointed yet, doesn’t own the house yet. I was able to visit the house recently — that story and photos are at http://nbcnews.com/clark/ — and similar tours have been given to potential members of a board. Or to put it another way, potential donors. The foundation will have to decide whether it pours money into keeping Bellosguardo as a public place for the arts — concerts? tours? an art museum? — or whether it would do more good by selling the house and using that money to promote the arts. We’ll see.

BCM: Some of the jewelry that was auctioned off was just beautiful! Did you get to see any of these pieces?

BD: I did see the jewelry pieces before the auction. And we have many photographs on our website, http://emptymansionsbook.com. You can see how the jewelry pieces looked when Huguette’s safe deposit box was opened, and there were the jewels — $18 million worth — still in their original boxes from Cartier and other fine jewelers. Our website now contains hundreds of photos of Huguette’s houses, art collection, her own paintings that she made, and her family.

BCM:  Do you have a sense of whether the art collection to be auctioned will go to a museum or a private collector?

BD: The sales of most of the items will be June 18 at Christie’s in New York. Who knows who the bidders will be. I do hope that some of Huguette’s own paintings, which she created, will end up at her house in Santa Barbara. I suppose that will require that someone there buy the items at the auction — which partly benefits the Bellosguardo Foundation — and then donate them to the foundation for display in her house.

BCM: It’s exciting to think there may be an Empty Mansions movie in the works now that Hollywood director Ryan Murphy (creator of “Glee” and “American Horror Story”) has optioned the film. What’s the next step in this process?

BD: We’re waiting to hear whether Mr. Murphy will write or direct the film himself. It’s too soon to say. I hope that a film will be entertaining and also will preserve Huguette’s dignity as a surprising person.

BCM: It’s been so fun interviewing you, Bill. Thanks so much for taking the time to appear on my blog site!

BD: I appreciate your kindness. Paul and I have been bowled over by the reaction from readers. We’ve had the best possible experience. Thank you.

More Empty Mansions updates!

empty mansions pic
Empty Mansions
by Bill Dedman and Paul Clark Newell, Jr.

I’m very excited to tell you that Bill Dedman, co-author of Empty Mansions: The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune has agreed to an interview! If you’ve been following my blog, you know that I totally enjoyed reading this life story of the reclusive heiress Huguette Clark, co-authored by Dedman and Paul Clark Newell, Jr. Huguette Clark grew up surrounded by riches and spent the last twenty years of her life living in various hospitals in New York, by choice. Clark’s will was hotly contested.

Bill Dedman
Bill Dedman

Bill Dedman is a Pulitzer-Prize winning American journalist, an investigative reporter for NBC News, and co-author of the No. 1 bestselling book Empty Mansions: The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune.

In 1989, Dedman received the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for “The Color of Money,” a series of articles in Bill Kovach’s Atlanta Journal-Constitution on racial discrimination by mortgage lenders in middle-income black neighborhoods. (Thanks Wikipedia! – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Dedman)

Here are some of the updates I received from Bill Dedman:

Empty Mansions will be out in paperback on April 22.

Huguette Clark’s art collection is currently touring the world and will be auctioned by Christie’s in May and June. These works include paintings by Monet and Renoir which have not been seen by the public for decades. Here’s the link to the article describing this artwork: http://investigations.nbcnews.com/_news/2014/01/30/22513322-art-cache-of-recluse-huguette-clark-revealed-begins-world-tour-before-sale.

Here are three of the paintings to be auctioned:

Renoir's "Woman with Umbrella"
Renoir’s “Woman with Umbrella”
"Water Lilies" from the series by Monet
“Water Lilies” from the series by Monet
Renoir's "Girls Playing Battledore and Shuttlecock"
Renoir’s “Girls Playing Battledore and Shuttlecock”

Details of the legal battle surrounding her estate are available at: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/38810137.

Here’s a YouTube video of Huguette Clark’s doll collection: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KRgWY2PdaDc.

Clark’s jewelry collection was sold at Christie’s in 2012 to help pay for the management of her estate during the dispute. Here’s the link describing her jewelry: http://investigations.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/04/17/11249129-sold-jewels-of-heiress-huguette-clark-bring-a-surprising-18-million-at-auction.

These cool emerald, pearl and diamond earrings were part of her collection.
These cool emerald, pearl and diamond earrings were part of her collection.

And the biggest news is that there may be a film of Empty Mansions.   Hollywood director Ryan Murphy (creator of “Glee” and “American Horror Story”) has optioned the film. The news came out in this Deadline Hollywood article:  http://www.deadline.com/2014/03/empty-mansions-to-get-film-treatment/.

Still curious? Do you have anything you would like to ask Bill Dedman? I’ll be preparing questions in the next few days. Reply in the Comments section and I’ll include your questions in my interview.

Thanks for reading – come back again!

Update from Empty Mansions author Bill Dedman

empty mansions pic
I received a nice message from Bill Dedman, thanking me for reviewing Empty Mansions.  He has provided additional links to his research and reporting on Huguette Clark.  Here’s what he wrote:
Thank you for your kind review of “Empty Mansions.” You can find more about the legal battle, the settlement of the court fight over her fortune, in my articles at http://nbcnews.com/clark. And more information about the book, and videos about Huguette, are at http://emptymansionsbook.com. Thank you again.”

Empty Mansions by Bill Dedman and Paul Clark Newell, Jr.

empty mansions pic

Empty Mansions
by
Bill Dedman and Paul Clark Newell, Jr.
Rating:

Every day I drive past three old abandoned homes and every day I wonder about the history of these houses and of the lives of the people who once lived inside them.  Bill Dedman discovered something like this on a much grander scale, with many unanswered questions:  two vacant mansions, one on the east coast, one on the west, still maintained and one fully furnished, ready for visitors.  And then there were three more residences, large uninhabited apartments in a Fifth Avenue building, including one that took up the entire 12th floor.  Their owner?  Huguette Clark, a reclusive heiress who by choice spent the last twenty years of her life in a hospital bed and during that time gave away huge amounts of money to her caretakers and advisers, and to friends, godchildren and charities.

The ultimate question upon her death, just short of her 105th birthday, was who would inherit her $300 million fortune, the people who for two decades took care of her or corresponded with her regularly, or distant relatives from the large Clark family?  Two wills emerged:  one bequeathing her assets to the Clarks, another one signed soon after, naming her nurse, accountant, attorney, doctor and others as the recipients.

Dedman conducted a massive amount of research and collaborated with Paul Clark Newell, Jr., a relative of Huguette whose father had researched the Clark family.  Newell developed a friendly correspondence and telephone relationship with Huguette and was not part of the Clarks who contested her will.  The result is Empty Mansions, a detailed history of the Clark family and an in-depth look at Huguette’s life during her twenty-year hospital stay.

Empty Mansions begins with Huguette’s father, W.A. Clark, an ambitious self-starter who made his riches in Montana’s copper mines, railroads, real estate and banking.  A Montana senator, his brief political career was filled with controversy, during a time when bribery and other payoffs were common.   After serving one term, he moved his family and riches east to New York, built a massive mansion on Millionaires’ Row where Huguette and her older sister Andrée were raised.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book, both the early history of W.A. Clark’s money-making, and the pictures of Huguette, her family and homes.  I think Dedman and Newell have done a terrific job explaining what it was like to have grown up in such wealth, as well as respectfully portraying Huguette as a people-shy girl who became a woman who preferred to stay home and relate to the people she loved through cables, letters and phone calls.

I also think Huguette derived a great deal of joy from giving to others, but I believe some of her caretakers and hospital officials took advantage of her.  Whether the Clarks deserved to receive part of her fortune is another issue. It seems right that the Santa Barbara home, Bellosguardo, should become the center of a foundation to house Huguette’s $1.7 million doll collection and other art.  And now that I understand the Clark connection to the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., I would like to plan a trip to see the rooms that hold much of W.A.’s art collection.

Empty Mansions was published before the settlement of Huguette’s contested will, however, all was recently finalized and the results are available on emptymansionsbook.com.  Explaining this complicated scenario with its many players is not an easy task so thanks to Bill Dedman for sending me this link!

This is a great read, well-written and worth the time!

Thanks for visiting – come back soon!

What’s up next? – Empty Mansions by Bill Dedman and Paul Clark Newell, Jr.

empty mansions pic

I decided to go with some non-fiction:  the recently published Empty Mansions – The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune.

Prior to writing Empty Mansions, Bill Dedman wrote a series of narratives for NBC which appeared on its news website.  It became the website’s most popular feature with over 110 million page views.  In 1989, Dedman received the Pulitzer Prize in investigative reporting while writing for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Paul Clark Newell, Jr. is a cousin of Huguette Clark and, in contributing to this book, provided twenty-years of family history research and shared his many personal conversations with Huguette.

(This info is adapted from the inside book flap.)

Anyone want to read along with me?