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Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Mystery & Detective / Historical
  • Language:English
  • Series title:The Philatelic Mysteries
  • Series Number:1
  • Pages:320
  • eBook ISBN:9781483511078

Chasing Jenny

A Philatelic Mystery

by Jeff Stage

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Overview
An explosion and fire in a summer cottage. A slippery car chase over country roads during an unexpected blizzard. Explosions. Magic. A deadly knife. Deceit. Prowling U-boats. Thievery. Murder. So, this is the life of the stamp collector? Perceptions of the hobby are turned upside down in "Chasing Jenny: A Philatelic Mystery," a history-based mystery novel that revolves around a world-famous stamp stolen in 1955 from a stamp show in Norfolk, Va. (Today, the theft remains unsolved.) The stamp, an error, depicts an upside-down airplane, known popularly as the "Jenny." The novel includes the story of our nation's first airmail flight; a tense WWII convoy across the Atlantic; and a taste of the 1950s. Most of the story is set in contemporary Upstate New York, in the Rust Belt city of Syracuse, N.Y., and the bucolic southeastern shore of Lake Ontario. "There isn't a collector in the world who wouldn't want one," exclaims central character Miles of the iconic invert known the world over. Miles, an affable former newspaper reporter who now spends some time helping a stamp dealer, is recruited by Lizzy Smith. Lizzy regularly travels to Syracuse to visit her aging and sometimes frail-minded father, a WWII veteran of the Navy. When Ted Smith mentions the inverted Jenny to his daughter, she seeks out help – and finds Miles – at a national stamp show being held in Syracuse. Miles likes Lizzy’s smile and quickly signs on to help her find what could be a true treasure. Trouble is, they aren’t the only ones looking for the iconic stamp. Some may even be willing to kill for it. The stamp is coveted by many, but in the end, who will possess the tiny rarity? Author Jeff Stage has been writing creatively and collecting stamps since he was a child. His professional career was spent working as an award-winning reporter, columnist and editor for the Herald-Journal and Post-Standard newspapers in Syracuse, N.Y., where he resides. This is his first novel, but he hopes to bring Miles back for more in a series he’s calling The Philatelic Mysteries.
Description
A fire in an old, exposed-beam summer cottage leaves two people desperately searching for an escape. A slippery car chase over country roads through a blizzard. Explosions. Magic. A deadly knife. Deceit. Prowling U-boats. Thievery. Death. So, these are the elements of stamp collecting? Perceptions of the hobby are turned upside down in Jeff Stage’s “Chasing Jenny: A Philatelic Mystery,” a history-based novel that includes the story of our nation’s first airmail flight in 1918; a tense WWII convoy across the Atlantic; and a brush with the post-war 1950s. Much of the story is contemporary, set in Syracuse, N.Y., and the cottage area of the southeastern shore of Lake Ontario. In 1955, someone boldly plucks a block of four rare postage stamps – the world-famous inverted Jennys – from beneath security guards’ noses on the third morning of a national stamp show in Norfolk, Va. Fictional “Chasing Jenny” picks things up nearly 60 years later when Lizzy Smith thinks her aging father has one of the rare stamps, and she’s out to find the tiny piece of paper that could be worth $1 million. Trouble is, so are others, who are willing to steal, lie and commit murder. The story’s timeline begins in 1918 when the U.S. Post Office Department is about to institute the world’s first regular airmail service. To pay the airmail rate, a new 24-cent stamp showing a Curtiss JN4-H biplane – popularly known as the Jenny – is produced. Stamp collector William T. Robey feels that because of the stamps’ hasty production, some copies might have printing errors. They could be worth a small fortune if they reach collectors’ hands. Robey’s instincts are correct and he discovers a new sheet of 100 stamps that show all of the biplanes upside down. The stamps, known as the inverted Jenny, are instantly valuable and recognized by collectors and the public worldwide. (The invert is so iconic that the U.S. Postal Service commemorated it with a new $2 version of the error released in 2013.) The 100 Jennys eventually make their way into the hands of collectors and museums. In 1955, Ethel McCoy exhibited a block of four of the inverts at a stamp show in Norfolk. On the third morning of the show, the stamps seem to vanish into thin air. Though two of the stamps have since been recovered, decades later the other two remain missing. Who stole those stamps and where are the lost ones? “Chasing Jenny” picks things up today. The stamps are fresh on the mind of Ted Smith, a frail WWII Navy veteran and amateur magician who resides in a nursing home. He mentions them to his daughter, Lizzy, just as (not coincidentally) a national stamp show comes to town. Perplexed, Lizzy visits the big show in Syracuse, where she finds help in friendly stamp dealer Tommy Byrnes and his part-time assistant, Miles, an affable former newspaper reporter. Lizzy tells them that her aging father may possess one of the valuable inverts. The stamp dealers are skeptical. Passionate stamp collectors have kept tabs over the years on the whereabouts of all 100 inverts and “only a few are unaccounted for,” they say. Though unlikely, they admit Lizzy’s father could have one. The stamp is certainly not the world’s rarest. Some stamps are known to have only one, two or a handful of copies. But many say that the inverted Jenny is the best-known and favorite of all rare stamps. “There isn’t a collector in the world who wouldn’t want one,” exclaims Miles, who agrees to help Lizzy. After all, he’s single and a tad lovelorn. And what could go possibly go wrong by spending a day helping this cute stranger in her hunt for a treasure? But they aren’t the only ones who suspect a missing Jenny is nearby. A former Navy colleague of Lizzy’s father and a dangerous survivalist Frenchman, who acts quickly and lethally when his back is to the wall, are also hot on the trail. “Chasing Jenny” takes readers on a topsy-turvy thrill ride in search of the famous upside-down-airplane stamps. The stamp is coveted by many, but in the end, who will possess the tiny rarity? Author Jeff Stage has been writing creatively and collecting stamps since he was a child. His professional career was spent working as an award-winning reporter, columnist and editor for the Herald-Journal and Post-Standard newspapers in Syracuse, N.Y., where he resides. This is his first novel, but he hopes to bring Miles back for more in a series he’s calling The Philatelic Mysteries.
About the author
Jeff Stage has been writing creatively and collecting stamps since he was a child. He grew up in Liverpool, N.Y., a suburb of Syracuse, where he resides. His worked for more than 35 years as a reporter, columnist and editor for the Herald-Journal and The Post-Standard daily newspapers in Syracuse. Jeff is a longtime fan of mysteries and history, and his stamp collection has been growing for more than 50 years.