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Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Mystery & Detective / Amateur Sleuth
  • Language:English
  • Pages:172
  • Paperback ISBN:9798350969740

Conflagration On Fieldston Green

by Perry King Neubauer

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Overview
An historic church on Fieldston Green burns to the ground on a cold winter's night. The architect commissioned for the rebuilding becomes a sleuth and eventually brings the perpetrator to justice.
Description
Before it crashed to the ground, the flames soared high and briefly illuminated the white steeple of the Fieldston Congregational Church, situated near the banks of the mighty Connecticut River in Southern Vermont. In founding the church in 1729, Joshua Abernathy had fled the congestion of New Haven and Boston and founded the village Fieldston. Abernathy had been the favorite student of Eli Yale, who gifted his personal Bible as a commencement honor. The "Abernathy Bible" had become a cherished possession which the church took extraordinary care to preserve. In the winter of 1978, an arsonist set fire to Fieldston's historic church and it burned to the ground, the Abernathy Bible with it. Townspeople asked each other who would do such a crime. There was the usual arrogance and hypocrisy among some of the church members, but nobody could understand a spiteful person who would carry out such a deed. Hank Richardson, an architect from Cambridge, Massachusetts, was a close friend of George Danbury, the new Fieldston minister. He was selected to design the new church, and he soon became an amateur sleuth because the Fieldston police were already understaffed and showed little interest in investing costly time and resources to catch the perpetrator.
About the author
Perry King Neubauer FAIA was born in 1940, and grew up in the Southwest United States. He and his family moved to the East Coast in 1954 where he later attended Princeton and Harvard. After serving as a company commander in Vietnam, he returned to Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1968 where he joined The Architects Collaborative, eventually serving as its president. He is now retired and lives in Cambridge with Susie, his beloved wife for over 60 years.