Cover Image: The Talented Miss Farwell

The Talented Miss Farwell

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

I really enjoyed this cat and mouse story of the Talented Miss Farwell. Becky Farwell is the likeable hard working accountant at Pierson Illinois a small rural town but her alto ego is Reba Farwell successful art dealer which is funded by her ‘accounting’ job. Will she get caught and just How far will Becky go ? The double life she lives is exhausting as is her need to continue to embezzle more and more funds. A quick easy entertaining read

Was this review helpful?

Becky Farwell is well-known in her small town in Illinois, first as a loving daughter to her ailing father, helping him make his farming equipment business a success, and then as a beloved town comptroller somehow always finding that extra dollar to fund a town project. All the while living a quiet life in the farmhouse she grew up in. Yet, no one knows what's behind her magic with the town's books, or that she's siphoning off money to fund her alter-ego's elegant lifestyle as a high-end art dealer. Reba Farwell, as she's known in art circles, wears Manolo's and YSL and works contacts all over the world to buy, sell, and build her own art collection. The novel's suspense builds as you, and Becky, wonder how long she can keep up the double-life. I was surprised at how much I was rooting for Becky, even as I knew what she was doing was wrong and taking her further down that path as the novel progressed. She's likable, and even when she is being less likable Tedrowe creates a believable contrast between the con artist and the caring friend and daughter, keeping me invested in the choices Becky makes. The icing on the cake for me was that I really enjoy novels about art so I loved diving into the parties, paintings, and ins & outs of the art world.

Was this review helpful?

Intriguing and hard to put down. Ultimately the characters felt underdeveloped and the ending fell flat.

Was this review helpful?

I liked the premise of the book: small town bright woman who becomes a con-artist art collector. However, I thought it became a little tedious. I kept waiting for something exciting to happen and it never did.

Was this review helpful?

Maybe I let the buzz about this title go to my head, but I had very high expectations when I started this novel and it didn't live up to the hype for me. The premise of a local government employee embezzling money from her town and living a double life was really intriguing.

Becky's relationships with her father and her best friend, Ingrid, drew me in but they weren't enough to cause me to have positive feelings for Becky. She ended up seeming very one dimensional and I couldn't find anything redeemable in her character, so this book ended up being a really uncomfortable read for me. The glimpses into the art world were interesting and perhaps some more details about it, or just some more tension in the plot, would have made this a more enjoyable read. Thanks to NetGalley and HarperCollins for the digital ARC!

Was this review helpful?

Becky Farwell starts as a hard-working teenager who manages her father's business and ends up in prison for leading double life as a con artist art collector. You want her to succeed despite her choices. It's an interesting story of how difficult life can be for bright young women with few choices but a driving need to be successful.

Was this review helpful?

This was an interesting read. While I was never sure if I liked it disliked Becky, the main character, the writing was very well done and it kept me intrigued the whole time. I think Becky used her intelligence with math and accounting to embezzle money from her town comptroller job as a way of escape from her life and things that had taken place when she was younger and the choices she felt she had to make. She relished the high society life of the art world and she became very good in it. While she was embezzling millions of dollars, she did do a lot of food for the town and she did try to help out as much as she could. I feel like she just got sucked in to something that overtook her and controlled her life. Eventually our lies always catch up with us

Was this review helpful?

Becky Farwell, small town government employee by day transforms herself into a jet-setting art collector utilizing some creative accounting techniques. The book is a whirlwind adventure as Becky tries to juggle her two vastly different lives. While a seemingly far fetched scenario, the book was an entertaining and quick read.

Was this review helpful?

The Talented Miss Farwell by Emily Gray Tedrowe is a very unusual story that revolves around a motherless daughter taking care her beloved father. She is trying to do it all in order to survive. financially. As this storyline progresses the daughter becomes addicted to collecting valuable art while at the same time working for town government. She is taking and returning money in order to make expensive art purchases. This is all done under the constant probabikty that she could have her schemes uncovered by legal authorities. This novel has many lessons to teach and, in my opinion, deals with the topic of addiction very well. I enjoyed The Talented Miss Farwell. At times, however, I did find the pace of the novel to be a bit slow. I would have liked to see a more character development of some of the minor characters. I would like to thank netgalley, Emily Gray Tedrowe, and HarperCollins Publisher for allowing me to read this novel in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Was this review helpful?

I like this book. It took a while to understand all the art jargon and its purpose. BUT.... then it left me wondering what is Becky/Reba up to now and will she get away with this?!?!

Was this review helpful?

Maybe 3.5 stars. The premise was promising, and the beginning third interesting. It lagged a bit in the middle, and the ending was quickly wrapped up. I found the ending both perfect (in as much as we ever learned about the main character, Becky) and a bit depressing (the friendship between Becky and Ingrid). We never really get a true picture of Ms. Farwell's motivations as an art collector.

"Reba, as she’s known, is the picture of a wealthy art collector. To some, the elusive Miss Farwell is a shark with outstanding business acumen. To others, she’s a heartless capitalist whose only interest in art is how much she can make.

But a thousand miles from the Big Apple, in the small town of Pierson, Illinois, Miss Farwell is someone else entirely—a quiet single woman known as Becky who still lives in her family’s farmhouse, wears sensible shoes, and works tirelessly as the town’s treasurer and controller.

No one understands the ins and outs of Pierson’s accounts better than Becky; she’s the last one in the office every night, crunching the numbers. Somehow, her neighbors marvel, she always finds a way to get the struggling town just a little more money. What Pierson doesn’t see—and can never discover—is that much of that money is shifted into a separate account that she controls, “borrowed” funds used to finance her art habit. Though she quietly repays Pierson when she can, the business of art is cutthroat and unpredictable.

But as Reba Farwell’s deals get bigger and bigger, Becky Farwell’s debt to Pierson spirals out of control. How long can the talented Miss Farwell continue to pull off her double life?"

Thanks to NetGalley for the free ARC in exchange for my honest review.

Was this review helpful?

An intriguing main character is central to this story. Although this reader never fully understood her motivation, Ms. Farrell certainly was intriguing and pulled the story forward in an fashion that was a definite page-turner. Reveling in details from the not too distant past, the story is both heartbreaking and comical at times. Would recommend the reading of this book.

Was this review helpful?

“The Talented Miss Farwell” was a very clever and entertaining book. Becky Farwell was a complicated, interesting, even sympathetic character. Sociopath – not sure? But even as she was robbing the townspeople of their amenities, it was hard not to understand her drive and her need and her obsession and be in total awe of what she was able to accomplish. Of course it had to end at some point, but the ending felt somewhat anti-climactic. What happened to all the artwork? Did her completed collections get to stay together? It would have been nice to have a little blurb about that, but maybe that’s the point: that she didn’t know, either.

Was this review helpful?

I couldn’t put this one down. It was a nice change from the typical suspense novels I’ve been reading lately.

Was this review helpful?

Money laundering, Fine Art, fashion, female friendship, small town life—can these possibly be related.? The Talented Miss Farwell encompasses all of these into an engaging read. Though in this day and age, some of it seems a bit unlikely, the storyline still seems doable. Some things come full circle which will be satisfying to many readers as these things help define the character at various times in her life. Having her best friend as the mother of a special needs child helped put a lot of things in perspective. A few days we’ll spent.

Was this review helpful?

Becky Farwell was a smart, ingenious teenager who mom died when she was young. She helped turned her father's floundering farm equipment business around, and discovered a love of numbers and accounting. She turned this love into a job working in the finance department in her home town of Pierson, Illinois, quickly rising through the ranks. She also discovers a passion for art buying, and begins "borrowing" money from Pierson to pay for her purchases, always intending to pay the town back, with her next big art transaction. She lives a double life and is known as Rebea in prestigious art circles. The story moves along quickly, however, I never really felt anything for Becky and her double life. The final outcome was inevitable, and I was relieved when it finally happened. If you are interested in art and the buying and selling of the same, this story would fit the bill.

Was this review helpful?

I was intrigued by the premise of this book, but unfortunately it just fell short for me. The main character was too aloof for me to root for her - and I certainly don't mind rooting for wayward protagonists! The art dialogue was snappy, the small town was true to life, the timeline was paced well. Plenty to love if you can get past Miss Farwell herself!

Was this review helpful?

Taking place during the 1990's, main character, Becky Farwell, takes on a position of treasurer for a small town of Pierson, Illinois. Her day job turns into a way to "fund" her passion of art collecting and selling. While she plans to pay the money back right away, her obsession with art, and the lifestyle it brings, puts the town and Becky into greater and greater debt. How will she recover the money?
I found myself rooting for Becky even though what she was doing was greedy and illegal. Becky was smart, likable and hard working. Her friendship with Ingrid showed how she could be supportive of those she loved. I had little interest in the art aspect of the book, but the author kept those parts light and easy to read so I did not become bored with the names of artists, works, etc.
I would recommend this book (3.5 stars) to others who are interested in crime, art and/or strong female characters. Thank you to NetGalley, Harper Collins and Emily Grey Tedrow for the advanced e-copy of this book.

Was this review helpful?

I was looking forward to reading The Talented Miss Farwell. I loved Katherine Neville's A Calculated Risk, another book about a savvy woman working the financial system. But this was a disappointment to me. It felt incredibly pretentious and condescending instead of sly and compelling. Becky Farwell was a disappointment. Instead of rooting her on because she was a woman doing something that people don't think women can do on her own, I was rooting for her to get caught. Maybe if she'd been stealing money from a Fortune 500 company instead of her town it might have been easier. Maybe if she'd been a nice person who was compulsive and undervalued it would have been easier. But instead the author gave us a character that didn't care about the people around her, using them or keeping them around to make herself feel good. She gave us a hypocrite who got angry at someone for double-crossing her and then turned around and did the same thing herself. And last but not least, she was willing to destroy her own community and let it fall into disrepair while occasionally pitching in with her own personal funds (that were a result of stealing from the community in the first place) to throw a bone to help out. I for one, couldn't wait for her to get caught.

Was this review helpful?

Having worked in several small companies paying their bills and getting ready for audit, there was a HUGE suspension of disbelief I had to take here. Could Reba have gotten away with what she did in the 80s? Absolutely. But by the mid-90s, nope. And while I could believe the auditors weren't paying attention, this was a small town. There's no way the state didn't stick its nose in more.

So, what about the story beyond that? I loved the split character of Becky/Reba, and could easily see how Reba's love of art and ability to learn and manipulate artists and people grew over the years. More of that action would have been great - for example, when she's doing a huge deal, why not give us more of those details? Why not describe more of the art, so we can see what she's feeling so passionately about?

The most real part of this was Becky's persona and her relationship with Ingrid. The love/hate, Ingrid's ability to ignore or forgive Becky's worst aspects, all rang so true. This is clearly an unequal relationship in both their eyes, but which one holds the power is not as clear to them as it is to readers.

eARC provided by publisher.

Was this review helpful?