Books About Art Crime For People Who Can't Get Enough of the Louvre Jewel Heist

image of four books about art crime

I thought it was an appropriate time to dust off this article I wrote about one of my favorite subjects presented in books: art crime! Originally published on BookRiot.com, I tell you which of these books are worth buying, borrowing, bypassing – or stealing!


how to steal the mona lisa
How to Steal the Mona Lisa and Six Other World-Famous Treasures
by Taylor Bayouth

Step into the exciting and glamorous world of people like Thomas Crown and Danny Ocean with this handy "plug-and-play" art theft guide. Learn how to pick locks, dig under buildings, operate helicopters, manipulate people, and more! All in the name of stealing the world's greatest treasures for fun and profit.


This book is supposed to be a parody (or so the author claims), but the humor it deals in is extraordinarily dry, so be forewarned if that's not your jam. 


Even while I was laughing at the bizarre and outlandish instructions (e.g., test your companions' ethical framework and loyalty by casually asking, "Have you ever thought of doing something really wild, like ripping off a priceless piece of art?" All my friends and family said no, disappointingly), there is definitely a deeper point Bayouth seems to be making about the irony of reducing a cultural icon's worth down to dollars and cents so as to make it available for sale and private ownership. 


But basically this is just a silly book about indulging in the fantasy of committing a grand heist à la a Hollywood movie.


Verdict: Borrow. It's fun and good for some light entertainment, but probably not a reread. That said, I would be SHOCKED if this book isn't being developed into a screenplay as we speak. And you can bet I'll be seeing the movie.


the art forger cover

The Art Forger by BA Shapiro

Claire Roth is a master art copier, specializing in the works of Edgar Degas. But what she really wants, of course, is to be recognized for her own original paintings. Into all the art studios in all the world walks Aiden Markel, owner of the lauded Markel G gallery, with an offer Claire can't refuse: for a giant bucket of cash and her own show at Markel G, Claire agrees to copy a Degas painting lifted in the famous 1990 Gardner Museum heist. But forging a stolen painting is easy; it's getting away with the original that's hard.


There was some pretty dodgy art history going on in this book, but I'm willing to set that aside, since few besides actual art historians would care. Even without that, there were just too many convenient coincidences and things that didn't make sense for me to enjoy or buy into this story as much as I wanted. For example, Claire's BFF just happens to be an associate curator at the Isabella Stuart Gardner Museum? And another of her friends is a high-powered attorney. HOW WEIRD GUYS, I wonder where that's going??? Also, I recommend you drink every time someone says, "Copying a work of art isn't a crime." They're right, it's not. But possessing a stolen work of art with the intent to sell is. Remember that whole thing about the law and intent? No? Neither does the main character, or the lawyer, or the FBI character.


Verdict: Meh. You could probably get away with bypassing and not miss anything, but borrow if you must.


a fool and his monet cover
A Fool and His Monet by Sandra Orchard

Special Agent Serena Jones of the FBI Art Crime Team returns home from her very first undercover case, only to be thrown right into the middle of an apparent art heist at a local museum. Will she be able to find the theif[ves], keep her amateur sleuth aunt safe, and choose between two guys who have the hots for her, all within in 300 pages?


I can never say no to a book with a punny title. Never ever. It's a sickness. I also once harbored an ambition to work on the FBI's Art Crime Team, so there was no way I was going to pass this book up. It's light and fluffy reading, which normally I'm all about, but unfortunately if this book was cotton candy it'd taste like paper towels. Everything is just curiously flat and bland. The characters come across as either boring or cartoonishly stereotyped, the crime is completely uninteresting, and while Serena gets into plenty of hijinks they all feel one-note. The Captain Obvious statements explaining stuff that's common knowledge–for instance, what tiramisu or Pig Latin is–and things that can be easily inferred through dialog don't help. 


And don't get me started on the character's obsession with not becoming a spinster, which is simply BIZARRELY old-fashioned. Is this 2016 or 1916? Have the last 100 years of feminism actually happened or did I dream it?


Verdict: YMMV, but for me this was a bypass.


priceless robert k wittman cover

Priceless: How I Went Undercover to Rescue the World's Stolen Treasures by Robert K. Wittman and John Shiffman


And speaking of the FBI's Art Crime Team, how about a memoir by the guy who actually founded it and worked in the trenches to recover pieces like those stolen from the Gardner Museum? Yes please. Robert K Wittman discusses both the nature of art crime and why protecting art is so important, debunking all the Hollywood myths you can think of along the way.


Priceless is the exact opposite of A Fool and His Monet: it's emotional, thrilling, unputdownable, and it made me change the way I look at art. I've seen the phrase "The best book ever written about art crime," tossed about in regards to this book several times, and normally such hyperbole would make me roll my eyes. But in this instance I think it might be true. It would be stating the obvious to say Wittman knows of what he speaks, but Priceless is much more than a police procedural or a "just the facts" book, or even an average memoir. Every chapter centers around one stolen object d'art and what makes them valuable. Hint: it's not how much they sell for, but their history and the story they have to tell about the people who created and owned them. It's clear Wittman sees himself–100% justifiably–as a crusader against those who would steal the world's cultural identity through art theft. I learned so much from this book–not just about art crime, but about art in general and what it means to people and cultures. Most surprising nonfiction read ever.


Read my full review here.


Verdict: Absolute buy. If you have any interest in art crime at all, this is a must-read.


portrait of an unknown woman cover

Portrait of an Unknown Woman by Daniel Silva

Gabriel Allon is a retired spy whose day job is restoring Renaissance masterpieces in Venice. When a premier Old Masters dealer in London realizes he's been duped into selling a fake, he asks Gabriel to help recover the painting and save his reputation. The only problem? The painting is being held in a Swiss storage vault where stolen art goes to disappear forever.

This is the 22nd in the 25-volumes-and-counting Gabriel Allon series. There are many books in the series involving art crime, heists, and forgeries. In my opinion this is one of the best, and it's a good starting point if you've never read one of Silva's books before. The heist element is real and the book stays twisty turny until the end.

Verdict: Buy, or borrow if this your first Gabriel Allon book.