Alan Hirsch, a writer and Chair of the Justice and Law Studies Program at Williams College, received a J.D. from Yale Law School and an M.A. from Williams College in the History of Art. He moonlights as a trial consultant and expert witness on police interrogations and false confessions across the nation. In addition to numerous works of legal scholarship, Alan has written Talking Heads: Political Talk Shows and Their Star Pundits (St. Martin's, 1991) and is the co–author with Akhil Amar of For the People: What the Constitution Really Says About Your Rights (Free Press, 1998) and. His writing has appeared in the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Washington Times, Newsday, and the Village Voice. He lives in Williamstown, Massachusetts.
"If you’ve never heard of the theft of Francisco de Goya's Portrait
of the Duke of Wellington from London’s National Gallery, trust
that it’s a tale worth telling . . . Alan Hirsch has delved into
the incredible ins and outs of the crime, the bizarre motive for
the painting’s ransom, the sensational trial, and, more than half a
century later, the true story of who was responsible—never mind the
history books." —artnet News
"
[An] entertaining narrative
this gripping story of a hapless
art thief, a prized work of art, and the workings of the British
justice system makes for an intriguing addition to the annals of
modern art history."—Booklist
"This colorful true–crime story makes a zany whodunit out of an art
heist that stunned England's National Gallery in London more than
50 years ago
Hirsch writes his debut book's opening chapters like
a finely tuned suspense thriller, alternating chapters of biography
about the irascible and very unreliable Bunton and the authorities'
investigation of the crime and its clues. His description of
Bunton's amusing trial is the stuff of an Ealing Studios comic
crime caper. The book's surprise ending perfectly caps this story
of the unlikely art thief who made sport of his nation's criminal
justice system.""—Publishers Weekly
"This story has all the potential of a great mystery and a
thrilling crime story.""—Kirkus
"As fun as it is improbable, The Duke of Wellington, Kidnapped!
tells the story of a real–life heist too strange to be made up.
Hirsch manages to solve one of the great art thefts of the
twentieth century and, at the same time, to deepen its
mystery."—Elizabeth Kolbert, Pulitzer Prize winning author of The
Sixth Extinction
"In this page–turner, Alan Hirsch carefully unravels the tangled
case of a major art heist whose true story eluded investigators for
a half century. With a writer's flair and a lawyer's precision, he
portrays the hall of mirrors that can disorient a criminal justice
system, and he raises questions about the nature of justice
itself." —David K. Shipler, Pulitzer Prize–Winning author of Arab
and Jew: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land
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