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Loading... The Grand Complication: A Novelby Allen Kurzweil
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This book begins with a compelling idea, and there are quite a few interesting twists and turns, but I didn't enjoy reading it. The main characters are all flat, and the unraveling of the mystery at the end is trite. Disappointing. ( )This book has nothing to recommend about it. It is not worth reading. The characters are not nice. The story is dull. The descriptions of the library from the perspective of the librarians do not seem all that realistic or insightful. I rarely finish a book that I don't like, but I kept expecting something with this one, I couldn't actually believe it was this dull. I didn't like the character. The librarian was the representation of the stereotype of librarian, obsessive,dull and stuck up ( I work in a library and very few of the librarian actually fits that description). The patron who hired him was far from being an excentric, but was clearly disturbed. Overall.... not a book I would suggest to anyone. This fun novel is about a librarian at NYPL who becomes estranged from his artistic French wife and ends up working with an eccentric old man to solve the mystery of an 18th century display case full of oddities. The mystery plot is kind of a dud but the characters are great and I especially enjoy the library parts, including the library page who can tell you call numbers for books off the top of his head. no reviews | add a review
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Alexander Short is a reference librarian who spends his days dealing with the minutiae of his work world. At night he goes home to his French wife who is also a book person. She makes pop-up books and other three-dimensional volumes, including a "girdle" that Alexander wears in the manner of medieval monks, tied around his middle and used for his "girdling" or taking notes--something Alexander does obsessively, to the detriment of his job. Two such people seem made for each other, but their obsessions make for a rocky marriage.
So Alexander is fascinated when he meets Henry James Jesson III, an elderly man with equally obsessive interests. He would like Alexander to help him after hours. In Jesson's Manhattan mansion there is a cabinet of curiosities that tell the life of an 18th-century inventor. But one of the compartments is empty. Jesson, and soon Alexander, are agog with curiosity about what was in that compartment. Finding out is half the fun of reading this book.
The other half, if you care (and somehow I think you do), is the design of the book itself. Kurzweil is the son of an engineer, and he designed the small icon, a gear, that appears on many of the book's pages. Over the course of the novel, which runs 360 pages, that gear turns 360 degrees. And then there are the endpapers.... --Otto Penzler
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400)
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