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The Book Hunters of Katpadi: A Bibliomystery

by Pradeep Sebastian

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432587,020 (2.86)3
Neelambari Adigal and her young associate, Kayal, together run Biblio, a one-of-a-kind store of rare books in Chennai, specializing in modern Indian first editions. The lives of these passionate book-women revolve around curious browsers, eccentric book collectors, private-press printers and the occasional thrill of unexpected discoveries of the antiquarian kind. On a book-collecting trip to Ooty, Kayal stumbles upon an incendiary manuscript, long thought to be a myth, purportedly authored by explorer and translator Sir Richard Francis Burton. Almost simultaneously, a cache of priceless editions that looks like it could be from the 300-year-old library of one of the greatest book collectors the world has ever known, turns up at the bookshop. When it falls upon the two women to authenticate their finds, Neela and Kayal discover, quite suddenly, that their lives are more full of bibliographic intrigue than they could ever have imagined.India's first-ever biblio-mystery, The Book Hunters of Katpadi, is the book every lover of the written word has been waiting for. In the tradition of the greatest in the genre, it holds within its pages adventure, action, suspense - and the sheer thrill of close encounters with prized print-on-paper.… (more)
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I couldn't possibly pass up the great chance to read the first biblio-mystery set in India, could I? Pradeep Sebastian, known for his excellent bibliophilic columns in The Hindu, turns to fiction here, and though I wouldn't call it a perfect effort, it's entirely well worth a read.

There is a bit more of the "biblio" than the "mystery" about this book, since Sebastian makes an effort to cover a wide swath of book history (from printing and papermaking to binding, book collecting, and bookselling), and the exposition can sometimes get in the way of the plot. The mystery, which revolves around a Sir Richard Burton manuscript, is a bit thin, and the culmination struck me as a bit implausibly over the top. Those quibbles aside, I hope that Sebastian will write another novel; I will certainly read it if he does. ( )
  JBD1 | Mar 4, 2018 |
http://www.librarything.com/work/20702202/details/148564404

It is sometimes difficult to switch from writing nonfiction to writing fiction. One is based upon fact and the other is based on figments of one's imagination. Pradeep Sebastian has succeeded in writing nonfiction. He is the author of The Groaning Shelf & other instances of book love, a series of essays about book collecting that was published by Hachette India in 2010. He is a literary columnist for The Hindu and writes articles about book collecting for other periodicals as well, including the Business World, India. And now, Pradeep Sebastian has succeeded in writing fiction.

In one of his nonfiction articles, Pradeep mentions working in an antiquarian bookshop prior to becoming a teacher. He has used his past experiences to write a life-like bibliomystery, The Book Hunters of Katpadi. I say "life-like" because the characters in this book are veritable clones of people you and I have met in the real book world. Neela, the knowledgeable bookseller and proprietor of the bookstore, Biblio, instructs her assistant, Kayal, on the wiles and ways of bookselling. Come hell or high water, Nallathambi Whitehead, the Sir Richard Francis Burton collector, wants to be recognized as the foremost Burton collector in the whole wide world. But Whitehead has an adversary, 'Arcot' Manovalan Templar, owner of Heritage Auctions, the only book auction house in India. Templar thrives on acquiring choice items for his auction house before Whitehead has the opportunity to purchase them directly from their former owners. Both men were originally from Katpadi, about 138 kilometers west of Chennai, and thus the title, The Book Hunters of Katpadi.

Biblio is located in Chennai in south India, on the Coromandel Coast off the Bay of Bengal, and most of the action takes place in Chennai. Kayal, however, is dispatched by train to Ooty, over 500 kilometers away in the Blue Mountains to see a man about a fragment reportedly from a notorious manuscript by Burton. But I'm getting ahead of myself! There is more than one plot in this story. The story begins with a priest who accuses Biblio of trafficking in stolen books! And the books prove to be originally from the 300-hundred year old library of one of the world's greatest book collectors. But I'm getting ahead of myself again. You'll just have to read the book to find out whose library I'm hinting about....

Pradeep Sebastian wrote The Book Hunters of Katpadi for the bibliophiles of India. But bibliophily is a universal language. And the bibliophile in America will readily recognize the names of bibliophiles of the past who are mentioned in this book. The American reader may even be surprised with the connection some of these bibliophiles had with India. Currently, the book is only being published in India. But the hardback is available at fairly reasonable prices from several India bookstores via Abebooks and Biblio. A Kindle edition is available via Amazon UK.

Pradeep asked his publisher, Hachette India, to send a copy of The Book Hunters of Katpadi to me because he wanted to see what I thought of it. I told him that Hachette should have its American-based Hachette Book Group publish his book in America as well. I believe that American booklovers will enjoy reading it.

My copy of The Book Hunters of Katpadi now rubs covers with my copy of Sebastian's other book, The Groaning Shelf and other instances of book love. I had traded a couple of books from My Sentimental Library Collection for Sebastian's first book.
  moibibliomaniac | Jan 6, 2018 |
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Neelambari Adigal and her young associate, Kayal, together run Biblio, a one-of-a-kind store of rare books in Chennai, specializing in modern Indian first editions. The lives of these passionate book-women revolve around curious browsers, eccentric book collectors, private-press printers and the occasional thrill of unexpected discoveries of the antiquarian kind. On a book-collecting trip to Ooty, Kayal stumbles upon an incendiary manuscript, long thought to be a myth, purportedly authored by explorer and translator Sir Richard Francis Burton. Almost simultaneously, a cache of priceless editions that looks like it could be from the 300-year-old library of one of the greatest book collectors the world has ever known, turns up at the bookshop. When it falls upon the two women to authenticate their finds, Neela and Kayal discover, quite suddenly, that their lives are more full of bibliographic intrigue than they could ever have imagined.India's first-ever biblio-mystery, The Book Hunters of Katpadi, is the book every lover of the written word has been waiting for. In the tradition of the greatest in the genre, it holds within its pages adventure, action, suspense - and the sheer thrill of close encounters with prized print-on-paper.

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Neelambari Adigal and her young associate, Kayal, together run Biblio, a one-of-a-kind store of rare books in Chennai, specializing in modern Indian first editions. The lives of these passionate bookwomen revolve around curious browsers, eccentric book collectors, private-press printers and the occasional thrill of unexpected discoveries of the antiquarian kind.

On a book-collecting trip to Ooty, Kayal stumbles upon an incendiary manuscript, long thought to be a myth, purportedly authored by explorer and translator Sir Richard Francis Burton. Almost simultaneously, a cache of priceless editions that looks like it could be from the 300-year old library of one of the greatest book collectors the world has ever known, turns up at the bookshop. When it falls upon the two women to authenticate their finds, Neela and Kayal discover, quite suddenly, that their lives are more full of bibliographic intrigue than they could ever have imagined.

India's first-ever bibliomystery, The Book Hunters of Katpadi is the book every lover of the written word has been waiting for. In the tradition of the greatest in the genre, it holds within its pages adventure, action, suspense — and the sheer thrill of close encounters with prized print-on-paper.

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