Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THE DEPARTMENT OF RARE BOOKS AND SPECIAL COLLECTIONS by Eva Jurczyk

THE DEPARTMENT OF RARE BOOKS AND SPECIAL COLLECTIONS

by Eva Jurczyk

Pub Date: Jan. 25th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-72823-859-3
Publisher: Poisoned Pen

Toronto librarian Jurczyk’s first novel is a valentine to librarians that doesn’t shy away from their dark sides.

The ceremonial display of a university library’s latest headline acquisition, a Plantin Polyglot Bible, to a select group of influential donors comes a cropper over two misfortunes. First, Christopher Wolfe, the director of the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections for the 40 years since 1969, suffers an incapacitating stroke before he can retrieve the Bible from the safe in which he stored it while awaiting an insurance evaluation (best guess: $500,000). Then, when Liesl Weiss, the longtime assistant who’s suddenly catapulted into Wolfe’s job, finally gets the combination from his distraught wife, she finds the safe empty. The donors are fobbed off with a Peshawar manuscript that may include the very first use of a zero, but the library is still in crisis. Was the Plantin simply misplaced or (gasp) stolen? How long can university president Lawrence Garber keep its disappearance secret? And how will the library ever recover the trust of major donors if the staff can’t keep track of the materials it purchases with their big-ticket donations? Liesl is especially distressed because her protégé, Miriam Peters, goes missing very shortly after the Platin, and the discovery of her corpse, an apparent suicide, weeks later in a nearby wood does nothing to derail the assumption that she was the thief. Even though, as Liesl’s colleague Francis Churchill points out, “Our entire job is finding information,” Jurczyk consistently subordinates the question of whodunit to the question of how to handle the case.

The perfect gift for librarians and those who love them—and doesn’t that include just about every reader?