"So to summarize, we're basically dealing with three concentric locked-room mysteries."- Special Agent Bay of the Library Police
The last review that appeared on here, a
rundown of Jack Iams' Death Draws the Line (1949), is still smoldering,
and while it's already a contender for worst mystery read this year, the final portion
of the book that included the Little Polly Pitcher comic-strip served as reminder
that I still had to check out the work of an actual comic book artist – who drew
and penned an attractive contribution to the locked room sub-genre.
Jason Shiga's Bookhunter (2007) is
a modern-historical, set in Oakland, California, 1973, but the fact that the
story's protagonist is a special agent, named Bay, attached to the Library
Police clues you in that you're still in comic-book land. However, the plot is
delightfully classically in tone with a cartoon-y hardboiled edge to it. The story
is split up in four chapters, three of them detailing Bay's investigation, and
the first introducing him when he's organizing a raid on a "freelance censor,"
who swiped several political books from the shelves, and has been locating by
printing the same book he was targeting with radioactive dye! A confrontation
with the self-appointed censor ends in the same way that got a lot of old
Looney Tunes episodes canned or censored, "my bladder,"
before Bay moves on to a more cerebral problem.
The rare book room of the Oakland Public
Library had an English bible on loan from The Library of Congress, which "was
given to John Quincy Adams by a group of Mendi tribesmen in commemoration of
his representation of them in the Amistad slave ship case," and by all
accounts, appears to have been spirited away from the library.
There were no signs of forced entry on
the outside doors and windows. The fire-escapes were alarmed, but they were
last heard the year before. The safe were the book was kept overnight is
unscratched. And finally, if the thief got past these obstacles, there is still
the stop-point gate that will be triggered by a magnetic strip embedded in the
book. Unfortunately, these security measures were to no avail and someone skipped
out of there, unnoticed, with a valuable book.
I have to compliment Shiga for planting a
false explanation in my mind with his art work that would've made the triple
locked room far less complicated, and I think every seasoned mystery fan would
latch on to that like it was an actual clue, but the eventual solution was more
involved – relaying on the inner workings of a library and the building itself.
In a way, the plotting reminded me of Herbert Resnicow and perhaps I should
also mention Bill Pronzini's novella "Booktaker," collected in Casefile
(1983), because the resemblance between the titles alone speaks for itself. They
have completely different solutions though.
Anyway, I couldn't tell more without
divulging too much of what is essentially a short story, even if the page count
lies somewhere around the 140, and I recommend you read it for yourself –
especially if you're a fan of locked rooms, comics and/or bibliophilic
mysteries.
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