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The Bookman's Tale: A Novel of Obsession, by Charlie Lovett
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Guaranteed to capture the hearts of everyone who truly loves books, The Bookman's Tale is a former bookseller's sparkling novel and a delightful exploration of one of literature's most tantalizing mysteries with echoes of Shadow of the Wind and A.S. Byatt's Possession.
Hay-on-Wye, 1995. Peter Byerly isn't sure what drew him into this particular bookshop. Nine months earlier, the death of his beloved wife, Amanda, had left him shattered. The young antiquarian bookseller relocated from North Carolina to the English countryside, hoping to rediscover the joy he once took in collecting and restoring rare books. But upon opening an 18th-century study of Shakespeare forgeries, Peter is shocked when a portrait of Amanda tumbles out of its pages. Of course, it isn't really her. The watercolor is clearly Victorian. Yet the resemblance is uncanny, and Peter becomes obsessed with learning the picture's origins.
As he follows the trail back first to the Victorian era and then to Shakespeare's time, Peter communes with Amanda's spirit, learns the truth about his own past, and discovers a book that might definitively prove Shakespeare was, indeed, the author of all his plays.
- Sales Rank: #20415 in Audible
- Published on: 2013-06-27
- Released on: 2013-06-27
- Format: Unabridged
- Original language: English
- Running time: 679 minutes
Most helpful customer reviews
96 of 104 people found the following review helpful.
All of this in one book? Yep!
By Genevieve Kazdin
Oh MY! This is a book for book lovers, collectors, book historians, researchers and those who enjoy a good story. Everyone seems to have written a summary of the plot, so I won't. What you will find here is a mystery, a love story, some book history, and chances are good you will not work out the whodunit until the very end of the book. (Or even when it was done!!) Lovett surely did his research for this story - and that just adds to making the story so readable. It does ring true -- as though these things could indeed have happened. I did find some problems -- at least for me. The final solution does seem a bit contrived, although by that time the reader really doesn't mind. And although Lovett generously thanks his editor, I do wish that reliance on spell checkers was not used for quality books. Folks, 'I' is not a proper substitute for 'a'. No matter what some software will tell you, please read the manuscript. This is a marvelous read for a summer afternoon. And likely for a winter day -- or when Autumn leaves fall -- oh I did enjoy this book and hope you will as well.
78 of 87 people found the following review helpful.
A good read mired with predictable plot twists and excessive coincidences
By dianaers
The Bookman's Tale: A Novel of Obsession is a lot of things. It's a love story, mystery, thriller, all combined into one book. Peter Byerly, a socially awkward antiquarian book seller, is still reeling from the death of his beloved wife, Amanda. To escape, he goes to England, hoping to rejoin life by immersing himself in his first love, books. He happens to come across a watercolor portrait of Amanda while browsing through an old book. The thing of it is, though, is that the painting was done a hundred years prior. Driven by obsession, he steals the picture and finds himself in pursuit of who BB (the artist) and the person in the painting are, while stumbling upon a manuscript that could very well prove that Shakespeare actually wrote his plays.
This book had some pretty good selling points for me. Obsession? Bibliophila? SOLD! I found it to be well written and really interesting. Lovett draws from his own personal experience in the antiquarian book business, and it is very clear that he knows his subject matter. The descriptions of how books are restored and about forgery are in depth and very comprehensible to someone that has no idea about any of that stuff. I really liked how he drew his inspiration from actual documents (such as Shakespeare's Pandosto) and people, yet do not forget that this is primarily fiction.
The story shifts between three different stories: present day (or rather, the 1990s), the mid 1980s (Peter and Amanda's love story), and the early 1600s-late 1800s (the story of the Pandosto manuscript, the "Holy Grail" of English literature). The time periods are easily discernable as they are all labeled before it moves into that particular segment. While well written, I found that because of so many story lines, when one would peak, it would shift to another time period where something slow may be going on. Or, it would stop in the middle of something captivating, and shift to another story. I'm not a fan of that kind of device. It's not nearly as bad as a cliffhanger ending, but still....
While I enjoy plot twists, the author is excessive with them, and most of them are pretty predictable. The same goes with the coincidences. There are too many coincidences to be credible, and I felt that because of them, it was kind of a lazy attempt to wrap everything up neatly with a big, pretty bow.
The love story between Amanda and Peter is very sweet and believable, but I can't really say that I connected or felt anything for them. As far as the Shakespeare angle, I've never been too interested in the theories that his works were actually written by others; that is a very big part in this book.
Interesting in premise and execution, but because of the predictability and excess concurrences, I wasn't completely in love with The Bookman's Tale. That's not to say that I wouldn't recommend it, but it's definitely for people who are fascinated with the antique book trade and William Shakespeare.
54 of 60 people found the following review helpful.
This bibliographic detective story was a delight that kept me up into the wee small hours
By Maine Colonial
Our protagonist, Peter Byerly, is a young bookseller who caught the bibliophile bug at (the fictional) Ridgefield University in North Carolina. A scholarship boy with crippling shyness, his preferred work/study job was in the library, because he wouldn't have to interact with anyone. And yet that is where he meets the two great loves of his life: rare books and Amanda.
The story actually begins with Peter recently widowed, Amanda having died suddenly after they'd been married only six years. Heartbroken, Peter has fled North Carolina for the cottage in Kingham, Oxfordshire, England that he and Amanda had bought the year before.
Now, months later, Peter decides slowly to return to his antiquarian book hunter/seller work. In Hay-on-Wye, the renowned city of bookshops in Wales, he discovers a portrait of Amanda slipped inside an old volume. But it can't be Amanda, because this is a Victorian-era portrait. The discover electrifies Peter. He must find out where this portrait came from.
A request to evaluate a local Kingham resident's manor-house collection of antiquarian books leads Peter on a quest for what he calls the Holy Grail: proof that William Shakespeare really was the author of all those plays and sonnets, rather than Marlowe, de Vere, Bacon or one of the other better-educated writers often claimed to be the more likely source.
Peter's two quests become a thrilling adventure, especially for readers fascinated by old books and their travels through time and the lives of their owners. Each chapter tells one of three stories: Peter's modern-day (1995) pursuits, his life with Amanda and the chequered past of the grail book. The three yarns wind around each other skillfully, each part adding extra richness to the others, then converging in a deliciously satisfying way.
When I turned the last page of The Bookman's Tale, I was shocked to see it was 1:30am. Now it's nearly 3:00am and I'm savoring more time with the book as I write this review. I'm a morning person; I'm usually asleep before 11:00pm and I can't remember the last time I've been up past midnight. But it never occurred to me to think about the time while reading this tremendously enjoyable bibliographic detective story. I'm not going to claim it's high art, and hard-core crime fiction readers will probably figure out the whodunnit side of the tale fairly early on, but it's terrific, old-fashioned entertainment.
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