Carlisle, Kate. Homicide in Hardcover (2009), If Books Could Kill  (2010), and The Lies That Bind (2010). New York : Obsidian. [These are  the first three volumes of the ongoing Bibliophile Mystery series by the  same author.]
By Marieka Kaye
This review first appeared in The Bonefolder, Volume 7, 2011.  
 An exciting book conservator  has joined our ranks, and her name is Brooklyn Wainwright. The paperback  mystery author Kate Carlisle has developed Brooklyn’s fantastical  adventures in a series of three books to date: Homicide in Hardcover  (2009), If Books Could Kill (2010), and The Lies That Bind (2010), also  known as A Bibliophile Mystery series. Many of us are already very  familiar with the handful of wildly romanticized and over-the-top  depictions of book conservators in fiction, such as Margot Harrington,  who runs off to Florence to assist in flood recovery in The Sixteen  Pleasures (1994) by Robert Hellenga, Geraldine Brooks’ People of the  Book (2008), which follows Hannah Heath’s wild adventures in the  treatment of the Sarajevo Haggadah, and the unlucky-in-love Sara  Gonzales, restorer of rare books and manuscripts at the Getty, in Yxta  Maya Murray’s The Conquest (2002). Carlisle tops these fictional females  through the adventurous Brooklyn, who was conceived in the balcony  between acts of a Grateful Dead show and grew up on a hippie commune in  the wine country of northern California. It is easy to criticize, but  ultimately Carlisle’s depiction of our profession forces those of us who  are book conservators in the real world to not take ourselves so  seriously for just a little while. As a self-described book snob, I  freely admit to losing myself in these books for the short amount of  time it takes to read them.
The first and most entertaining book  in the series, Homicide in Hardcover, sets the scene for a hilarious  ride through the eyes of an author who knows very little about our  profession, but just enough to throw in descriptions of treatments and a  few light technical terms. All textblocks seem to be made of vellum and  all adhesives appear to be “glue.” She gets one thing absolutely right  when she highlights Peachey knives in the first and third books. In the  third book Brooklyn wins a set of “cryogenic steel-bladed knives that  were hand-honed to surgical precision and beautifully beveled to work  with the thinnest calfskin” made by Jeff Peachey. Prior to placing her  bid, she exclaims, “Peachey is a genius.” As I know many of us rely on  his knives to make our leather paring a happier activity, I can only  hope this boosts sales and introduces the masses to his beautiful  knives.
Apparently Carlisle was a student at the San Francisco  Center for the Book prior to writing her series, so we can take comfort  in the fact that she has at least bound some books by hand. A quick look  at Carlisle’s Facebook page reveals over 750 fans and enthusiastic  comments such as, “I finished your book last week and I’m going to see  if there are book binding classes where I live.” It’s fun to think that  more people have been introduced to what we do, but I had to stop and  wonder what non-bookbinders might make of the use of technical terms.  Peachey knives, kettle stitches, endbands, and rounding are not in most  people’s every day lexicon. Fortunately there is a glossary of some key  terms (“Brooklyn’s Glossary”) added to the end of the third book to  educate the reader, which was sorely lacking in the first installment.
The  first book starts out with a side-splitting comparison of Brooklyn to a  surgeon while introducing her training in the following way: “My  teacher always told me that in order to save a patient you’d have to  kill him first. Not the most child-friendly way of explaining his theory  of book restoration to his eight-year-old apprentice, but it worked. I  grew up determined to save them all.” The back cover also includes the  following to whet our appetites: “Brooklyn Wainwright is a skilled  surgeon. Sure, her patients might smell like mold and have spines made  of leather, but no ailing book is going to die on her watch.” The story  unfolds into the unfortunate murder of her mentor, Abraham Karastovsky,  on the eve of a celebration for his latest book restoration at the  Covington Library in San Francisco. If we could all be so lucky to have  our work celebrated in a gala event! And on a side note, the Covington  is a library that boasts an incredibly eclectic collection including  twelve of Shakespeare’s folios on permanent display, Walt Whitman’s  letters, one of the first Gutenberg Bibles, printed accounts of  explorers from Christopher Columbus onwards, rare first editions of  works by authors such as Mary Shelley and Agatha Christie, John Lennon’s  drawings, Steven King’s rejection letters, Kurt Cobain’s diaries, and  an “amazing” collection of vintage baseball cards.  The imagination that  went into this collection is astounding! But I digress.
Important  plot points crop up immediately, adding an interesting cast of  characters that are carried through the three books. During the  investigation of Abraham’s murder Brooklyn meets a mysterious and  overwhelmingly handsome British security guard, Commander Derek Stone,  who sticks with her throughout the series in a frustrating and drawn out  saga of unrequited love and desire. His stunning looks are exceedingly  emphasized, and Brooklyn is not shy about stating her lust through  statements such as, “My stomach tingled and I could’ve smacked myself.  Yes, okay, he was indeed gorgeous as honey-baked sin…” and “…Derek Stone  exuded more animal magnetism than all those Bond men combined.” We are  also quickly introduced to Brooklyn’s archenemy, Minka LaBoeuf, who  tried to cut Brooklyn’s hand off with a sharp knife while they were  classmates in a conservation program located in Texas. For those of us  who know how stressful conservation programs can be, this relationship  does not actually seem so far-fetched and is sure to be a source of  entertainment for any program alumni. Moments before Abraham takes his  last breath, he whispers a cryptic message and passes on a cursed copy  of Goethe’s Faust for safekeeping. Brooklyn becomes the prime suspect in  the murder when dashing Derek discovers her with Abraham’s dead body.  She proceeds to get herself into trouble countless times playing amateur  detective in the hopes of discovering the mystery behind the book and  her beloved mentor’s murder.
Carlisle’s second volume, If Books  Could Kill, brings Brooklyn to the “world-renowned” Edinburgh Book Fair  where she looks forward to catching up with old friends and teaching  some workshops. Her ex, Kyle McVee, shows up to the fair with a  scandalous book that threatens to humiliate the British monarchy. While  on a nighttime tour of the city, Brooklyn runs into Kyle’s dead body,  once again causing her to be the prime suspect for murder. As it seems  she can’t keep herself out of trouble once a murder has occurred, she  uses her amateur sleuthing skills to find the true killer. Her skills as  a detective are subpar, but Derek is always there to rescue her from  ridiculous danger and near-death experiences. Brooklyn’s wacky New Age  parents make multiple appearances and Robin Tully, her glamorous best  friend from childhood, who has “…an uncanny ability to cause men to  wander off sidewalks into oncoming traffic,” helps a bit too as another  key character that we first met in Homicide in Hardcover. Minka’s  character displays cartoon-villain intensity throughout this book, and  is constantly getting in Brooklyn’s way. Admittedly, the characters  become a little irritating in the second book, but the funny book  restoration tidbits and bibliophilia kept me going to the end. If you’re  a fan of Edinburgh, the city is lovingly documented.
The most  recent book, The Lies That Bind (ranked #31 on the New York Times  bestsellers list), returns the usual cast of characters and places  Brooklyn back at home in San Francisco to teach a bookbinding class at  Bay Area Book Arts (BABA). The BABA director, Layla Fontaine, is a  horrible witch of a lady who “pitches fits and lords it over her  subordinates.” The reader won’t be sad to see her go early in the story,  when she is found murdered in her office, obviously discovered by our  favorite dead body magnet, Brooklyn. The plot revolves around an edition  of Oliver Twist that Brooklyn expertly restores and Layla deceptively  plans to auction off as a first edition prior to her death. Upon the  discovery of this murder, it has only been four weeks since the  Edinburgh Book Fair, and Derek shows up unannounced to once again sweep  Brooklyn off her feet and rescue her when she inevitably gets in big  trouble. The storyline in this book focuses heavily on the brewing  romance between Derek and Brooklyn, and I found myself getting highly  annoyed that the consummation of their steamy relationship was thwarted  at every turn by nosy neighbors and a collection of misadventures.
Mention  of bookbinding is still scattered throughout. I had to laugh especially  hard reading lines such as, “It was the night of my latest bookbinding  class and I, Brooklyn Wainwright, Super Bookbinder, was like a kid on  the first day of grammar school” and “Tonight, as my students completed  their second journal book, I threw in a lesson on how to mix PVA glue  with certain powders and pastes to achieve different textures and  results. ‘The thinner the PVA,’ I explained, ‘the more useful it is for  restoration work, patching delicate tears and securing frayed threads.’”  While these fun lines can keep a book conservator reading for the  laughs, I found myself guessing the murderer from the very start,  obviously revealing a weak plotline. Carlisle attempts to build in a  love triangle when another overwhelmingly attractive character, Gabriel,  is reintroduced from earlier storylines. Unfortunately, there is a  great lack of steaminess in this triangle. If I’m going to give my time  to some entertaining paperback mysteries, I want to go all the way and  not just experience the tease.
Ultimately, Carlisle gets a few  things right in her series, such as giving Brooklyn an insatiable  appetite: “Yes, I liked to eat. A lot. I wasn’t picky. I loved  everything. Especially chocolate. And pizza. Oh, and red meat. I loved a  good steak.” As much as I try to deny any similarities between this  silly fictional character and myself, I share this passion for food and  see it in almost all the conservators I know. Brooklyn’s work ethic and  passion for her profession also shine through, and I couldn’t help but  become endeared to her at the opening of the second book: “If my life  were a book, I would have masking tape holding my hinges together. My  pages would be loose, my edges tattered and my boards exposed, the front  flyleaf torn and the leather mottled and moth-eaten. I’d have to take  myself apart and put myself back together, as any good book restoration  expert would do.” I highly recommend this series to any book conservator  flexible enough to look beyond fluffy, sappy, and obvious plotlines and  who enjoys encountering a cast of quirky characters and a heroine who  just can’t keep herself out of trouble. If you need some stress relief  from your hectic schedule, laughter is the best tonic. Pick up these  books and the next thing you know a weekend has passed and your abs have  gotten a good workout from all the giggling. And just maybe, you’ll  have a renewed sense of how exciting and fun our profession is, with or  without a murder along the way (hopefully without). It’s actually  refreshing to see our profession romanticized, straying from the stuffy  book nerd and librarian stereotypes that seem to haunt us. I’m actually  looking forward to the fourth installment of “Brooklyn’s Bloody Bodies  ‘R’ Us,” Murder Under Cover, coming out in May 2011.
Marieka  Kaye is currently Exhibits Conservator at The Huntington Library, where  she held the position of  Dibner Conservator for the History of Science  since 2006. She received a Masters degree in Art Conservation from  Buffalo State College and is currently working on her Masters of Library  and Information Science through San Jose State University. Marieka  began to work as a library preservation assistant at Brandeis University  in 1998, while she was in her last year of undergraduate studies. This  position resulted in a passion for the care of books and library  materials. She went on to work as Library Preservation Assistant at the  Brooklyn Museum of Art and Conservation Assistant for Exhibits and Loans  at the New-York Historical Society. She also volunteered in the book  lab at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and completed internships at the  New York City Municipal Archives, Syracuse University, Etherington  Conservation Services, and the University of California Los Angeles. She  can be reached at <mariekakaye@gmail.com>
 

 
