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The Geographer's Library

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Book Overview

Jon Fasman's dizzyingly plotted intellectual thriller suggests a marriage between Dan Brown and Donna Tartt. When reporter Paul Tomm is assigned to investigate the mysterious death of a reclusive... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Captivating Intellectual Mystery

Captivating Intellectual Mystery Review of: "The Geographers Library" By: Jon Fasman This is one of my all time favorite books. It starts in a routine job setting for a recent college graduate. Paul Tomm works for a small town newspaper. Paul gets a reporting assignment for his paper. He is to write an obituary of a local academic. Nothing about the story turns out to be routine. Events gain inertia ahead of Paul and snowball out of control. His life is never the same. This story is a superb treasure hunt story and an intriguing murder mystery. Although the genre is similar, it is much better than "The Da Vinci Code" or "The Rule of Four." It is unfortunate that the story has a surface resemblance to the "Da Vinci Code" because "The Geographer's Library" is a far better book. Fasman gives the reader more to think about while solving the mystery. The story revolves around a set of ancient artifacts. I found the description of the artifacts entertaining, although tangential to the story. Another reader thought the descriptions were formal and distracting. The physical description of artifacts is detailed and is not central to the mystery. If you don't like these descriptions just skim them. See also: The Unpossessed City: A Novel I was captivated by "The Geographer's Library" and unreservedly recommend it to others.

An enthralling book

Mr Fasman's first book holds wonders: it is a thrilling and intelligent mystery, a trip around the world and a wonderful portrait of post-collegiate malaise. With all due respect to our German reviewer, who seems to use the book simply to sneer at Americans (something we Canadians know a little about) Mr Fasman's characters are profoundly well-detailed and variant; not all of them speak like Americans at all, nor is this a James Bond story. Despite the author's youth, it has a seasoned Eastern European feeling, and contains some of the finest prose I have read in a long time. Very highly recommended to all readers of historical fiction and mysteries: if you like Umberto Eco, Haruki Murakami, or John Fowles, you will love this.

Brilliant first novel from Jon Fasman

The "Geographer's Library" is a historically rich debut mystery by Jon Fasman. Readers who enjoy esoteric historical mysteries will really enjoy Fasman's offering and find themselves hooked until the final secrets of the mystery are revealed. Fasman lays out the story slowly and carefully. His writing is bright, colorful, and intelligent; and it is uniformly interesting in its details and gripping in the mystery that it weaves. The main narrative follows Paul Tomm, a young reporter working for a small-town newspaper. A college professor dies, and Tomm is assigned to write the obituary. Unsurprisingly, Tomm's assignment entails more work than a typical death notice. I will not reveal the details of Tomm's investigation, lest I give away the secrets of the mystery. Tomm's first-person story alternates with chapters that comprise the contents of a "library" put together by a 12th century figure, nobly named Yussef Hadras ibn Azzam Abd Salih Jafar Khalid Idris. The library chapters detail various exotic objects that have a relation to the practice of alchemy. Each chapter tells a story about the object's origins and its current situation. It is clear that the library contents and Tomm's investigation are intriguing connected. Fasman takes the reader to many sites around the world: Córdoba, Baghdad, Bukhara, Mikkouni, the Khamantor Mountains of the Khazars, the cities of Yazd, Eshahan, Ahvaz, Dimashq, Beirut and Jerusalem, the islands of Sicily, Malta and Minorca, and, of course, New England, where Tomm is living and working to unravel the mystery of the professor's death. It is a fascinating journey for the reader, involving numerous interesting characters and engrossing situations. The book is a sheer joy to read, not just to find out whodunit, but to enjoy the many stories within the main story. The journey to the end of the tale is as much fun as the tale itself. In his review in the LA Times, Allen Kurzweil aptly says: "Alchemy, Fasman tells us more than once, is the science of transformation. Good fiction aspires to the same lofty goal, and it is achieved in 'The Geographer's Library,' a cabinet of wonders written by a novelist whose surname and sensibility fit comfortably on the shelf between Umberto Eco and John Fowles." I agree.
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