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The Archivist
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The Archivist
Author: Martha Cooley

Book Information
Publisher: Back Bay Books
Book Type: Paperback
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780316158466 - ISBN-10: 0316158461
Publication Date: 4/8/1999
Pages: 336


Other Versions of this Book: Hardcover

Book Description:
A debut novel about an archivist at a university, whose life contains many parallels to the life of the poet T. S. Eliot. When a graduate student requests access to letters written by Eliot to a woman in Boston, the archivist--whose wife committed suicide-- discovers things about his own past that lead to a renewal of his faith in life. A New York Times Notable Book for 1998.

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Top Member Book Reviews

Erin K. (ekaptian) wrote on 5/1/2007...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

A lovely look at the life of a somewhat isolated librarian, his love of his work, and the relationship that upsets his views of how things work. Somewhat reminiscent of "Possession" by A. S. Byatt.

Sarah E. (DreamSE22) wrote on 3/1/2007...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

This book was alright, but I grew bored at Part 2 of the book detailing Matt's wife's letters or journal entries. The book's premise reminded me a lot of and was similar to A.S. Byatt's Possession, minus the panache and symbolism involved. I gave up midway through the book because I simply was no longer interested in the plot, especially since I found it highly predictable.
Best of luck to the next reader!


Please Rate these Book Reviews

Heather W. (hpunzel) - Vancouver, WA wrote on 7/30/2009...


This was a really intersting story that crossed over topics like survivor's guilt after WWII, marriage/relationships, depression, attraction, and library stewardship. Enjoyable but with some very heavy moments.

Laura B. wrote on 3/11/2006...


This is very good read and lets you into a very small, but interesting academic world.

JoLaine D. (queenmother) wrote on 9/12/2005...


The reserved voice of 65-year-old Matthias Lane, archivist at a prestigious Eastern university, opens this remarkably assured first novel, a complex and beautifully written tale of loss, crises of faith and resolution. Then we read the anguished journal of his wife, Judith, a poet who committed suicide in a mental institution in 1965, the same year as T.S. Eliot died. This is just one of the many parallels between the life of the poet and those of Matt and Judith (Eliot, of course, committed his own wife, Vivienne, to an asylum). Grad student and poet Roberta Spire requests Matt's permission to look at the sealed correspondence between Eliot and a Boston woman named Emily Hale, to whom he may have bared his emotions. Roberta has more than an academic interest in this correspondence. She is immensely disturbed by her parents' belated revelation that they were Jews who fled Germany and converted to Christianity in the U.S., and she feels that Eliot's conversion to Catholicism may hold insights for her. She is unaware that Judith's mental breakdown was related to the Holocaust, but Matt is quick to see the relationship and to recognize the parallels between Eliot's reclusive personality and his own emotional detachment. As several wrenching surprises about the past are revealed, Matt is finally opened to his pain and guilt and to an affirmative act of connectedness and trust. With its sinewy interplay of moral, spiritual and philosophical issues, its graceful interjection of lines of poetry and references to jazz, the novel first engages the reader's intellect. Soon, however, the emotions are also engaged, and the narrative acquires unflagging suspense as it peels back layers of secrets. This is an auspicious debut from a writer who already has mastered the craft.


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