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The Grand Complication
The Grand Complication
Author: Allen Kurzweil
Critically acclaimed for his international bestseller, A Case of Curiosities, Allen Kurzweil has been called one of today's most gifted new voices in fiction. Now he returns with The Grand Complication -- a modern-day tale of literary intrigue, deviant passions, and delicious secrets. — Behind the majestic walls of a Manhattan t...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780786885183
ISBN-10: 0786885181
Publication Date: 8/2002
Pages: 368
Rating:
  • Currently 3.1/5 Stars.
 20

3.1 stars, based on 20 ratings
Publisher: Theia
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

rxkicker avatar reviewed The Grand Complication on + 71 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Set in present day, but has the slow, elegant feel of an historical. Not a traditional mystery. The sleuth, a librarian, solves the problem of a missing item (turns out to be a watch), partly with his knowledge of Dewey classifications. Funny funny description of the staff post-inventory party, which includes a Dewey classification competition called Class Struggle, and a 'chariot' race around the Reading Room. Class Struggle winner gets to run the library any way he wants for the rest of the party; he takes his oath on a copy of the _ALA Handbook_.
Like the janitor on _Scrubs_, the library janitor knows far more than most people suspect, and can assist in ways only the janitor can. If you know (or are) a reference or catalog librarian, you may like this. I like the librarian, adore the janitor, am ambivalent about the watch-seeker, and sometimes want to smack the wife. Clever (but fiction, so improbable) mental revenge aided by way-modern technology. Usually I like all loose ends wrapped up. This has some uncertainty at the end, but it seems appropriate to the book.
esh712 avatar reviewed The Grand Complication on + 44 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
There was something kind of... dispassionate about this, despite the story line involving being _too_ passionate about the watch in question. I just felt that every time the detailed descriptions of the research popped up, I just didn't care. I finished it, because part of me wanted to know what happened, but I also didn't much care one way or the other if I did. I just had nothing better to do, so I read it all the way through. Turns out i really wasn't satisfied at the end, I didn't like any of the characters much - especially his girlfriend, and probably wouldn't read anything else by this author again.
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aladdin avatar reviewed The Grand Complication on + 154 more book reviews
Wonderfully inventive, a Hitchcock-like zig zag inspired by a real life theft [USA Today]
A literate, cerebral thriller about objects and the people who tetishize them, Grade A [Entertainment Weekly]
Book jacket: a delicious compendium of quirky colleagues, erotic pop ups, deviant passions, and miraculous examples of theft; the book is a grand and complicated 'timepiece' and told with a devilish sense of fun.
reviewed The Grand Complication on + 42 more book reviews
Started reading this book, but couldn't finish it - was not to my taste.
reviewed The Grand Complication on + 43 more book reviews
A very complicated, improbable and thoroughly enjoyable myster. Very cerebral and high browed.


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