The Geographer's Library

by Jon Fasman

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Sales Rank:844753 (lower is better)
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Pages:384
Binding:Paperback
Publication Date:2006-02-28
ASIN:B000HIV0AY
Category:Book

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Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Product Description

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 academic, he finds himself pursuing leads that date back to the twelfth century and the theft of alchemical instruments from the geographer of the Sicilian court. Now someone is trying to retrieve them. Interspersed with the present action are the stories of the men and women who came to possess those charmed—and sometimes cursed—artifacts, which have powers that go well beyond the transmutation of lead into gold. Deftly combining history, magic, suspense, and romance—and as handsomely illustrated as an ancient incunabulum—The Geographer’s Library is irresistible.
Amazon.com Review

The literary history suspense novel has long been a genre appreciated by a small subset of general readers. It is currently enjoying a new vogue and a wider readership with the publication of such novels as The Da Vinci Code, The Rule of Four, and Codex. What these books have in common, and what The Geographer's Library can also claim, is a set of characters in the here and now grappling with questions about things that went on a very long time ago. Another characteristic is the unearthing or explanation of objects of great value. The trick is to weave these two realities together in a compelling way, one that will keep the reader involved in both stories.

Jon Fasman has taken a big chance with The Geographer's Library, his debut novel, setting out a complicated scenario in which a collection of priceless objects is stolen from the titular library and, eventually, scattered and re-collected a thousand years later--with very bad results for the final collector. The geographer is a real person, Al-Idrisi, a Spanish-Muslim philosopher, cartographer, linguist, and scholar who served in the court of King Roger of Sicily in Palermo in the year 1154. For the most part, Fasman's risk pays off, although there is a lot of meandering before we finally get to the final revelation.

The "wraparound" story is about a young journalist, Paul Tomm, who sets out to write a simple obituary about a professor who died in his office at Paul's Alma Mater. The man is Jaan Puhapaev, an Estonian perhaps, who is a terrible teacher, fires his gun out his office window twice, is odd, unavailable, and reclusive and yet is allowed to stay on for unknown reasons. He also collects only $1.00 a year in salary and has no other visible means of support. The core narrative is a description of the provenance and travels of each of the 15 objects--some or all of which may hold the secret of eternal life--stolen from Al-Idrisi.

A professor friend of Paul's, a policemen and a curious editor all get an investigation rolling regarding what really happened to Jaan, who is he, and is he perhaps much, much older than they think? Paul meets and falls for a neighbor and putative friend of Jaan's, a music teacher named Hannah Rowe, which moves the information curve upward. This is the least believable part of the story: it's easier to accept the alchemical power of the Emerald Tablet of Hermes than Hannah. That said, Fasman does bring it all home at the end with an expository chapter and two letters. A bit of a cheat, but at least the reader is neatly taken off the literary hook he has dangled on for 380 pages. --Valerie Ryan

Customer Reviews

thriller based on mumbo-jumbo - Reviewed on 2008-11-15
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2 customers found this review helpful.

I picked this up expecting a thriller, perhaps with a bit of history mixed in. What I got was an plot involving a tablet allegedly found clasped to the chest of the Patriarch Abraham with the secret of immortal life etched on it. This object has been handed down through the generations until it shows up in the office of an obscure Estonian professor at Wickenden (modeled on Brown) University in Providence. Said professor dies in a hit-and-run. A young journalist working for a small provincial newspaper is assigned to write his obit. And so, the rickety plot is launched.
Take this premise, add a bunch of alchemy, a mish-mash of weird antique objects, a pallid hero trying to make sense of it all and a weird female protagonist with nice eyes and you get a tedious trip through pseudo history leading to an unconvincing climax.
I know there's a whole sub-genre out there of books about strange historical curiosities that conceal matters of immense importance. I also know there's a rich vein of stories about sinister secret societies plotting to take over the world. Heck, this kind of stuff is bread and butter to authors like Dan Brown and you can't quarrel with 100 million books sold. If the plot is gripping or the characters compelling, these books can justify their existence -- although I personally prefer real history and at least somewhat realistic situations. However, I'm prepared to suspend disbelief if the writing is good enough.
The problem with this book is that even in its own terms it's not even vaguely believable. There are a couple of nice moments here and there but never enough to really engage me.
Fantastic thriller for those who think! - Reviewed on 2008-10-22
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Well-plotted, beautifully crafted, imaginatively conceived. I loved this book. The author has created a detailed, complex story that is wonderfully written. A rare and amazing book.
Good but.... - Reviewed on 2008-10-07
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I did enjoy this book however the main item that caused all the commotion showed up way to late in the book. That was its only draw back. Other than that I liked it. Others may grow tired of it way to soon.
Alchemist and wonderer - Reviewed on 2008-09-10
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Ambitious and well-done histo-mystery (building into a hot sub-genre, along with The Da Vinci Code and The Egyptologist: A Novel reviewed here) about the tools of alchemy. The author's note at the end doesn't suggest how much of the alchemy thread in the story is based on history or even pseudo-history, which is just as well as it leaves the reader following the story, not that history.

And the story is framed like a straightforward mystery with interspersed descriptions of the alchemical objects gathered then lost by and stolen from a 12th-century alchemist and wonderer. The story is told with a wry sense of self-deprecating humor and light touch on the terror and grit that suggests a future in this field as the author matures and branches out.
Horrible - DO NOT WASTE YOUR TIME! - Reviewed on 2008-07-07
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1 customer found this review helpful.

I read a great deal; 2-3 books a week and have done so for almost 40 plus years. This said it is very rare indeed that my opinion upon closing the book is that the author literaly owes me my time and effort back. Comparing "The Geographer's Library" to "The DaVinci Code" is a direct insult to it's author Dan Brown. Even the CD version of the "TGL" which I also purchased; was the WORST read CD I have ever listened to. It was read soooo slowly at times I had to "read" portions of the book simply to get through it. Mr. Fasman's obvious constant thesaurus use is blatant. To use "big" words simply to edify one's ego ruins simply reading the book, and enjoying the story and plot line. Even in the end Mr. Fasman never completely answers ever aspect of the plot line questions he creates. He leaves many roads simply open and incomplete. Shame on this author!
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