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The Secret of Lost Things (2007)

di Sheridan Hay

Altri autori: Vedi la sezione altri autori.

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1,3645713,706 (3.27)92
Eighteen years old and completely alone, Rosemary arrives in New York from Tasmania with little more than a love of books and eagerness to explore the city she's read so much about. She begins her search for independence with appealing enthusiasm, and the moment she steps into the Arcade bookstore, she knows she has found a home. The gruff owner, Mr. Pike, gives her a job sorting through piles of books and helping the rest of the staff, a group as odd as the characters in a Dickens novel. But when a letter arrives from someone seeking to "place" a lost manuscript by Herman Melville, the simmering ambitions and rivalries of the Arcade staff rise to a boiling point.… (altro)
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» Vedi le 92 citazioni

Nach einem behüteten, umsorgten Leben zieht es Rosemary Savage mit 18 (nach dem Tod ihrer Mutter, einer Hutmacherin) von Tasmanien nach New York, dem Fluchtpunkt all ihrer Träume. Sie findet dort bald eine Anstellung in einem Antiquariat. Die Faszination dieses Buches liegt in der Trauer, dem Abschied und einem feinsinnig gesponnenen Spannungsbogen hin zur aufblühenden, suchenden Liebe bzw. Leidenschaft von Rosemary.

Sie weiß nichts über ihren Vater, keine Andeutung der Mutter gab es jemals dazu. Nicht ohne Grund entwickelt sich die Geschichte um ein verloren gegangenes Buchmanuskript von Melville, in dem ein Vater seine Famillie verlässt und erst nach langer Zeit zurückkommt.

Ich mag Romane, die in New York spielen und hier kommt ein weitere Faszination hinzu: das Thema Bücher bzw. Antiquariate. Man spürt, dass die Autorin Sheridan Hay in einem Antiquariat gearbeitet hat (dem legendären The Strand). Die Einblicke in einzelne Abteilungen, die Preis- (ankaufs- & verkaufs-)struktur sowie die Psychologie von Sammlern sind überaus treffend und feinst ausgearbeitet. Die Charaktere ihrer Kollegen im Arcade erscheinen perfekt inszeniert und wie eine Spiegelung der Trauer- und Abschiedsgefühle von Rosemary.

Bücher sind für sie alle eine Hilfe, um das mühselige Leben zu überbrücken, ein Trost und sicherer Hafen. Eine erste Freundin ist die (um ihren in Argentinien verschwundenen Sohn trauernde) Emfpangschefin des heruntergekommenen Hotels (die erste Zuflucht von Rosemary bis sie eine eigene Wohnung findet) und Pearl, die zwischen den Geschlechtern zum Frausein hin pendelnde Kassiererin des Antiquariates. Beide Frauen werden zum Haltepunkt einer Odysee, die Rosemary in ihrem (männlichen) Begehren und Begehrtwerden immer wieder auffangen und ihr zu einem eigenen Abschied verhelfen, der für sie zum eigentlichen Startpunkt wird. Damit ist nichts über den Plot verraten, dessen überraschende Wendungen sich einem Krimi gleich um die erwachenden, erwachsenen Gefühle von Rosemary ranken.

Spannend, an einem Tag gelesen, mit einer Vielzahl von besten Zitaten versehen. Dieses Buch war für mich ein besonderer Genuss! Aus den wunderschönen Sätzen ragt für mich vielleicht dieses Lebensmotto besonders hervor: "Liebe alle, vertraue wenigen und schade niemandem".
  Clu98 | Mar 22, 2023 |
The Secret of Lost Things was a carefully written book, with a cast of quirky characters, but a minimal plot that went nowhere and took a long time to get there. Every aspect except the heroine was deliberately peculiar or abnormal: the albino, the transgender, the overweight gay man diddling himself in the stacks, the miserly bookstore owner who always referred to himself in the third person, and several more. But although the author gave many of these characters detailed attention, they remained little more than caricatures of real individuals who, for me, did not come alive in the book. Even the heroine often seemed more like a movie victim whose primary function was to do foolish things to drive the plot along. I was a little disappointed with the ending.

10/03/2020:
I read The Secret of Lost Things in 2008, and I didn't even remember it. I still fill the same about this book I felt 12 years ago. Appreciated the descriptiveness of the novel, it was unique and compelling. The plot did fall a bit short, though. It was not terrible throughout most of the story; there was a mystery and what was promising to be an exciting climax. The thrilling climax, for me, really never came. The ending fell short, and there wasn't a clear message.
None of the characters were particularly likable to me, and I couldn't understand why Rosemary was so in love with Oscar. Also, it bothered me that all the people that worked in the shop seemed to be so vicious.
I am happy that this book is a library one. ( )
  AvigailRGRIL | Nov 3, 2020 |
The secret of lost things is the story of Rosemary Savage, a native of Tasmania who loses her mother at age 18. A bookstore owner and friend of the family gives her a ticket to New York and her new life begins. She finds a job in a book store and meets its employees: Walter Geist, the store's manager and an albino; owner George Pike; Pearl, a transgender cash register operator, Robert Mitchell, rare books curator; Arnold, in charge of art and photography; Oscar, head of non-fiction; and several others. She begins her stay at the Martha Washington Hotel for Women where she befriends Lillian, the receptionist who is from South America. The relationships between the characters becomes a large part of the book, especially the friendship between Pearl and Lillian, whose son was one of the "disappeared" in Argentina. (And, along with apartment prices helps date the story to late 70'sor early 80s.)

The story is also a mystery into the lost manuscript of Melville, The Isle of the Cross. Rosemary and Oscar research the work at the local library, while Rosemary becomes more involved with Mr. Geist.

Author Sheridan Hay lists the sources used by Rosemary and Oscar and gives citations for all quotes used in the book. She a;lso goes into more detail about the events in Argentina to help explain the "disappeared," persons who were killed for their political views.

The book is compelling and reads quickly. This is Sheridan Hay's only book to date, which is a shame as I'd like to read more of her work. ( )
  fdholt | Jul 4, 2019 |
Lovely book about the mystery of bookstores. A red-haired Tasmanian orphan moves to Manhattan in the late 1970s and begins work in a used book store where she becomes enmeshed in the search for a mysterious Melville manuscript. Echoes of Borges, Moby Dick - a tad twee in places but overall, quite a good read. ( )
  laurenbufferd | Nov 14, 2016 |
Such a disappointment. Almost gave it two stars, but at least I did finish it. The book had such an interesting premise, but was poorly developed. I couldn't ever connect with the characters. It's been described as a coming of age story, but even being 18 can't explain the abysmally poor judgement of the main character.
( )
  msjudy | May 30, 2016 |
Hay's debut has all the elements of a literary thriller, but they don't quite come together.
 
When Hay leaves the 19th century and bounds back to the weird world of the bookstore, she’s a lyrical, exciting writer. Rosemary is an unspoiled innocent, a quality that attracts the others, and it’s partly because of her that the novel, while so literary in its aspirations, isn’t pretentious.

 

» Aggiungi altri autori (6 potenziali)

Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Sheridan Hayautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Schwaab, JudithTraduttoreautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato

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". . . for experience, the only true knowledge . . ."
-- Herman Melville
The Confidence Man
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For Michael, my own tempest
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I was born before this story starts, before I dreamed of such a place as the Arcade, before I imagined men like Walter Geist existed outside of fables, outside of fairy tales.
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I was a small sultana, my treasure counted in the currency of trifles.
For her part, Chaps was too well read to be considered entirely proper. Books had made her unreasonably independent.
I knew books to be objects that loved to cluster and form disordered piles, but here books seemed robbed of their zany capacity to fall about, to conspire. In the library, books behaved themselves.
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Eighteen years old and completely alone, Rosemary arrives in New York from Tasmania with little more than a love of books and eagerness to explore the city she's read so much about. She begins her search for independence with appealing enthusiasm, and the moment she steps into the Arcade bookstore, she knows she has found a home. The gruff owner, Mr. Pike, gives her a job sorting through piles of books and helping the rest of the staff, a group as odd as the characters in a Dickens novel. But when a letter arrives from someone seeking to "place" a lost manuscript by Herman Melville, the simmering ambitions and rivalries of the Arcade staff rise to a boiling point.

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