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Booked Twice: Booked to Die and The Bookman's Wake
 
 

Booked Twice: Booked to Die and The Bookman's Wake [Hardcover]

John Dunning
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Review

The New York Times Book Review A joy to read for its wealth of inside knowledge about the antiquarian book business and its eccentric traders...A soundly plotted, evenly executed whodunit in the classic mode...Cliff Janeway makes a honey of a debut.

Boston Sunday Globe I am...an unabashed admirer of John Dunning's Booked to Die. No one...can fail to be delighted by the sort of folkloric advice Janeway carries with him.

San Francisco Chronicle Fascinating...Very cannily and creepily, Dunning shows how quiet men with civilized tastes can turn into killers....The payoff, in pleasure, is for the reader.

Publishers Weekly (starred) Crisp, direct prose and nearly pitch-perfect dialogue enhance this meticulously detailed page-turner.

Kirkus Reviews (starred) Dunning, twice nominated for the Edgar, deserves to win one for this Denver-cop-turned-bookman tale -- a lively, seductive primer on how to open a bookstore, spot a first edition, warehouse it, price it, and enjoy it for its own sake.

Booklist Dunning is an amazingly assured writer, willing to head off down narrative side streets, secure that his readers will follow. He's never wrong.

Houston Chronicle Booked to Die offers an intriguing peek inside the antiquarian book business, and book lovers will be fascinated by the setting and education along the way. Yet this story has much more...Dunning's return...has the mystery readers' scene buzzing with great reviews and hopeful that more books featuring his detective-book dealer will be forthcoming.

People The author immerses the reader in this intriguing, little-known milieu without losing sight of the page-turning yarn he's spinning. In the end you may be disappointed that the last plot twist has finally played out.

Product Description

Together for the first time in a single volume -- the two critically acclaimed Bookman crime novels that helped inspire America's passion for modern first-edition book collecting and that belong on every bookshelf.

Includes "The Book Collector," advice and special tips from John Dunning on collecting rare books.

BOOKED TO DIE

Denver cop Cliff Janeway probably knows as much about books as he does about homicide. His living room resembles an adjunct to the public library. He's aware that some Stephen King first editions can bring more money than most Mark Twain firsts, and a copy of Raymond Chandler's Lady in the Lake is worth more than $1,000. And he realizes that, contrary to popular belief, "older" doesn't necessarily mean "more valuable."

He also knows that valuable volumes can be hidden in plain view among otherwise ordinary book collections. It's not easy to find such books, but some people seem to have an extraordinary talent for honing in on the treasures.

Such a man is bookscout Bobby Westfall. Bobby once earned $900 in a single weekend and has generally spotted enough valuable books to keep himself and his beloved cats fed and housed.

Now Bobby is dead, murdered at the witching hour on Friday the thirteenth, his body dumped under a ladder in a dark alley. It's not a good end for a superstitious man. Janeway is sure he knows who did it. But can he catch him? And, in the process, will Janeway's own life change forever?

THE BOOKMAN'S WAKE

The story starts and ends, aptly, with a very special book: a 1969 edition of Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven, published by the tiny, prestigious Grayson Press of North Bend, Washington. The Grayson bibliography mentions no such edition. If, indeed, it exists, it could be worth a fortune to the right collector. It's the kind of book somebody might kill for. In fact, somebody probably already has.

Ex-Denver cop Janeway is happily at work selling rare and used books when former police colleague Clydell Slater arrives with an offer. Slater runs a detective agency and he wants Janeway to go to Seattle to pick up a young female fugitive and deliver her to Taos, New Mexico. The woman is wanted for burglary and assault. More to the point, as far as Janeway's concerned, she may also have in her possession a stolen copy of the 1969 Grayson Press Raven, taken when she ransacked a Taos home.

The rare-book angle gets to Janeway every time. He could turn down thousands of dollars in fees, but he can't say no to The Raven.

Janeway signs on to the case because of a book, but he stays because of a vulnerable young woman. He will discover not only her painful story but the poignant tale of a once-great small press, where paper and ink became beautiful books in the hands of a master craftsman.


Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
Bobby the Bookscout was killed at midnight on June 13,1986. Read the first page
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5.0 out of 5 stars A couple of great books about books, April 1 2004
This review is from: Booked Twice: Booked to Die and The Bookman's Wake (Hardcover)
There has been a lot of talk among bibliophiles about these books and their subject matter. Rare books and their values are instrumental in their plots. What those people usually leave out in their recommendations, however, is that these are two excellent mysteries.

In Booked to Die, Cliff Janeway is a cop with a problem. He knows who is pulling a string of derelict murders--his old nemesis Jackie Newton--but he can't pin the crimes on him. Up comes a new victim, a local bookscout that Janeway recognized from the street, and Janeway thinks he has Newton cold--except that Newton has an alibi in one Barbara Crowell, who was with him from 3:00 the previous afternoon.

The Bookman's Wake focuses on a long-thought-lost special printing of Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven, which Janeway is hired to find. Along the way he meets a woman named Eleanor Rigby and things just get more confusing from there.

To say more would give too much away. But these are definitely two mysteries worth reading. All the information on the book world is simply a bonus for bibliophiles.

Janeway is a very interesting character--a cop, then a detective, and a book lover. Author John Dunning also owned a book shop for ten years and still runs a first-edition-only business from his home. I recommend these books to people interested in books as a commodity, but also to anyone who likes a good mystery. For once (well, twice), I was satisfied with an ending.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.3 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)

12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A couple of great books about books, April 1 2004
By Craig Clarke "Living After Midnight: Hard and... - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Booked Twice: Booked to Die and The Bookman's Wake (Hardcover)
There has been a lot of talk among bibliophiles about these books and their subject matter. Rare books and their values are instrumental in their plots. What those people usually leave out in their recommendations, however, is that these are two excellent mysteries.

In Booked to Die, Cliff Janeway is a cop with a problem. He knows who is pulling a string of derelict murders--his old nemesis Jackie Newton--but he can't pin the crimes on him. Up comes a new victim, a local bookscout that Janeway recognized from the street, and Janeway thinks he has Newton cold--except that Newton has an alibi in one Barbara Crowell, who was with him from 3:00 the previous afternoon.

The Bookman's Wake focuses on a long-thought-lost special printing of Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven, which Janeway is hired to find. Along the way he meets a woman named Eleanor Rigby and things just get more confusing from there.

To say more would give too much away. But these are definitely two mysteries worth reading. All the information on the book world is simply a bonus for bibliophiles.

Janeway is a very interesting character--a cop, then a detective, and a book lover. Author John Dunning also owned a book shop for ten years and still runs a first-edition-only business from his home. I recommend these books to people interested in books as a commodity, but also to anyone who likes a good mystery. For once (well, twice), I was satisfied with an ending.


7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Intro to the "Bookman" series, July 10 2006
By L. Z. - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Booked Twice: Booked to Die and The Bookman's Wake (Hardcover)
I was told about Dunning's mystery series by a good friend -- and fellow book lover -- and found this omnibus edition of the first two novels a great way to get a feel for the author's storytelling skills (they're remarkable), the main character's back story (it's quite interesting), and read two interesting mysteries involving one of my favorite pastimes -- browsing for treasures in used bookstores. Dunning is obviously quite knowledgeable about the used book market, and he has written a gritty, engrossing, and at times amusing account of the trials and travails of Cliff Janeway, a former cop turned used book seller. If you are in anyway interested in books -- as a reader and as a collector -- this series is sure to please and certain to provide hours of edification of the fine, wonderful, world of owning collectable books.

About these two novels . . .
Dunning's first novel, Booked to Die introduces us to his indominable lead character, Cliff Janeway. He's a tough, honest, principled cop in Denver who has a passion for collecting books and a long-standing personal vendetta against a local thug, Jackie Newton. When a local vagrant is found beaten to death, Jackie Newton appears to be the most likely suspect, but Janeway finds he's unable prove anything. After a violent clash with Newton, Janeway realizes that his career as a cop is over, and decides to open a used bookstore. Janeway is happy and even hires a young woman to be his assistant, Miss Pride. But, his comfortable complaciency is suddenly shattered when Janeway discovers Miss Pride and a ne'r-do-well bookscout summarily executed in his store, and he's certain that Newton's behind it.
In a good mystery, nothing is ever as simple as it seems on page 200 . . . By the end of the novel, Janeway cleverly discovers who was behind the brutal deaths of three people and why, and even more importantly, he has won this reader's admiration as a top-notch, cop-turned-bookseller that you want to get to know even better.
Which is why this volume is such a treat. Finish one novel and there's a second one immediately after it. In The Bookman's Wake, Janeway must stay several steps ahead of a murderous thug who is after a previously unknown rare, limited edition of The Raven, by Edgar A. Poe. This novel is a vivd portrayal of genius turn to murderous hubris. The high-stakes risks taken by Janeway and his associates are duly rewarded in the end, and the reader of this novel will be, too.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars John Dunning's Booked to Die and Bookman's Wake, Nov 9 2006
By Robert F. Light "Flash" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Booked Twice: Booked to Die and The Bookman's Wake (Hardcover)
Dunnings style and easy reading vocabulary make his books great relaxing and interesting material. He is fast becoming one of my favorite authors and I highly recommend his work.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 7 reviews  4.3 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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