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THE BOOKMAN'S PROMISE
by John Dunning, pub. 2004.
Book 3 of the Cliff Janeway series, a former Denver homicide detective is now a book dealer in first editions and rare books.
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THE STORY
At auction Janeway bought a signed three volume first edition by the legendary British author and explorer Sir Richard Francis Burton (1821 to 1890). The book is a true classic, telling of Burton's journey (disguised as a Muslim) to the forbidden holy cities of Mecca and Medina and the book contains a personal inscription to a friend, Charles Warren.
After an on-air interview with NPR where the personalized inscription is read aloud, Janeway and his bookstore receive some notoriety. The elderly Josephine Gallant, Jo to her friends, traveled from her retirement home in Baltimore to Janeway's store in Denver and claims the Burton book once belonged to her family. She explains that her grandfather was Charlie Warren, the man mentioned in the inscription, who was living in Baltimore more than eighty years ago and had a fabulous collection of Burton books, letters and notes, including Richard Burton's handwritten journal detailing his travels with Charlie through the American South in May of 1860, a year before the Civil War (1861 thru 1865).
Cliff Janeway is of course the Bookman who makes the promise to Josephine while she's on her death bed. Her grandfather's collection of Burton books were unscrupulously purchased some 80 years ago by the Treadwell bookstore in Baltimore and Jo wants Janeway to recover them, if possible and donate the collection to a library in her grandfather's name. Josephine remembers the books fondly from her childhood, but after her grandfather's death in 1906, her boozy dad sold the collection to the Treadwells for $30, which he promptly spent on booze.
Jo brought with her the only book from that collection that wasn't sold because it hadn't been on the bookshelves at the time and she's kept it safe and in pristine condition all these years. She offers it to Cliff if he'll try to locate the rest of her grandfather's collection. Denise and Mike Ralston have been helping Jo since she arrived in Denver and because of their kindness she wants Denise to receive some of the profits when her book is sold.
Janeway knows this will be a monumental task, locating a book collection that was sold decades ago, but he plans to give it his best effort. - edited & expanded
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The story's conclusion isn't particularly believable and the author actually wrote this tale as historical fiction concerning the very real person Sir Richard Burton, giving the details of his genius and exploits. There's some hypocritical comments with Janeway stating that $30 was a steal for the Burton books even in 1906, but later he brags about getting a $300 book cheap at $6 cuz the seller didn't know what it was really worth. So, Josephine's dad sold the books cheap, boohoo get over it.
The book begins with Janeway telling the story from sometime in the future, thinking back to the year 1987 when he was 37 years old and the internet was not yet widely available for book searches and determining the price of a collectible book could be an arduous task.
Janeway is back from his Seattle adventure which took place in book 2 The Bookman's Wake, where he received a 50 grand finders fee from the Grayson affair which concerned an edition of The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe. The money is burning a hole in his pocket and he decides to spend it on one great book, the Burton three volume set.
At a dinner party held by Janeway's friend Judge Lee Huxley, he gets a look at the judge's impressive book collection. Lee inherited much of it from his grandma Betts, including many penned by the British explorer Richard Burton. The Pulitzer Prize winning historian Hal Archer is also there and Janeway has admired his historical fiction for years, but the author turns out to be a stuffed shirt. Being a visting author from Charleston, Archer-the-jerk has been provided with a car and driver and the driver is the lovely Erin d'Angelo, an attorney who moonlights for a company that schleps around visiting writers. Erin is also Janeway's future girlfriend.
For their first date Erin was a no-show, so Janeway closed his bookstore for the night and ordered himself a pizza and that's when she finally showed up. The Ralstons call, urging Janeway to quickly come to their house where Josephine seems to be dieing. On her deathbed Jo offers Janeway that one book she has from her grandpa, now worth $25,000, if he'll try to find the missing collection. After she's dead and gone, Janeway offers to give Denise and Mike half the value of the book while he keeps it safe in his store and starts his investigation into grandpa Charlie's Burton books. Denise wants to hold on to the book for a day or two and Janeway warns her that even a spot on the cover could mean five grand off the book's value. Mike is a nervous wreck, wants the money and for Janeway to take charge of the book.
Sometime after Denise turned the book over to Janeway, someone snuck into their house and smothered her with a pillow, left eleven hundred dollars on the bed and a white guy was seen rushing from the house. Cliff suspects the murder had something to do with the book and the killer didn't know she'd already given it back. Mike the husband and Erin claim they hadn't mentioned the book to anyone.
Now Janeway goes into his homicide detective mode, something he misses more than he realizes. He flies to Baltimore and visits the Treadwell bookstore which is now run by the 4th generation of Treadwells, the brothers Dean and Carl. He also has a run in with Dante a local gangster and associate of Carl Treadwell. Archer-the-jerk who lives in Charleston, South Carolina is also here in Baltimore palling around with Dean Treadwell.
In the Baltimore suburbs Janeway goes to see Koko Bujak who lives in Ellicott City. She's a retired librarian who volunteers at Josephine's retirement home. Koko is doing life histories of the old folks and has recorded on cassette hours of Jo telling all about her life and times with her grandfather including his travels with Sir Robert Burton. And it seems all these people are interested in Burton books including that one remaining book belonging to Jo. A while ago she brought it into the Treadwell store and asked them to make an offer. Their obvious low price was proof to Josephine that they're still a bunch of crooks.
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What's really going on?
Here are the revealing story details and exactly how it all ends - only if you're interested.
Some guys attack Janeway and Koko at her house, stealing all her notes and cassettes about Jo and Grandpa Charlie. He knows who did it, so Cliff heads over to Treadwell books where Carl, Dante and a third thug are trying to figure out what's valuable on the tapes. Janeway gets the jump on them, dishing out the same first class beating he had received, plus a little extra for Dante the gangster. Dante doesn't heed the warning and gets revenge by burning down Koko's house, destroying all of her possessions and research except for the tapes and notes on Jo and Charlie that they have with them.
They fly to Charleston where Koko plans to do research to verify Grandpa Charlie's time he spent there with Burton. On the plane Janeway listens to one of the tapes of Koko interviewing Josephine under hypnosis. Yup, hypnotic trance. That's how Koko learned all this detailed information of exactly what Grandpa Charlie had said to Jo when she was just a child and all the details she'd read in his journal about the 1860 adventure with Burton. Supposedly conversations and the written information you've read are all locked away in the human mind and can be revealed in exact detail through hypnosis.
As Janeway listens to Jo on the tape, we get a very long detailed story of her Grandpa Charlie traveling with Burton the British explorer. They travel by riverboat and stop in various places from Charleston to New Orleans, encounter fair maidens and rogues intent on doing them harm, consult with military officials about the impending Civil War and much more - a section that's far more dull than interesting. Charlie wonders at times if his new friend was actually spying on America for his home country of England. Burton promised to send Charlie copies of all his various books as he wrote them. When Burton departed he forgot the journal he'd been writing and drawing in during this adventure in the American South. Grandpa Charlie kept the journal with the books and that journal turned out to be the most valuable part of the collection.
Who has the collection? Judge Lee Huxley has them. These are the books he inherited from his grandma Betts. Archer-the-jerk is Huxley's cousin, they grew up together and some years ago the Judge shared a couple of the books with his black sheep relative: that very valuable Burton journal and the Burton book set Janeway bought at auction. The plan was not to sell any of them until after the last Charles Warren relative was dead, specifically Josephine. Archer has writer's block and a lot of debt and so he put up that book for auction and agreed to let the judge buy-back the journal.
After Grandpa Charlie's death in 1906, Archer the first, that's grandfather Archer, had hired the Treadwells to purchase the Burton book collection cheap. Grandmother Betts outlived them all and inherited the books which she eventually left to her grandson, Judge Lee.
Dante the gangster just won't learn his lesson. Erin, Janeway and Koko are visiting the historic Fort Sumter and spend the night there, camped out on the island in sleeping bags. Dante and his thugs show up to do them in and they brought along a ladder in their boat to sneak over the fort's wall. Cliff is expecting this and surprises them as they reach the top of the wall. This time he warns Dante to expect a visit from a guy and pushes them off the top of the wall and Dante lands painfully on the shore below. The four thugs get back in their boat and retreat.
Dante the gangster is a killer and the easiest way for Janeway to end this ongoing threat is to just shoot the thug while he's right there atop the wall, but Cliff just can't bring himself to murder a killer unless they were involved in an actual self-defense gunfight. The "I know a guy" promise is not an idle threat. Janeway does know a guy. His name is Vinnie Marranzino, a notorious Denver mobster and Vince wants more than anything to do a favor for his long ago pal Cliff. Many years ago in their rough and tumble youth, Janeway saved Vince's life and even though they went into different professions, cop and the mob, Vinnie has always wanted to repay the debt.
Erin had also been in Charleston negotiating with Archer-the-jerk who had suddenly changed the price he wanted the Judge (his cousin) to pay for the Burton Journal. Erin, a friend of the Judge and his wife and an attorney is acting as go between as they negotiate the price for the journal. Janeway saw her leave Archer's house and she soon joined him and Koko. To write the Jo, Grandpa and Burton story, Koko needs to verify all the details, which is why she came to Charleston, to check the local library, interview the director at the Fort Sumter National Historical Park and others.
They hear that Archer has been severely beaten and hospitalized, obviously Dante and company wanting to know how to find Janeway. Archer is now despondent and agrees to give his cousin the Judge the journal at the original price. Dean Treadwell, Archer's lifelong pal, retrieves the journal from the house where Dante had thoroughly hidden it, actually buried it and turns it over to Janeway and Erin.
Their tasks mostly complete and Koko without a place to live, the three (Janeway, Koko & Erin) fly to Denver and turn over the journal to Lee Huxley the Judge. In the meantime Janeway has figured out the mystery of who killed poor Denise. She and her hubby Mike had invited the frail Josephine to stay at their house. Janeway had made his bookman's promise at that house and Jo offered them her one and only prized book and it's where Jo passed. When Cliff accuses the Judge, Erin is livid at the suggestion. The Huxleys are family to her, they paid her way through law school and she lived with them for years, but when Judge Lee insists he didn't mean to kill her, it's a surprise.
Here it's not clear why Judge Lee was so determined to get a hold of that one last book. Erin had lied, she did tell someone about it, she told the Judge in confidence. He went over there and offered Denise a lot of money for the book, but she no longer had it. She of course got a little freaked out with the Judge and when she started screaming he was only using the pillow to quiet her down not kill her. To Cliff the Judge insists it was just an accident, he didn't go over there to kill anyone.
The Judge was worried about the Burton book collection because he's had a couple of interviews with US president Ronald Reagan and he's on the list as a possible candidate for the US Supreme Court. He legally owns the book collection, but was worried over even a minor scandal coming out about how his distant relatives obtained the books in the first place. With the pillow incident revealed, Judge Lee suicides in his car by leaving the engine running in the garage and Janeway so far has not alerted the authorities to Lee's involvement in Denise's death.
Vinnie gives Janeway a call about the problem he had in that "neck of the woods." Nothing is said about what was done, if anything, to Dante the gangster. Koko's house is being rebuilt and some unknown party is paying for it. Earlier in the story Janeway had mused about Dante making amends by giving Koko her house back. So, it's left up in the air whether Dante is alive or not or maybe someone compelled him to rebuild the house he burned down.
The bookman's promise is not kept. Janeway found the books, but since they belong to the Judge and now to his widow it's very unlikely they will ever be donated to a library in Grandpa Charlie's name. We don't know if Mrs Huxley knows her husband the Judge accidentally killed Denise, but she definitely blames Janeway for her husband's demise and even threatened to kill Cliff, if it were possible. She also claimed she burned the book. It doesn't say what book. We can assume it's the Burton Journal that they all brought over that night.
In the end Janeway gets a pleasant call from Erin, she's on her way over. It's been 40 days since their date and she seems determined to move on with Janeway in her life.
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Mostly interesting, but the author has a habit of not always telling the details. Instead he leaves it to the reader to assume what happened. For instance Janeway had decided he would not be calling his mob pal Vinnie for help with Dante. Obviously at some point he did contact Vinnie, cuz the guy gives him a call, saying: "Hey Cliff everything's fine. Let me know if you have any more trouble in that neck of the woods."
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