The Grand Complication
by Allen Kurzweil
Theia
(368 pages)
Keyword(s): Literary fiction
Dates read: January 05-11, 2004,
Rating:
I received both The Grand Complication and A Case of Curiosities for Christmas, and I glanced them over quickly before choosing Complication as my first exposure to Allen Kurzweil. I had no way of knowing this when I made my decision, but it turns out that the book I chose is a sequel of sorts to the one I passed over; the book I neglected is actually a character of sorts in the one I selected (and in a very meta way, one character in the present book is projected back into the other novel). Confused? Don't be...it makes sense when you read it.
Kurzweil is a bit of a pedant, but in an endearing way. His protagonist, Alexander Short, is a librarian who is slightly eccentric (this is true of all good librarians, right?). His quirks include constantly taking cryptic notes in a book attached to his waist, and his interests include secret compartments. When he is contracted by a curious older man to help find a missing objet d'art, the reader is drawn into an unorthodox mystery. About two thirds of the way through the 360 pages of the novel proper, Kurzweil bogs down, but he recovers with a couple of satisfying twists, and the ending is apropos.
Kurzweil's prose is quirky, but with good reason. The characters are strange but consistent, and there is clearly a lot of scholarship behind the story itself. I'm very curious to read another of his novels to make a comparison.

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