"One
hears a lot of stories in a place where stories are sold," the protagonist
of the collection says in the opening story. "I am often a good listener
and encourage people, especially paying customers." This storyteller, an
undisguised characterization of the author, is intrigued by stories of
bibliomania, the obsessive-compulsive urge to hoard books, and these are the
stories he shares with visitors to his fictional, based-on-fact, bookstore.
His
customers include Kenny Gold, an American-born Paratroopers veteran working at Israel's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs. About to participate in the Jerusalem Marathon, Gold
is called away at the last minute to handle a private task for his boss,
Minister Moshe Sulimani. Angry after being assigned to send out the Bar Mitzvah
invitations for Yaron, his boss's son, he instead papercuts them into snowflakes
and flowers. Gold is saved from being sacked when the minister runs into
personal problems of his own.
Sulimani
and his son appear in another of the book's stories. Yaron escapes his father's
political misconducts by changing his last name to Solan. After writing a book
of poetry and a novella that was praised in Haaretz but mocked by his infamous
father, Yaron takes refuge in a Bedouin encampment in the Negev. "Another
shameful scandal for the Sulimanis," the tabloid headlines scream.
Hanan
Meir, a famous writer, visits the bookstore on a monthly basis in search of
books he himself has written, questioning why books he had inscribed or
dedicated to readers had ended up in second-hand bookstores. Meir mentions
meeting a professor, a frequent bookstore customer who had been caught
pilfering valuable British Mandate period literature collectibles. "Murder,
I would even murder to get a book I must have," the professor declares.
Customers
to the fictional bookstore in The Bibliomaniacs, or to the very real
bookstore on Tel Aviv's Allenby Street, probably won't kill anyone for books,
but they will find genuine value in the "book gossip" told in the
short stories of this highly enjoyable collection.
J.C. Halper was born in Newark and raised in Springfield, New Jersey. He studied
history at George Washington University and at Yeshiva University. He moved to
Israel in 1983 and was soon drafted into the Infantry. He opened his bookstore
on Allenby Street in downtown Tel Aviv in 1991. When not buying and selling
books, he tries to read them.
Originally published on The Times of Israel.
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