Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore - Matthew Sullivan

I figured I was setting myself up for a huge disappointment when I let my enthusiasm about the cover of Matthew Sullivan’s Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore convince me that I really needed to read this one. That’s happened to me several times before when I chose a new book based solely on what I saw on the cover – especially, it seems, with books about, or set in, bookstores (a major weakness of mine). This one, though, did not disappoint. 

Lydia Smith is a bookseller at the Bright Ideas bookstore, a young lady who truly loves books and what she does in the bookstore. And her customers love her right back - especially the BookFrogs, an eccentric group of regulars who claim the bookstore as a second home (for many of them, it’s their only home) and spend whole days there browsing or napping among the books. But when one of the BookFrogs hangs himself in the store at midnight, just before closing time, everything changes for Lydia for good. She will never, ever be the same.

Matthew Sullivan
Lydia not only discovers Joey’s body, she also learns that he has bequeathed all of his possessions – what little there are of them - to her. She already suspected that she was Joey’s favorite bookseller, but because Joey had only recently started actually speaking to her about himself a little, Lydia was taken by surprise by his gesture. What Lydia finds in Joey’s apartment is pretty much what she expects to find: lots of junk and lots of books. But when Lydia starts taking a closer look at the books in the apartment she begins to wonder what Joey was up to before his suicide. The books have been defaced in an apparently systematic way, with dozens of little windows cut into their pages, and Lydia knows that the key to what was going on in Joey’s head is hidden somewhere in the books he left behind.

Lydia has bloody secrets of her own, things about her childhood that she has shared with no one in the world, including her live-in boyfriend, David. But when she finds something from her childhood in Joey’s possession, it doesn’t make sense. Just who was Joey Molina, anyway? And does she really want to know the truth?

Bottom Line: Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore satisfies on a couple of different levels. Fans of “bookstore books” will be pleased that so much of the plot takes place inside, or around the day-to-day routine of, the bookstore itself in a way that reveals lots about the quirky store and its often eccentric employees and customers. But this one is also a good mystery about a murderous rampage perpetrated by a villain so spooky that a whole generation of children would never forget him. It’s a mystery with enough solid misdirection in it that I did not solve it until the author intended me to solve it. My only gripe concerns the book’s ending (long after the mystery itself is solved), an ending that is really a little too abrupt to be much satisfying. 

13 comments:

  1. I love the sound of this one: the bookshop, the quirky characters, the mystery. Even with the abrupt ending I'm excited to give this one a try.

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    1. Do be warned that it is a little grittier than the impression given by the cover. I saw a few negative reviews complaining that this is not a "bookstore" novel at all. It's not a cozy, that's for sure.

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    2. I'm okay with a little grit. But thanks for the warning. :)

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  2. I love the sound of this one too. Not only do I love a book about books and readers, it does actually sound extremely intriguing. Will see if I can find it.

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    1. As I told Lark, Cath, it's a fairly gritty piece of crime fiction, but it's set in and around a bookstore and how this particular store works. I think it was published in 2018.

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  3. I'm not usually into mysteries, but this one does sound good!

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    1. Jeane, it's a mystery in the sense that a murderer has gone unexposed for two decades and things start happening that threaten to end the game. It's crime fiction and the crime is a brutal one.

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  4. The title! It would be hard to resist the title alone, but the defaced books with little windows is a clincher!

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    1. I think you would enjoy it, Jenclair. I know that you like crime fiction, thrillers, etc. and that's what this one really is. But the bookstore stuff is definitely the icing on the cake and that icing makes all the difference in the world.

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  5. Oh, good! I'm glad this one lives up to the promise of its lovely cover. It's already on my TBR mountain chain, but maybe I need to bump it up a little? Glad you enjoyed it!

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    1. It worked well for me, Susan. I liked that the bookstore atmosphere was enough a part of the story that the novel's cover was not a misleading one - and I enjoyed the murder mystery part of the story even though I probably should have figured it out long before I realized who the culprit was.

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  6. Oh- is it very gruesome or something? I can't stand stuff that gets really explicit on that kind of thing.

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    1. Not so much in the present, but in the flashbacks to the crime scene, it does get a little explicit in the details. I will add, though, that some of those details are critical to the plot.

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