Wednesday, October 22, 2014

In Pursuit of the Bard's Undiscovered Play

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The Book of Air and Shadows by Michael Gruber
What if your day at work has turned into your worst nightmare, and out of the ashes of that terrible day you discover you’ve found a clue to the location of an unknown play by Shakespeare?  Is this your silver lining?  What would a Shakespeare scholar do to find an entire play in the Bard's hand? Whom would a criminal mastermind kill to steal it?  Can the unwitting hero find the manuscript first?  And will he capture the heart of the mysterious girl bookbinder in the process?
The Book of Air and Shadows is a thriller about chasing down the clues to fame, and fortune, and an unknown Shakespeare play.  You’ll delve into the science of studying 16th century printing, ink, and history.  You’ll also learn about the publishing industry.  It all starts when mysterious letters are found embedded in the covers of a rare book set.  This is not a fast paced read.  Instead it is a methodical tracking and testing to validate and de-cipher clues.  Whether the clues are proven or fraud, the criminal mob has heard of the find, believes it, and is hot on the heels of the others.  And of course, the Intellectual Property Lawyer is right in the middle of the chase and looking to gain his piece of this action.  It builds into a wild story of double-crossings, de-coded ciphers, forgeries, kidnappings and murder.
What starts as a thrilling puzzle to solve, slowly turns into such a dangerous riddle no one including family, friends, and lovers are trustworthy.  While you are learning about the present day treasure hunters, in parallel the author tells the story of characters in 17th century England.  These characters, including Shakespeare, are driven by mystery and danger to take specific actions with Shakespeare’s final handwritten play.  The author tells a vivid story of William Shakespeare’s life.
Michael Gruber now lives and writes in Seattle.  He has a PhD from Columbia University, and during his career he was a policy advisor for the Jimmy Carter White House, and also a bureaucrat for the EPA.  In an interview about this book, Michael Gruber said, “So why Shakespeare? Because I feel he's the essence of mystery. Because in the modern history of the world there's no literary figure of remotely comparable magnitude for whom we have less biographical information: the greatest single figure writing in our language, and he's smoke. Because he flourished in a world without copyright laws his mystery continues.”  According to the author, he was inspired to write this novel, “during a conference with an intellectual property lawyer on a particular afternoon in November of 2003.  When I say born, I mean nearly the whole plot popped into my head.”
And thereby hangs a tale . . . .