New York Daily News

‘An astounding person’

Public library staffer killed by minivan leaving garage

- BY ELLEN MOYNIHAN AND ROCCO PARASCANDO­LA

A beloved archivist for the New York Public Library was killed last week when a minivan leaving a Midtown parking garage knocked her to the street, causing her to hit her head against the pavement in a fatal blow.

Kathie Coblentz, 73, was only steps from her home on West 58th St. when she was killed last Saturday. The garage had a steep ramp leading up the street where Coblentz was walking, police said. The driver stayed at the scene and was not charged.

Co-workers at the NYPL, where she worked for over 50 years, described her has a quintessen­tial New Yorker, delighting in Central Park and the Yankees, as well as her treasured books.

“She spent her entire career here, starting in July of 1969 — just weeks before the moon landing.

She was recruited right out of library school at the University of Michigan,” NYPL President Anthony W. Marx wrote in an email to staff on Tuesday.

“She was known as an extremely thorough and vigorous cataloger who took very seriously the responsibi­lity of connecting the public to our collection­s.”

Supervisor Deirdre Donohue was quoted in the announceme­nt, calling Coblentz the “matriarch of our work family.”

Donohue went on to describe the work Coblentz did as “artisanall­y-crafted catalog and authority records that were the products of detective work, deep research, and skepticism about facts leading to truly rich descriptio­n and access of items in the library’s coffers of great value and importance.”

Coblentz loved the letter Christophe­r Columbus wrote documentin­g his voyage in 1493, and had told friends it should be reproduced as a scarf. For her 50th anniversar­y at the library, co-workers had one custom made for her

in silk.

She was also an enthusiast­ic blogger, writing about rare texts in a contempora­ry way for the library.

“You wouldn’t expect a guy who lived that long ago to be the subject of a Wikipedia war, but so it is,” she wrote last year about Saint John Climacus, a sixth-century Syrian,

in a post called “How to Achieve Spiritual Perfection in 30 East Steps.”

She was a fan of Scandinavi­an murder mysteries and the Yankees. According to Marx, Coblentz learned Swedish, Danish and Norwegian to be able to read the books as they were originally written.

“She was an astounding person with so much to give and so much intelligen­ce and wit and humor,” said library curator Madeleine Viljoen, who knew Coblentz for 10 years.

“It’s tragic.” Viljoen said Coblentz was so dogged in her research that her findings sometimes overturned accepted historical narratives.

“She was the kind of person to make real discoverie­s during her work,” said Viljoen. “She would keep on digging until she got to the bottom of it.” Coblentz co-edited books of interviews with Clint Eastwood and Woody Allen and was also an author, having written a guide on organizing home libraries.

She was also the “life of the party,” Viljoen said, perpetuall­y armed with a witty quip.

“She was always right there ready to have a good time. Kathie knew how to work and also how to play.”

 ?? SHAWN INGLIMA/FOR DAILY NEWS ?? Kathie Coblentz (inset) was walking on W. 58th St. toward her building near Ninth Ave. on April 3 when she was struck by minivan (above) . She hit her head on the sidewalk and later died.
SHAWN INGLIMA/FOR DAILY NEWS Kathie Coblentz (inset) was walking on W. 58th St. toward her building near Ninth Ave. on April 3 when she was struck by minivan (above) . She hit her head on the sidewalk and later died.

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