South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)
Photographer hunts priceless ancient book
Unconventional characters often appear in the mystery genre, and selfdestructive photographer Cassandra “Cass” Neary is among the most unusual. Cass’ default is being “an aging punk jonesing for a drink and a handful of black beauties.”
She is not an appealing character, but Elizabeth Hand never makes her character boring.
Many times readersmay wish they could shake Cass, demanding she stop the drinking and pills, and quit living on the fringes of society. Cass doesn’t need enemies or criminals targeting her— she is quite capable of sabotaging herself. But Cass’ intelligence, her vulnerability and her empathy for others make readerswant to revisit her.
“The Book of Lamps and Banners” finds Cass hiding out in low-rent hotels in London, desperate to raise enough money so she and her longtime boyfriend, Quinn, can leave the country. That is, if Quinn is even alive and if she can find him.
Froman old acquaintance, Cass learns about “The Book of Lamps and Banners,” an ancient book supposedly written by Aristotle and rescued from the Library of Alexandria. The priceless book isn’t supposed to exist, but if it does it may contain esoteric knowledge, even supernatural power. As Cass quips, “Sounds likeDan Brown on really good acid.” Cass aims to cash in on the plan to sell the book to a reclusive video game developer. When the book and thewould-be buyer disappear, Cass follows a trail of odd clues across London, ending up on a
‘The Book of Lamps and Banners’ by Elizabeth Hand. Mulholland, 336p, $27
remote island off the Swedish coast.
Hand fills her fourth novel in this series with
many heartfelt scenes that speak to Cass’ character. A stroll down a London alley filled with independent bookstores is tailor-made for bibliophiles. An oldschool photographer who has avoided digital equipment, Cass sees everything through her craft. Knowing howchemicals and metals interact gives her an amateur’s knowledge of forensics. Cass views another character’s selfentitled personality as “the human equivalent of the hole on a piece of emulsion that has been exposed to direct sunlight.”
Hand’s affinity for brisk plotting keeps “The Book of Lamps and Banners” churning with twists and surprises leading to a finale that gives hope to Cass’ future.