The Day

Mystery in ‘Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore’

- By CHRISTINA LEDBETTER

Matthew Sullivan’s “Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore” is shocking, charming and thrilling from the opening scene. Lydia Smith, a compassion­ate bookstore clerk, is horrified one night when she finds her favorite customer, the young Joey Molina, has committed suicide in the Western history section. Things turn eerier when Lydia spies a picture of herself as a child poking out of the dead man’s pocket. However, it is when Lydia learns that Joey has left all of his meager possession­s to her (including abooks he has meticulous­ly defaced) that the bookseller has a mystery on her hands.

While she tries to decipher Joey’s message, readers will wonder what Lydia is hiding. She brushes off a postcard from a homicide detective who recognized her photo in the newspaper; she’d rather not think about a villain dubbed the Hammerman lurking in her childhood (and possibly the streets today); and she refuses to speak to her father. The story alternates between present day and Lydia’s childhood, and Sullivan navigates the transition­s elegantly.

With compelling characters and rich descriptio­ns, Sullivan’s writing is spot-on. Raj, a chubby, jumpsuit-sporting boy befriends Lydia as a child and offers her doughnuts from his parents’ gas station. David, Lydia’s boyfriend, with his mangled fingers resembling a knot of bread dough in his palm, disassembl­es VCRs and wipes crumbs from the kitchen counter. Local eccentrics roam Bright Ideas’ aisles and nap in armchairs. Sullivan nails it, delivering a captivatin­g conflict plus masterfull­y executed prose.

“Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore” by Matthew Sullivan Scribner Publishing 336 pages, $26

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