The Library Thief by Kuchenga Shenjé
Thank you Hanover Square Press for the opportunity to be on the blog tour for this debut book. It is publication week as The Library Thief came out on May 6th! Enjoy learning about this book and reading an exclusive excerpt!
About the Book:
The library is under lock and key. But its secrets can't be contained.
A strikingly original
and absorbing mystery about a white-passing bookbinder in Victorian England and
the secrets lurking on the estate where she works, for fans of Fingersmith and The Confessions of Frannie Langton.
1896. After he brought her home from Jamaica as a baby,
Florence's father had her hair hot-combed to make her look like the other
girls. But as a young woman, Florence is not so easy to tame—and when she
brings scandal to his door, the bookbinder throws her onto the streets of
Manchester.
Intercepting her father's latest commission, Florence talks
her way into the remote, forbidding Rose Hall to restore its collection of rare
books. Lord Francis Belfield's library is old and full of secrets—but none so
intriguing as the whispers about his late wife.
Then one night, the library is broken into. Strangely, all
the priceless tomes remain untouched. Florence is puzzled, until she discovers
a half-burned book in the fireplace. She realizes with horror that someone has
found and set fire to the secret diary of Lord Belfield's wife–which may hold
the clue to her fate…
Evocative, arresting and tightly plotted, The Library Thief
is at once a propulsive Gothic mystery and a striking exploration of race,
gender and self-discovery in Victorian England.
Excerpt:
The story starts with a scandal that I thought would end my
life. Fortunately, my scandal didn’t kill anyone. In fact, it pales in
comparison with what I went on to discover at Rose Hall.
Thus far, the way I see it, in any good life you need to die
several times to really lead a life worth living. There are little deaths and
there are big deaths. My tale has both—and the real tragedy would be if this
story were to die with me.
I was lying when I swore I would take this secret to my
grave. I had no right to promise that.
*
Granger’s Bookbinders,
143 Long Millgate,
Manchester,
Rose Hall,
Lancashire,
November 20, 1896
Dear Mr. Granger,
I trust this note finds you in good health and that business is as
steady as when last we met some years ago.
I write to you with an unusual commission. I will not trouble you here
with the details of my current circumstances. Since the untimely death of my
beloved wife, Lady Persephone, it seems the fates are in conspiracy against me.
Suffice it to say that I find myself now in need of your excellent services and
on a far grander scale than before.
The library at Rose Hall is, as you are aware, extensive. I am proud of
the rarity and quality of the books it now houses, a collection that I have
painstakingly curated over many years. I now find myself in the unhappy
position of seeking a buyer for my collection. Many of the books, due to their
age and mishandling by less cautious owners, are badly in need of restoration.
There are perhaps some two hundred such artifacts. The nature of my
circumstances make it necessary that this work be carried out to the highest
quality and with the greatest rapidity. Since no bookbinder in the North West
possesses skills equal to yours, I thought of you at once.
Please inform me as soon as you are able whether it is within your
means to accept such a commission.
Your obliged and affectionate friend,
Lord F. Belfield
1
I fell in love with the feel of the cotton before I fell in
love with the books. Leather felt too masculine and reptilian. Cloth was so
much warmer and didn’t slip out of my hands as easily. As a child I played
underneath the tables and made toy families from the scraps that fell at my
father’s boots.
He would never talk to me about where the cloth we used came
from, nor the contents of the books we worked on. There were a lot of things my
father wouldn’t tell me, and rather than keeping me ignorant, his silence made
me more curious. And fortunately, I was surrounded by the means to nourish that
curiosity.
Most of the time we spent together as I grew up was in silence, folding, beveling and smoothing. I sometimes wished my fingers could be as thick as his; he didn’t grimace when schooling leather and cloth into precise lines under his digital tutelage. I tried to be like my father, but all the books he left lying around gave me opinions.
* * *
I arrived at the front door of Rose Hall looking more ragged
than I would have liked. My breath was far from fresh, and the hair pins and
clips I had used to imprison the frizzier strands had been loosened by the
bumps of the rickety carriage. I had been dropped at the top of a tree-lined
drive that was at least a quarter mile long, if not more. The December mists
obscured my vision, and I could only just make out the shape of a grand house,
the likes of which I had only really seen on biscuit tins in the windows of
Manchester’s new department store, though I had imagined them as I read Brontë,
Austen and Radcliffe. Even with the curls of mist in the air, I could tell this
was a very English dwelling. As I approached it my feet slipped and shifted on
the gravel, unused to navigating such terrain after only walking on cobbled
streets and across wooden floors.
Lord Francis Belfield of Rose Hall had been my father’s
long-standing customer. He was the only man I’d ever seen look luxurious
without any air of pomposity. The men of Manchester were not known for wearing
velvet, so the sheen of his jackets always marked him out as distinguished. It
felt completely fitting that Rose Hall was an ode to symmetry and a more
tasteful example of the grandiosity of the mid-eighteenth century. It was an
early Georgian home of Lancashire sandstone. Even though my father hadn’t
mentioned it, the period of the building’s erection and the mercantile success
of Lord Francis Belfield were all I needed to know to deduce that the building
and its grounds had been purchased with plantation wealth.
I knocked on the forest-green door and left my suitcases on
the ground, hoping that looked more elegant than being strained down by the
weight of my clothes, books and binding tools. In my pocket, my fingers found
the folds of Lord Belfield’s letter. I inhaled, recalling once more the story I
had so carefully rehearsed.
The door opened and a pair of prominent blue eyes glared at
me through the crack. “Well?”
“Miss Florence Granger for Lord Francis Belfield, please.”
I took in the lines, too many for the face of someone who
was still clearly a young man. The hand holding the door open was rough and
calloused.
“He is expecting me,” I added.
“No ’e is not.”
I blinked, having not expected resistance this soon.
“I assure you I arrive here at the request of Lord Belfield
himself. I am from Granger’s of Manchester.”
The door widened and there stood a long-limbed boy of no
more than twenty. His movements were almost feline. The way he handled the door
without effort despite its apparent heaviness was quite a marvel.
“We are bookbinders. I’ve been sent to care for your master’s
collection.” I retrieved the letter from the pocket of my coat and held it out.
He made no move to take it, but instead chewed his bottom
lip, realizing there was truth to my words but clearly unconvinced by me. A
female tradesperson at the door to Rose Hall was probably not a common
occurrence.
“Young man, I excuse you of your impertinence, but I have
been traveling for some hours and would like to rest,” I told him, trying a
sterner approach. “Please fetch your master.”
“’E don’t rise before midday most days anymore. You can wait
in the kitchens, if you like.”
Now it was my turn to falter. I had no way of assessing how
appropriate this was. Should I be seated in the parlor? If I allowed myself to
be taken to the kitchens, was I aligning myself with the downstairs staff? I
was an artisan, not a servant. But a sharp ripple through my stomach made the
decision for me.
“Very well, so long as your offer comes with a cup of tea.”
I sighed and crouched down to pick up my suitcases.
“No, m’lady. I’ll tek those.”
He ushered me into the reception hall, lifting my bags up to
his sides as if they weighed nothing at all. The door chuffed itself closed
behind us with a low groan. The darkness of the perimeter indicated that there
was no draft coming through, nor a single sliver of light. A curtain hung to
the right of it and the man gave it a sharp tug. It concealed the entrance
entirely once pulled across, an odd choice. It gave the sense of being sealed
into the house somehow—not being able to see where one could escape.
Stepping into the hall, I was compelled to look up. It was a
huge atrium, with dark green textured walls and candles placed at regular
intervals which gave the illusion of a warm, close space. He led me over a
black-tiled floor, underneath a vast yet delicate brass chandelier aglow with
coppery bulbs. At the back of the hall, under the bifurcated staircase, he
opened a hidden door which led down to the kitchen. Before I had reached the
bottom the herbaceous and deeply woody smells of the kitchen came wafting up to
greet me. It was divine. But when we reached the flagstoned room I saw there
was nothing on the stove; I could only imagine that months of cooking in a room
with such small windows had baked the scent into the walls.
I was seated at a wooden table facing an array of copper
pans and white jugs with the high windows behind me. It was clearly a kitchen
intended for many staff, but there was none of the expected bustle. Where was
everyone? I shifted uncomfortably as I cast about for something to say, before
realizing that I didn’t know the young man’s name.
“What is your name?”
“Wesley.”
“Wesley what?”
He gave me a strange look. “Bacchus. Wesley Bacchus. I’m the
footman.”
He was telling me that as a footman, his surname did not
matter. Of course there was no reason that I, as a craftswoman, should know the
intricacies of these hierarchies, but I sat in silence, not wanting to betray
myself further by speaking again.
I was grateful when the cook came in some minutes later—from
a pantry, I imagined—but she barely looked in my direction, merely banging a
pan of water onto the stove. My stomach growled something fierce when she
entered, almost as if my belly knew that I was meeting the person in charge of
feeding the house.
I waited for her to acknowledge me, while Wesley continued
to look on with a smile playing about his lips. But she only retrieved a mug
and a caddy, before placing a steaming tea in front of me with a snort. My
shoulders slumped. I hadn’t expected to be treated as a lady, but had hoped for
at least some respect. Would my father have received such a poor greeting? I
sipped the tea, grateful for its sweetness and warmth as the cook clattered
about with her back to me. As I finished, she returned to the table with a
thick slice of ham sandwiched between two slices of bread. There was also a
large apple on the plate and in her other hand was a pewter cup of water. She’d
clearly heard my stomach. But her face showed no compassion as she laid the
blessed offering on the table.
With one last assessing glance at me, Wesley left, and the
cook returned to the stove, making it clear she had no intention of speaking to
me. I decided I could forget my manners just as she had hers, and devoured the
most delicious meal I’d had in weeks. Salty ham on pillowy bread, with a
delightfully sour apple and water that tasted like it came from the purest
spring to cleanse my palate. After greedily wiping the crumbs off the plate
with one of my fingers, I took out A Christmas Carol from my coat pocket and
started reading until the words on the page began to blur. The beast of a
carriage I had traveled in overnight had creaked with the strain of being drawn
up even the slightest incline. Combined with the cold that jolted me from
slumber, I had only been able to sleep in fits and bursts.
I awoke, suddenly, with my head on my crossed arms in front
of me and my wrist soaking wet from my dribble. The plate and pewter cup had
been taken away and Wesley was standing above me, a mocking smile about his
thickish lips.
“I’m sorry to wake you, Miss. Lord Belfield says he’ll see
you now.”
Wesley led me back upstairs, and down a corridor. As we
passed a tall, gilded mirror, I stopped, horrified by my reflection. My hair,
after only days left to its own devices, was now once again completely untamed.
My eyes were bloodshot with fatigue and my skin was pale, making my freckles
stand out. Hastily, I tried to force my frizzed hair back beneath its pins as
Wesley stopped too. He watched me with amusement until I had done the best I
could, and we continued on our way.
I thought back to the last time I had seen Lord Francis
Belfield. His best features were his long fingers, which were always encased in
tight kid gloves that he never took off. Oh, and the smell of him! Rich pepper
with a botanical soapy undertone, which always impressed me. Not in a way that
would make me swoon. He’s not the kind of man a girl like me is meant to fall
in love with. No, what I felt was awe. A man of his fortune had surely seen
more of the world than most. He’d have tales of Saint Petersburg,
Constantinople and Siam. If only I could ask him. The need to convince him of
my employability made doing so inappropriate.
The door opened onto the parlor, and immediately I could see
that the man I remembered from our shop was very different from the man who sat
in front of me. He was wearing a turmeric-colored silk waistcoat embroidered
with indigo plants, paired with dark trousers. He had clearly dressed hastily,
and a thread toward the bottom of his trousers was loose and trailing on the
floor by his feet. I inhaled deeply but could not catch the spiced vegetal
scent that usually accompanied his presence. He was much thinner than when I
had last seen him, and his eyes drooped as if he had suffered many a sleepless night.
He stood up from his seat to shake my hand but returned to it quickly as if he
couldn’t bear to hold himself up for too long.
“My name is Florence Granger, sir,” I began, but he waved a
hand.
“Yes, yes, I remember you. But why has your father sent you
all this way without an escort? It must have been a frightful journey.”
“Oh, no, Lord Belfield. The journey was fine.” I cleared my
throat to make space for the bigger lie. “My father sent me to complete the
work on your collection that you requested.”
He looked at me aggrieved. Offended, even. The way his
forehead crumpled made me more aware of the thinning hair at his temples. Even
disheveled, he was no less handsome. However, I pondered whether he might feel
a sense of loss for the way he used to look. On my previous viewings of him, he
looked like someone who was used to being seen and spoken of as a very handsome
“young” man. Although he wasn’t superbly weathered, he now had the face of a
man who had endured. A sad wisdom brought the tops of his eyelids a little
lower. His jawline was a bit less tenderly set because his teeth were more used
to being gritted together from stress. I supposed it was grief. He had lost his
wife less than a year before, after all, leaving him with only his son.
“Why on earth would he do that? This hasn’t even been
discussed. Had he accepted the commission, I would have had the books sent to
Manchester.”
Ah. This I had not considered. I remembered the words on the
letter. I was sure that it was an invitation to stay and restore the library.
My mouth was dry as I prepared my next lie.
Excerpted from THE LIBRARY THIEF by Kuchenga Shenjé. Copyright © 2024 by
Kuchenga Shenjé. Published by Hanover Square Press, an imprint of
HarperCollins.
Buy Links:
HarperCollins: https://www.harpercollins.com/products/the-library-thief-kuchenga-shenje?variant=41109244739618
BookShop.org: https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-library-thief-original-kuchenga-shenje/20641408?ean=9781335909695
Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-library-thief-kuchenga-shenj/1144095064
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1335909699/keywords=fiction
About the Book:
KUCHENGA SHENJÉ is a writer, journalist, and speaker with
work on many media platforms, including gal-dem, British Vogue and Netflix. She
has contributed short stories and essays to several anthologies, most notably
It’s Not OK to Feel Blue (and Other Lies), Who’s Loving You and Loud Black
Girls. Owing to a lifelong obsession with books and the written word, Kuchenga
studied creative writing at the Open University. Her work is focused on the
perils of loving, being loved and women living out loud throughout the ages.
The Library Thief is the ultimate marriage of her passions for history, mystery
and rebels. She currently resides in Manchester, where she is determined to
continue living a life worth writing about.
Keep in touch on
social media:
Author website: https://kuchenga.com/
GoodReads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/32054609.Kuchenga_Shenj_
Twitter: https://twitter.com/kuchengcheng
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kuchenga/
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