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The Bad Book Affair - (Mobile Library Mystery) by Ian Sansom (Paperback)

The Bad Book Affair - (Mobile Library Mystery) by  Ian Sansom (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 13.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Israel Armstrong, one of literature's most unlikely detectives, returns for more crime-solving adventure in this hilarious fourth novel in the Mobile Library series.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>"[Israel's] fish-out-of-water dilemmas and encounters with kooky locals will resonate with Alexander McCall Smith fans." --<i>Publishers Weekly</i></p> </p>Author Ian Sansom "clearly loves a good laugh" (<i>Washington Post</i>), as his delightful mystery series featuring rumpled, fish-out-of-water, Jewish vegetarian librarian Israel Armstrong indisputably proves. <i>The Bad Book Affair </i>is Israel's fourth hilarious adventure as he tools around Ireland in a rattletrap bookmobile trying to solve the mystery of a missing teenage girl while trying to keep his mess of a personal life in order. Sansom's Mobile Library Mystery series has made a big splash with critics on both sides of "the Pond." The <i>New York Times Book Review </i>loves their "formidable reserves of insight and humor,"<i> </i>while the <i>London Times </i>calls Israel "one of the most original and exciting amateur sleuths around."</p><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><p>Israel Armstrong--the hapless duffle coat wearing, navel-gazing librarian who solves crimes and domestic problems whilst driving a mobile library around the north coast of Ireland--finds himself on the brink of thirty. But any celebration, planned or otherwise, must be put on hold when a troubled teenager--the daughter of a local politician--mysteriously vanishes. Israel suspects the girl's disappearance has something to do with his lending her <em>American Pastoral</em> from the library's special Unshelved category. Now he has to find the lost teen before he's run out of town--while he attempts to recover from his recent breakup with his girlfriend, Gloria, and tries to figure out where in Tumdrum a Jewish vegetarian might celebrate his thirtieth birthday.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"...the dialogue is certainly amusing. Readers who enjoy send-ups of crime novels, talk-radio hosts, city pomposities and rural eccentricities will queue up for the series..."--<em>Kirkus Reviews</em><br><br>"[Sansom's] fish-out-of-water dilemmas and encounters with kooky locals will resonate with Alexander McCall Smith fans"--<em>Publishers Weekly</em><br><br>"[THE BOOK STOPS HERE] succeeds as a light farce . . . The book's high point is the acerbic portrayal of the personalities making up the Mobile Library Steering Committee, but most every page will elicit a grin, if not a chuckle."--<em>Publishers Weekly</em><br><br>"[a] comic masterpiece"--The Belfast Telegraph<br><br>"A clever, affectionate poke in the ribs.... Sansom...discovers an exceptionally lively world."--Kirkus Reviews<br><br>"A humane, big-hearted and sometimes devastatingly funny book."--LA Weekly<br><br>"A wonderfully comic novel...Ian Sansom has an acute sense of the absurd, and does not allow sympathetic intimacy to stand in the way of some wicked barbs."--Daily Mail (London)<br><br>"A work of tender and bonhomous refraction. ...Sansom is emphatically unpretentious in his portrayal of the ordinary lives of ordinary folk, and his gentle humor buoys their humdrum lives...pleasing, amusing and honest."--New York Newsday<br><br>"An endearing first novel...People cross paths, hook up, split up, say good-bye. Narrative unity derives less from the story than from the amiable persona of the narrator himself, in all his rambling, digressive warmth, and his mild insistence throughout--Daily Telegraph (London)<br>

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