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Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore Paperback – September 24, 2013
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The New York Times Bestseller
A Winner of the Alex Award, a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for First Fiction, named a Best Book of the Year by NPR, Los Angeles Times, and San Francisco Chronicle
The Great Recession has shuffled Clay Jannon away from life as a San Francisco web-design drone and into the aisles of Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore. But after a few days on the job, Clay discovers that the store is more curious than either its name or its gnomic owner might suggest. The customers are few, and they never seem to buy anything―instead, they "check out" large, obscure volumes from strange corners of the store. Suspicious, Clay engineers an analysis of the clientele's behavior, seeking help from his variously talented friends. But when they bring their findings to Mr. Penumbra, they discover the bookstore's secrets extend far beyond its walls. Rendered with irresistible brio and dazzling intelligence, Robin Sloan's Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore is exactly what it sounds like: an establishment you have to enter and will never want to leave.
- Print length288 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPicador Paper
- Publication dateSeptember 24, 2013
- Dimensions5.47 x 0.76 x 8.24 inches
- ISBN-101250037751
- ISBN-13978-1250037756
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“A real tour de force [and] a beautiful fable...The reader is swept along by Sloan's enthusiasm.” ―George Saunders, BLIP Magazine
“Part love letter to books, part technological meditation, part thrilling adventure, part requiem... Eminently enjoyable, full of warmth and intelligence.” ―The New York Times Book Review
“A book about passion--for books, for history, for the future...There is nothing about Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore that I didn't love.” ―Cory Doctorow
“Delightful.” ―Graham Joyce, The Washington Post
“An irresistible page-turning novel.” ―Newsweek
“One of the most thoughtful and fun reading experiences you're likely to have this year...There's so much largehearted magic in this book.” ―NPR
“A jaunty, surprisingly old-fashioned fantasy about the places where old and new ways of accessing knowledge meet...[Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore] cleverly uses the technological age in the service of its fantasy...Sloan's ultimate answer to the mystery of what keeps people solving Penumbra's puzzle is worth turning pages to find out.” ―Tess Taylor, San Francisco Chronicle
“[A] winning literary adventure...Sloan grounds his jigsawlike plot with Big Ideas about the quest for permanence in the digital age.” ―Thom Geier, Entertainment Weekly
“Fantastic...I loved diving into the world that Sloan created, both the high-tech fantasyland of Google and the ancient analog society. It's packed full of geeky allusions and wonderful characters, and is a celebration of books, whether they're made of dead trees or digits.” ―Jonathan H. Liu, Wired, GeekDad
“Sloan makes bits and bytes appear beautiful. ...The rebels' journey to crack the code--grappling with an ancient cult, using secret passwords and hidden doorways--will excite anyone's inner child.” ―The Economist
“Man, is this book fun--especially for any book nerd who isn't in denial about living in the modern age. If you love physical books (the smell! The feel!) but wouldn't give up your iPhone for any reason, if you like puzzles and geeky allusions and bookish cults and quests, then this book is for you. It also glows in the dark.” ―Emily Temple, Flavorpill
“What makes Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore so impressive is Sloan's great gift for storytelling and his cast of brilliant, eccentric characters. Think of this novel as part Haruki Murakami, part Dan Brown and part Joseph Cornell: a surreal adventure, an existential detective story and a cabinet of wonders at which to marvel.” ―Carmela Ciuraru, Newsday
“Beguiling...The plot is as tight as nesting boxes, or whatever their digital equivalent...Sly and infectious.” ―Karen R. Long, The Cleveland Plain Dealer
“Sloan isn't just exploring new ideas, but laying the groundwork for a new genre of literature. While the influence of Neal Stephenson and William Gibson is present, Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore is something all its own: a technocratic adventure where every riddle and puzzle is solved with very real gadgets, a humanizing reflection on technology that evokes the tone of a fairy tale, a brisk and brainy story imbued with such confidence that it will leave you with nothing but excitement about the things to come.” ―Kevin Nguyen, Grantland
“In a time when actual books are filling up tag-sale dollar boxes, along with VHS tapes and old beepers, Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore reminds us that there is an intimate, adventurous joy in the palpable papery things called novels, and in the warm little secret societies we used to call ‘bookstores.' Robin Sloan's novel is delightfully funny, provocative, deft, and even thrilling. And for reasons more than just nostalgia, I could not stop turning these actual pages.” ―John Hodgman
“The love child of Erin Morgenstern's The Night Circus and Neal Stephenson's Reamde, Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore is a hugely enjoyable story of friendship, living, and the lure of the mysterious. It's a good-hearted, optimistic book about the meeting of modern technology and medieval mystery, a tonal road map to a positive relationship between the old world and the new. It's a book that gets it. Plus, you know: cryptographic cults, vertical bookshops, hot geeks, theft, and the pursuit of immortality. I loved it. And yes, I too would freeze my head.” ―Nick Harkaway
“Robin Sloan is a skilled architect, and Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore is an ingeniously designed space, full of mysteries and codes. A clever, entertaining story that also manages to be a thought-provoking meditation on progress, information and technology. Full of intelligence and humor.” ―Charles Yu
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
HELP WANTED
LOST IN THE SHADOWS of the shelves, I almost fall off the ladder. I am exactly halfway up. The floor of the bookstore is far below me, the surface of a planet I’ve left behind. The tops of the shelves loom high above, and it’s dark up there—the books are packed in close, and they don’t let any light through. The air might be thinner, too. I think I see a bat.
I am holding on for dear life, one hand on the ladder, the other on the lip of a shelf, fingers pressed white. My eyes trace a line above my knuckles, searching the spines—and there, I spot it. The book I’m looking for.
But let me back up.
* * *
My name is Clay Jannon and those were the days when I rarely touched paper.
I’d sit at my kitchen table and start scanning help-wanted ads on my laptop, but then a browser tab would blink and I’d get distracted and follow a link to a long magazine article about genetically modified wine grapes. Too long, actually, so I’d add it to my reading list. Then I’d follow another link to a book review. I’d add the review to my reading list, too, then download the first chapter of the book—third in a series about vampire police. Then, help-wanted ads forgotten, I’d retreat to the living room, put my laptop on my belly, and read all day. I had a lot of free time.
I was unemployed, a result of the great food-chain contraction that swept through America in the early twenty-first century, leaving bankrupt burger chains and shuttered sushi empires in its wake.
The job I lost was at the corporate headquarters of NewBagel, which was based not in New York or anywhere else with a tradition of bagel-making but instead here in San Francisco. The company was very small and very new. It was founded by a pair of ex-Googlers who wrote software to design and bake the platonic bagel: smooth crunchy skin, soft doughy interior, all in a perfect circle. It was my first job out of art school, and I started as a designer, making marketing materials to explain and promote this tasty toroid: menus, coupons, diagrams, posters for store windows, and, once, an entire booth experience for a baked-goods trade show.
There was lots to do. First, one of the ex-Googlers asked me to take a crack at redesigning the company’s logo. It had been big bouncy rainbow letters inside a pale brown circle; it looked pretty MS Paint. I redesigned if using a newish typeface with sharp black serifs that I thought sort of evoked the boxes and daggers of Hebrew letters. It gave NewBagel some gravitas and it won me an award from San Francisco’s AIGA chapter. Then, when I mentioned to the other ex-Googler that I knew how to code (sort of), she put me in charge of the website. So I redesigned that, too, and then managed a small marketing budget keyed to search terms like “bagel” and “breakfast” and “topology.” I was also the voice of @NewBagel on Twitter and attracted a few hundred followers with a mix of breakfast trivia and digital coupons.
None of this represented the glorious next stage of human evolution, but I was learning things. I was moving up. But then the economy took a dip, and it turns out that in a recession, people want good old-fashioned bubbly oblong bagels, not smooth alien-spaceship bagels, not even if they’re sprinkled with precision-milled rock salt.
The ex-Googlers were accustomed to success and they would not go quietly. They quickly rebranded to become the Old Jerusalem Bagel Company and abandoned the algorithm entirely so the bagels started coming out blackened and irregular. They instructed me to make the website look old-timey, a task that burdened my soul and earned me zero AIGA awards. The marketing budget dwindled, then disappeared. There was less and less to do. I wasn’t learning anything and I wasn’t moving anywhere.
Finally, the ex-Googlers threw in the towel and moved to Costa Rica. The ovens went cold and the website went dark. There was no money for severance, but I got to keep my company-issued MacBook and the Twitter account.
So then, after less than a year of employment, I was jobless. It turned out it was more than just the food chains that had contracted. People were living in motels and tent cities. The whole economy suddenly felt like a game of musical chairs, and I was convinced I needed to grab a seat, any seat, as fast as I could.
That was a depressing scenario when I considered the competition. I had friends who were designers like me, but they had already designed world-famous websites or advanced touch-screen interfaces, not just the logo for an upstart bagel shop. I had friends who worked at Apple. My best friend, Neel, ran his own company. Another year at NewBagel and I would have been in good shape, but I hadn’t lasted long enough to build my portfolio, or even get particularly good at anything. I had an art-school thesis on Swiss typography (1957–1983) and I had a three-page website.
But I kept at it with the help-wanted ads. My standards were sliding swiftly. At first I had insisted I would only work at a company with a mission I believed in. Then I thought maybe it would be fine as long as I was learning something new. After that I decided it just couldn’t be evil. Now I was carefully delineating my personal definition of evil.
It was paper that saved me. It turned out that I could stay focused on job hunting if I got myself away from the internet, so I would print out a ream of help-wanted ads, drop my phone in a drawer, and go for a walk. I’d crumple up the ads that required too much experience and deposit them in dented green trash cans along the way, and so by the time I’d exhausted myself and hopped on a bus back home, I’d have two or three promising prospectuses folded in my back pocket, ready for follow-up.
This routine did lead me to a job, though not in the way I’d expected.
San Francisco is a good place for walks if your legs are strong. The city is a tiny square punctuated by steep hills and bounded on three sides by water, and as a result, there are surprise vistas everywhere. You’ll be walking along, minding your own business with a fistful of printouts, and suddenly the ground will fall away and you’ll see straight down to the bay, with the buildings lit up orange and pink along the way. San Francisco’s architectural style didn’t really make inroads anywhere else in the country, and even when you live here and you’re used to it, it lends the vistas a strangeness: all the tall narrow houses, the windows like eyes and teeth, the wedding-cake filigree. And looming behind it all, if you’re facing the right direction, you’ll see the rusty ghost of the Golden Gate Bridge.
I had followed one strange vista down a line of steep stairstepped sidewalks, then walked along the water, taking the very long way home. I had followed the line of old piers—carefully skirting the raucous chowder of Fisherman’s Wharf—and watched seafood restaurants fade into nautical engineering firms and then social media startups. Finally, when my stomach rumbled, signaling its readiness for lunch, I had turned back in toward the city.
Whenever I walked the streets of San Francisco, I’d watch for HELP WANTED signs in windows—which is not something you really do, right? I should probably be more suspicious of those. Legitimate employers use Craigslist.
Sure enough, the 24-hour bookstore did not have the look of a legitimate employer:
HELP WANTED
Late Shift
Specific Requirements
Good Benefits
Now: I was pretty sure “24-hour bookstore” was a euphemism for something. It was on Broadway, in a euphemistic part of town. My help-wanted hike had taken me far from home; the place next door was called Booty’s and it had a sign with neon legs that crossed and uncrossed.
I pushed the bookstore’s glass door. It made a bell tinkle brightly up above, and I stepped slowly through. I did not realize at the time what an important threshold I had just crossed.
Inside: imagine the shape and volume of a normal bookstore turned up on its side. This place was absurdly narrow and dizzyingly tall, and the shelves went all the way up—three stories of books, maybe more. I craned my neck back (why do bookstores always make you do uncomfortable things with your neck?) and the shelves faded smoothly into the shadows in a way that suggested they might just go on forever.
The shelves were packed close together, and it felt like I was standing at the border of a forest—not a friendly California forest, either, but an old Transylvanian forest, a forest full of wolves and witches and dagger-wielding bandits all waiting just beyond moonlight’s reach. There were ladders that clung to the shelves and rolled side to side. Usually those seem charming, but here, stretching up into the gloom, they were ominous. They whispered rumors of accidents in the dark.
So I stuck to the front half of the store, where bright midday light pressed in and presumably kept the wolves at bay. The wall around and above the door was glass, thick square panes set into a grid of black iron, and arched across them, in tall golden letters, it said (in reverse):
Below that, set in the hollow of the arch, there was a symbol—two hands, perfectly flat, rising out of an open book.
So who was Mr. Penumbra?
“Hello, there,” a quiet voice called from the stacks. A figure emerged—a man, tall and skinny like one of the ladders, draped in a light gray button-down and a blue cardigan. He tottered as he walked, running a long hand along the shelves for support. When he came out of the shadows, I saw that his sweater matched his eyes, which were also blue, riding low in nests of wrinkles. He was very old.
He nodded at me and gave a weak wave. “What do you seek in these shelves?”
That was a good line, and for some reason, it made me feel comfortable. I asked, “Am I speaking to Mr. Penumbra?”
“I am Penumbra”—he nodded—“and I am the custodian of this place.”
I didn’t quite realize I was going to say it until I did: “I’m looking for a job.”
Penumbra blinked once, then nodded and tottered over to the desk set beside the front door. It was a massive block of dark-whorled wood, a solid fortress on the forest’s edge. You could probably defend it for days in the event of a siege from the shelves.
“Employment.” Penumbra nodded again. He slid up onto the chair behind the desk and regarded me across its bulk. “Have you ever worked at a bookstore before?”
“Well,” I said, “when I was in school I waited tables at a seafood restaurant, and the owner sold his own cookbook.” It was calledThe Secret Cod and it detailed thirty-one different ways to— You get it. “That probably doesn’t count.”
“No, it does not, but no matter,” Penumbra said. “Prior experience in the book trade is of little use to you here.”
Wait—maybe this place really was all erotica. I glanced down and around, but glimpsed no bodices, ripped or otherwise. In fact, just next to me there was a stack of dusty Dashiell Hammetts on a low table. That was a good sign.
“Tell me,” Penumbra said, “about a book you love.”
I knew my answer immediately. No competition. I told him, “Mr. Penumbra, it’s not one book, but a series. It’s not the best writing and it’s probably too long and the ending is terrible, but I’ve read it three times, and I met my best friend because we were both obsessed with it back in sixth grade.” I took a breath. “I love The Dragon-Song Chronicles.”
Penumbra cocked an eyebrow, then smiled. “That is good, very good,” he said, and his smile grew, showing jostling white teeth. Then he squinted at me, and his gaze went up and down. “But can you climb a ladder?”
* * *
And that is how I find myself on this ladder, up on the third floor, minus the floor, of Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore. The book I’ve been sent up to retrieve is called AL-ASMARI and it’s about 150 percent of one arm-length to my left. Obviously, I need to return to the floor and scoot the ladder over. But down below, Penumbra is shouting, “Lean, my boy! Lean!”
And wow, do I ever want this job.
Copyright © 2012 by Robin Sloan
Product details
- Publisher : Picador Paper (September 24, 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 288 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1250037751
- ISBN-13 : 978-1250037756
- Item Weight : 9.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.47 x 0.76 x 8.24 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #48,283 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #595 in Magical Realism
- #1,208 in Urban Fantasy (Books)
- #4,196 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Robin Sloan is the author of the novels Sourdough and Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore, published by MCD in the United States, Tokyo Sogensha in Japan, and others around the world. He splits his time between the San Francisco Bay Area and the San Joaquin Valley. His next novel, Moonbound, will arrive in June 2024.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this book engaging and well-paced, with an interesting mix of old and new elements and clever plot subtexts. They appreciate the eclectic collection of odd-ball characters, with one customer noting how the protagonist's optimism and resourcefulness are contagious. The book explores the intersection of modern information technology, with one review highlighting its use of technology to facilitate knowledge discovery. Customers enjoy the writing style, with one noting it's written from the perspective of an aficionado of books.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book's story engaging and entertaining, particularly praising its focus on books, with one customer noting it provides a draw to keep reading.
"...No, this setting isn't the real world. It's better. Apart from anything else, it has the epic fantasy novels of Moffat in it...." Read more
"...Not a common combo, but one that's pulled off well. A very enjoyable read." Read more
"...It’s a perfect book for booklovers who lean toward the mysterious and fantastic, blurring genre lines throughout to afford readers a marvelous..." Read more
"...Why does the book work? Because it's a good, old-fashioned mystery with all of our favorite characters and settings...." Read more
Customers enjoy the mystery elements of the book, which features a mysterious conspiracy, with one customer describing it as a thriller-come-detective story.
"...Finally, setting. The book takes place in some wonderfully bizarre places: a tall, narrow bookstore full of mysterious volumes, an underground..." Read more
"...The book is an easy-reading mystery of interesting history, secret societies, and modern tech. Not a common combo, but one that's pulled off well...." Read more
"...It’s a perfect book for booklovers who lean toward the mysterious and fantastic, blurring genre lines throughout to afford readers a marvelous..." Read more
"...in cloaks, old libraries, wealthy investors, hidden messages and cryptic clues, and an ensemble cast of characters who literally name themselves..." Read more
Customers enjoy the characters in the book, describing them as delightful and an eclectic collection of odd-balls, with one customer noting how the protagonists' optimism and resourcefulness are contagious.
"...Not a Chekhov's gun is left unfired. There are about 20 named characters, and virtually all of them, even most of the minor ones, get to participate..." Read more
"...Clay has an engaging cast of sidekicks - Mr. Penumbra himself, as well as Clay's roommate Mat, a special effects guy, his oldest friend Neel who..." Read more
"...investors, hidden messages and cryptic clues, and an ensemble cast of characters who literally name themselves after DnD classes..." Read more
"...Penumbra's 24 Hour Bookstore we meet a cast of unforgettable, lovable characters...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, noting its wonderful phrasing and tight structure, with one customer highlighting its lightness and another mentioning how it ties into typesetting.
"...He's conscious of language. "Moffat's prose is fine: clear and steady, with just enough sweeping statements about destiny and dragons to keep things..." Read more
"...The book is an easy-reading mystery of interesting history, secret societies, and modern tech. Not a common combo, but one that's pulled off well...." Read more
"...It’s all very strange, but it’s an easy enough job. But Clay can’t resist looking into those books. And there he finds… gibberish...." Read more
"...This is because Sloan employs a casual voice throughout the book that makes you feel like you're hanging out with him at a coffee shop in downtown..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's exploration of modern information technology, with one customer noting how it uses technology to facilitate discovery of knowledge.
"...absurdity of the world, and from masterfully chosen, mostly technological juxtapositions. "..." Read more
"...easy-reading mystery of interesting history, secret societies, and modern tech. Not a common combo, but one that's pulled off well...." Read more
"...It deals heavily with technology, programing and delves into the into the book versus e-reader debate...." Read more
"...The author, Robin Sloan, does a good job melding the world of printed books, duty, immortal works of art and the new electronically available books...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's pacing, describing it as a fast and timely read that maintains a consistent speed throughout.
"...He's conscious of language. "Moffat's prose is fine: clear and steady, with just enough sweeping statements about destiny and dragons to keep things..." Read more
"...Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore is a fine, light read, and a lot of fun. It just could have been much more.... so here's hoping.... someday ;-)" Read more
"...was invented by a cheerful Japanese programmer, and it reads like friendly, accessible poetry. Billy Collins by way of Bill Gates."..." Read more
"...The story is by turns slow and can't-put-it-down, which is probably by design. Most readers need a little breathing time between adrenaline rushes...." Read more
Customers appreciate the plot of the book, describing it as tightly written and relatable, with clever subtexts and elements of fantasy woven throughout the narrative.
"...I don't read "literary fiction". I'm a genre snob. But if this is literary fiction, then I like it. The metaphors and turns of phrase are wonderful. "..." Read more
"...But it has the air of fantasy, of the mysticism inherent in books, of the magic of puzzles and those who devote their lives to solving them...." Read more
"...out the lights, I carried on reading through to the end of this wonderful tale...." Read more
"...a young man's journey into weirdness, which is where Robin Sloan's well conceived and adroitly crafted novel leads...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's blend of old and new elements, highlighting its brilliant integration of historical thoughts and items with contemporary themes.
"...The book is an easy-reading mystery of interesting history, secret societies, and modern tech. Not a common combo, but one that's pulled off well...." Read more
"...does a good job melding the world of printed books, duty, immortal works of art and the new electronically available books...." Read more
"...They were all very distinct and real and just really lovely to read...." Read more
"...thing about this novel is how it makes the case for good old-fashioned ink-and-paper books, and re-affirms how they will never really become..." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2013I found this via i09's list of best science fiction and fantasy books of 2012, which is funny, because it really isn't either. What it is, though, is a book for people who love science fiction and fantasy and books and technology. It reminds me of William Gibson's recent work, not because it's dystopian (it isn't, not even slightly), but because it's like science fiction set in the present.
It's also beautifully written. I don't read "literary fiction". I'm a genre snob. But if this is literary fiction, then I like it. The metaphors and turns of phrase are wonderful. "Feeding hours like dry twigs into the fire," the author writes. He's conscious of language. "Moffat's prose is fine: clear and steady, with just enough sweeping statements about destiny and dragons to keep things well inflated," he says, describing the fictional fantasy novels which play such an important role in the plot, and it could almost be a description of his own writing. He also has semicolons, and he knows how to use them.
There's humour that comes from an affectionate, almost loving, way of seeing the absurdity of the world, and from masterfully chosen, mostly technological juxtapositions. "The thinnest tendrils of dawn are creeping in from the east. People in New York are softly starting to tweet." Later, the protagonist's Googler girlfriend buys a New York Times "but couldn't figure out how to operate it".
I only spotted a single typo ("left" instead of "loft"), and that level of professionalism is vanishingly rare.
So: language, 5 stars. I wish every other book I've read recently was written more like this one.
Plot, then. The plot is beautifully woven. Not a Chekhov's gun is left unfired. There are about 20 named characters, and virtually all of them, even most of the minor ones, get to participate in the great wrap-up of the epilogue. It's missing one element of the classic happy ending, but that feels absolutely right, and it's better than a happy ending: it's a beautiful ending. It's a rich, wonderful ending. I've often been disappointed by weak endings to books I've otherwise enjoyed, but this is one of my favourite endings of any book I can think of. Five stars for plot, even if the protagonist's ultimate triumph is built on an unlikely mistake earlier in the book, and even if a couple of the events are also unlikely (like Google allowing a relatively minor project to take all their server time for three seconds).
And partway through it turns into a heist novel! I love heist novels.
Characters. I liked the main character almost immediately. He's having a somewhat difficult time, but he has perspective and wry humour about it, and he doesn't whine. He's capable of admiring and respecting other people greatly, including intelligent, strong women: "I am really into the kind of girl you can impress with a prototype," he says. His love for his eccentric, elderly mentor is an important part of what drives the plot.
The other characters are all quirky without being self-conscious about it, all (seen through the protagonist's eyes) people of skill and worth and, in general, goodwill. I loved every one of them. Five stars and at least three cheers for the characters.
Finally, setting. The book takes place in some wonderfully bizarre places: a tall, narrow bookstore full of mysterious volumes, an underground cavern of cultish scholarship, a textile museum, a storage unit for museum artifacts in the dryness of Nevada where motorized shelves move constantly in a stately dance. That last was totally unlikely. Wouldn't you want to keep valuable, rare items still? And yet it the feel of it was just right, much more so than a more realistic, static building would have been.
Even the protagonist's apartment gradually fills with his artist roommate's strange and wonderful miniature city.
You could say that the setting is the real world, but you'd be wrong. Aldus Manutius existed, but his friend Gerritszoon didn't, and Gerritszoon's font isn't on every electronic device, because it doesn't exist either. Nor, presumably, does the cult of scholars known as the Unbroken Spine. I have no idea whether Google really works the way it's described, but it wouldn't surprise me at all to hear that it doesn't. And there's one very minor mistake that I know is a mistake: what the main character calls "middleware" is not what middleware actually is.
No, this setting isn't the real world. It's better. Apart from anything else, it has the epic fantasy novels of Moffat in it.
Five stars for the setting as well, making it a perfect 20 for this book. Oh, there are things I've quibbled about, but none of them significantly diminished my enjoyment. I'll be looking for more of Robin Sloan's books. I hope they're like this one.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2020I am more of a genre reader, mostly reading SFF. I had picked this book up awhile ago when it was getting some nice attention in fantasy circles. I was under the impression it was more of a modern-day/contemporary fantasy. It's really more in the contemporary fiction/novel category in my mind. I guess it's a bit fantasy adjacent, but I wouldn't really put this in the fantasy genre.
Our protagonist's voice is extremely engaging and easy to read. A young web-developer caught in San Francisco in an economic downturn, Clay Jannon ends up taking a job as the night clerk at Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore (such a great name). This leads to Clay catching on that there's more to this book store than meets the eye and starting to unravel the mysteries hidden in the "Waybacklist" of the towering shelves in the back of the store.
Clay has an engaging cast of sidekicks - Mr. Penumbra himself, as well as Clay's roommate Mat, a special effects guy, his oldest friend Neel who made big money in the tech boom, and Clay's sort-of-new-girlfriend Kat, an employee and the biggest fan-girl of Google.
The book is an easy-reading mystery of interesting history, secret societies, and modern tech. Not a common combo, but one that's pulled off well. A very enjoyable read.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2013Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore is a romp of a first novel by Robin Sloan. It’s a perfect book for booklovers who lean toward the mysterious and fantastic, blurring genre lines throughout to afford readers a marvelous time.
The novel begins when Clay Jannon, the first-person narrator, is responding to an advertisement for a clerk in a 24-hour bookstore in San Francisco. Clay was educated as a graphic artist, but he’s finding jobs scarce since his work designing a logo and a website for a bagel bakery and acting as the “voice” of @NewBagel on Twitter — definitely a new economy sort of job. When the bakery went bust along with the rest of the economy less than a year after Clay took the job, he was left jobless with a very slim resume. So the help wanted ad in the window of the bookstore seems like a godsend, even though Clay questions whether the bookstore is a legitimate employer — after all, legitimate employers advertise on Craigslist, not in their windows, right? Clay suspects that “24-Hour Bookstore” is a euphemism for something distasteful.
He’s wrong about that, but he’s right that there’s something weird about the place. For one thing, there are almost no customers. In fact, there are almost no books, either, at least not the normal sort of books you would expect to be on offer. The bookstore is oddly shaped, too:
"[I]magine the shape and volume of a normal bookstore turned up on its side. This place was absurdly narrow and dizzyingly tall, and the shelves went all the way up — three stories of books, maybe more.…
"The shelves were packed close together, and it felt like I was standing at the border of a forest — not a friendly California forest, either, but an old Transylvanian forest, a forest full of wolves and witches and dagger-wielding bandits all waiting just beyond moonlight’s reach. There were ladders that clung to the shelves and rolled side to side. Usually those seem charming, but here, stretching up into the gloom, they were ominous. They whispered rumors of accidents in the dark."
A dedicated group of individuals visit the store to borrow books from the special collection housed in those ominous shelves; they never pay any money, and they ask for the volumes by the name on the spine, which appears to be simply the last name of the author.
Mr. Penumbra hires Clay for the night-time shift, from 10:00 p.m. until 6:00 a.m. He tells him not to look into any of the books in the back of the store, the ones on those high shelves, but only retrieve them for customers. And Clay must also keep precise records of all transactions, including not just what book was given to whom, but the time, the customer’s appearance, the customer’s state of mind, and anything else that Clay might observe, down to the material of which the customer’s coat buttons are made. It’s all very strange, but it’s an easy enough job.
But Clay can’t resist looking into those books. And there he finds… gibberish. And then Clay becomes curious about the mysteries in the store and tries to unravel them. It is a trip that will lead him deep into data networks and across the country, and give him a fair bit of insight into himself.
Sloan’s novel is about the intersection of books and technology, a subject of intense concern to many of us who love books in all their many forms, books as art, books as objects, books as repositories of information, books as sources of pleasure. The writing is lively and the plot is deliciously complicated. The novel contains both joy and melancholy, but ultimately, it is forward-looking, about how anyone can find his or her own place in the new world in which we find ourselves.
It may seem strange that I see this book as straddling genres; there are no spells, no magic, no wizards (excepting always those who are wizards with technology, which mostly means Google employees in this novel). But it has the air of fantasy, of the mysticism inherent in books, of the magic of puzzles and those who devote their lives to solving them. And, of course, there’s a secret society; maybe that’s enough. Or maybe I just loved this book so much that I want everyone to have the joy of reading it. Take my word for it, fantasy fans: you’ll like Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore.
Top reviews from other countries
- Macey89Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 3, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Hidden quests, secret societies and books - all brought together through the power of modern technology
When unemployed graphic designer Clay takes a job working nights at Mr Penumbra’s 24-hour bookstore, all he wants is a job. But it soon becomes clear that the bookstore, and its enigmatic owner, are more than they seem.
As well as the traditional books you’d expect to find in a bookshop, there’s also a second set of books – written in code and hidden away from the eyes of prying customers. Throughout the quiet night shift, an assortment of people occasionally hurry in to borrow one of these books, whilst returning another. Clay’s role is to note down what book is borrowed with a description of the borrower, but not to ask questions.
Inevitably, Clay starts to wonder about what this strange collection of people are up to. Finding the codes unintelligible, he and his friends instead draw on their technological skills to help track the pattern of borrowing in a way that they can understand. Unwittingly, he soon uncovers a clandestine literary society working to decode the mysteries around a centuries’ old secret.
It’s hard to say more without revealing too much of the plot, but this is actually one of my favourite recent reads. There’s not much not to like – hidden quests, secret societies and books, books and more books, all brought together through the power of Google and modern technology. It’s basically like a more literary version of a Dan Brown novel that’s been written just for book enthusiasts.
It perfectly contrasts the old and the new. There are people who believe that by bypassing years of work in a few computer strokes, Clay has ‘cheated’ and shouldn’t be allowed to share his knowledge – that this knowledge is only valuable if you’ve really worked for it and that Clay and his friends are devaluing the books themselves. In contrast, there are others who embrace a new way of tackling an old problem and see technology as enabler that will help them to achieve their overall goals.
It’s all about combining the old and the new in a way that works for all – something that strikes a chord in our modern world of e-readers, blogs and the like.
- Sandra LReviewed in Canada on May 17, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars Who doesn't love a book about books!? It's a perfect read for those who love puzzles, technology, typography and graphic design.
My Thoughts:
1. Based on the synopsis I was expecting a slow-paced mystery read but I couldn't be more wrong. The plot was adventurous, addicting, fast-paced and not to mention there were some funny moments too!
2. The way in which the book was written made it a very entertaining read. Robin Sloan has a unique writing style that makes it so easy for readers to understand and grasp such complex ideas in the plot.
3. I adore all the characters. It's very rare to read a book that has this wide of a variety and range of characters. But at the same time, I liked how the author kept the characters and plot realistic and believable.
4. I really enjoyed reading Clay's character development as the plot progresses. Because the protagonist is so hilarious and geeky, it makes this book a perfect light-hearted and fun read.
5. I'm glad the author decided to include an epilogue; it brought the story to a perfect end. My favorite part of the whole book has to be that last page <3
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primeballerinaReviewed in Germany on December 21, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Pflichtlektüre für Buchliebhaber!
""Rosemary, why do you love books so much?" - [...] "Well, actually, I love books because books are my best friends." Then he smiled."
Dieses Buch ist ein einziges Paradies für Buchliebhaber - schon vom ersten Satz an habe ich mich absolut heimisch gefühlt, in dieser verqueren Buchhandlung, mit so hohen Regalen, dass überall rollende Leitern stehen. Um die Bücher ganz oben anzuschauen, muss man den Kopf weitmöglichst in den Nacken legen. Dazu ist dieser Roman hochaktuell - da geht es um E-Books, E-Reader, Amazon, Google, besonders eine Szene hat es mir angetan: eine junge Frau kommt in die Buchhandlung und zeigt auf ihrem Smartphone die Produktseite eines Buches auf Amazon - sie hat es dort gefunden, möchte es aber in der kleinen Buchhandlung kaufen. Ist das nicht entzückend?
""I did not know people your age still read books," Penumbra says. He raises an eyebrow. "I was under the impresssion they read everything on their mobile phones.""
Ich bin auf den ersten hundert Seiten kaum aus dem Schmunzeln herausgekommen. Es geht um Bücher, ums Lesen, um diese ganz besondere Buchhandlung. Dann geht es um ein merkwürdiges Rätsel, welches seit 500 Jahren ungelöst ist, wir erfahren viel über den Größenwahnsinn von Google und besuchen schließlich einen unterirdischen Lesesaal, welcher sich hinter einem Bücherregal verbirgt. Wie gesagt - es ist ein Paradies.
"There's a stack of books on the table and a metal cup with pointy pencils that smell fresh and sharp. In the stack, there are copies of 'Moby-Dick', 'Ulysses', 'The Invisible Man' - this is a bar for bibliophiles."
Clay ist ein sympathischer junger Mann. Nach seinem Studium arbeitete er erfolgreich für ein junges Start-Up-Unternehmen, doch nach nur einem Jahr kam die Wirtschaftskrise und so stand Clay ohne Job da. Deswegen arbeitet er nun nachts, von 22 Uhr bis 6 Uhr in Penumbras Buchhandlung. Auch die anderen Charaktere sind - so verschieden sie auch alle sind - wahnsinnig liebenswürdig und auch wenn sich dieser Roman eher wie ein Young Adult Roman liest, so liest es sich so flüssig, leicht und gerne. Ich könnte einfach stundenlang darüber schwärmen! Übrigens: diese Ausgabe leuchtet sogar im Dunkeln!
"Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore" ist für alle, die Bücher und das Lesen über alles lieben, absolute Pflichtlektüre!
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Wagner MacedoReviewed in Brazil on April 16, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Livro excelente
Me diverti demais com esse livro, não consegui parar de ler.
É um livro nerd, mas acho que todos devem ler, mesmo que não seja nerd o bastante, afinal no mundo de hoje todo mundo é um pouco nerd.
- lajpat rayReviewed in India on November 9, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars "The 24-Hour Bookshop" by Pennumera: *Title:* The 24-Hour Bookshop *Author:* Pennumera
The 24-Hour Bookshop" by Pennumera is a heartwarming and thought-provoking novella that celebrates the magic of books and bookstores. The story revolves around a mysterious 24-hour bookshop that appears overnight, transforming the lives of those who enter.