
The NYPL was tipped off to the alleged theft when Doyle New York, an auction house based in Manhattan, alerted library officials in June of 2014 that several books with library markings had come in for appraisal and consignment. The would-be consignor, Margaret Tanchuk of Long Island, New York, said the books had been in her family for nearly three decades. The NYPL explained to Doyle that the contested books had never been deaccessioned and had been illegally removed sometime between 1988 and 1991.
Tanchuk then offered to sell the items to the NYPL for what library officials called a "significant amount." The NYPL declined, and Tanchuk initiated legal proceedings to have the books declared hers.
Tanchuk told the New York Daily News that she uncovered the books while putting her mother's estate in order. Her father, a Long Island jewelry dealer, "developed a network for buying and selling valuable items -- often jewelry, but on occasion other rare and valuable assets as well." Both parents are now deceased. Tanchuk's lawyer maintained that his client is "bewildered and horrified that the U.S. Attorney would think for a moment that she would do anything illegal."
Over at Philobiblos, Jeremy Dibbell turned up an old newspaper account about "Work Book No. 2" showing that the manuscript had been originally discovered in a New Jersey resident's attic in 1924. The famous book dealer A. S. W. Rosenbach pounced on that rare find and likely sold it to the NYPL soon thereafter. A photocopy of "Work Book No. 2" in the Hall papers at the American Philosophical Society lists the original as belonging to the NYPL.
While Tanchuk and her counsel acknowledge that NYPL may once have owned the books, they contend that since the library failed to pursue the possibly purloined material sooner, it lost its legal right to the books. Her complaint states: "...not once during those 24-27 years did the NYPL make any effort to claim (or re-claim) the contested items, made no announcement of its loss or misplacement, did not report the contested items missing to the police or any other law enforcement agency, did not make any claim to an insurer and did not generate a single internal document acknowledging the loss or misplacement of the contested items."
Library officials, however, note that it is not unusual for stolen material to resurface after years or decades from research institutions with collections as vast as the NYPL's. In a statement released to media, NYPL spokesman Ken Weine said, "This material was evidently stolen from the Library, and now someone is trying to profit from it. We will aggressively work to ensure that this material is returned to the public domain where it belongs."

Should it be any surprise that this year, which also marks fifty years since the poet's death, brings more Eliot-related news? In March the Boston Globe reported that the seven-bedroom house in Gloucester, Massachusetts, where Eliot summered as a child was purchased in late 2014 by the UK-based T.S. Eliot Foundation. The nonprofit plans to turn the $1.3-million seaside home into a writers' retreat, slated to open in 2016.

Images: T.S. Eliot in the Harvard 1910 Class Album, Courtesy Harvard University Archives, HUD 310.04.5. Young Eliot book jacket via Macmillan.

Medieval poet John Gower reprises his unlikely yet likable role as narrator and detective in Bruce Holsinger's new novel, The Invention of Fire (William Morrow, $26.99). A follow up to last year's A Burnable Book, this tale begins when sixteen corpses are found clogging a London privy channel. Gross! Holsinger, a medieval scholar at the University of Virginia, revels in this kind of pungent, atmospheric detail. We quickly learn how these poor souls met their gruesome end: "Handgonnes. A word new to me in that moment, though one that would shape and fill the weeks to come. I looked out over the graves pocking the St. Bart's churchyard, their inhabitants victims of pestilence, accident, hunger, and crime, yet despite their numberless fates it seemed that man was ever inventing new ways to die."
Gower's sleuthing sidekick, Geoffrey Chaucer, reappears too, as do the city's many maudlyns (prostitutes) and crooked officials. As in A Burnable Book, Holsinger succeeds where many historical novelists fail, in the creation of unique characters--e.g., Cripplegate hermit Piers Goodman, boy cutpurse Jack Norris, and steely widow Hawisia Stone--and sharp, approachable dialogue. Holsinger risks flaming (no pun intended) in taking up the history of guns and its attendant violence, even within the framework of a mystery set more than six hundred years ago, and yet his agenda, if he has one, is obscured.
The Invention of Fire is substantial and smart. Those who enjoy historical fiction will delight in its layered, well-researched narrative.
P.S. Should any reader be interested in the "real" Gower, I spied a 1532 edition of his De Confessione Amantis in Justin Croft's booth at the New York Antiquarian Book Fair earlier this month.

Coming to auction this week at Freeman's in Philadelphia is this neat piece of royal (or Revolutionary War) ephemera: a ticket to King George III's coronation, held "At Mr. Carruther's in New Palace Yard, Westminster" in 1761. The text is printed with some filled-in bits in manuscript; the red wax seal is present and lovely. The auction house estimate is $600-900, on par with what it made when last seen at auction eleven years ago, when Bonhams London sold it for £549 ($825) at the sale of the Enys Collection of autograph manuscripts.

This event was initiated & organized by Dr. Maureen E. Mulvihill (Princeton Research Forum, Princeton NJ; Vice President, Florida Bibliophile Society).
Here is her Schoenberg event webpage (mark of the Cuala Press, Dublin, displayed at foot of page) ~
http://www.floridabibliophilesociety.org/SUBDIR/upcoming-event
Image: Book of Hours, c. 1475-1500. Courtesy of the Florida Bibliophile Society.