Summer hours at the robbers library6/29/2023 ![]() ![]() The story winds back and forth in time for each of the main characters. ![]() There's Kit, broken in heart and spirit by a marriage that ends in disaster who moves to Riverton after answering a random ad for a librarian there's Sunny, the "no-schooled" pre-adolescent child of hippies who is assigned to the library by a judge in Kid's Court for stealing a Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary because all the words that are in all the books are in the dictionary there's Rusty, the failed Wall Street short-seller who arrives in Riverton to search for a hoped-for windfall from a bank deposit made by his mother in 1950 and there are many minor characters from the 'hearts as good as gold' four old guys who visit the library every morning to the immigrant Patels who run the Tip Top Motel. ![]() Halpern, a scholar-in-residence at Middlebury College, places the library at the center of the action and skillfully manages what could have been a trite story about a stock group of characters. But those days are long gone, and the main sign of the town's past glory is the library, built as one of the Carnegie libraries in 1912. Riverton had been a thriving mill town, employing hundreds and supporting citizens from barbers to doctors, from businessmen to laborers. Sue Halpern's eighth book, "Summer Hours at the Robbers Library" (Harper, 2018) is a fast-paced and complex novel about a diverse cast of characters in a small New Hampshire town that is well past its best days. ![]()
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