Alistair Ian Blyth's Card Catalogue is a book about books. Set in
Bucharest in the decade after the Revolution, it presents a series of
dreamlike narratives loosely linked by the subject of libraries: book
hoarding, book hunting, book burning, and, above all, the dreams of
infinite other books--past and future--that every individual codex
volume inspires. Whether he is describing his encounters with Gribski
(whose strange hidden library in Bucharest he is to see but once) or
itemizing the various books whose existence he has dreamed (including "a
collection of children's paeans to Ceausescu bound in the same volume as
a slim commentary on Pound's Canto XIV"), Blyth shows himself to be a
card catalogue unto himself. In the tradition of Jorge Luis Borges,
Italo Calvino, and Alberto Manguel, this book is bound to please.