<p>No one had ever tried a caper like this before. The goods were kept in a secure room under constant scrutiny deep inside a crowded building with guards at the exits. The team picked for the job included two old hands known only as Paul and Swede but all depended on a fresh face a kid from Pinetown North Carolina. In the Depression some fellows were willing to try anything -- even a heist in the rare book room of the New York Public Library.</p><p>In <em>Thieves of Book Row </em> Travis McDade tells the gripping tale of the worst book-theft ring in American history and the intrepid detective who brought it down. Author of <em>The Book Thief</em> and a curator of rare books McDade transforms painstaking research into a rich portrait of Manhattan&#39;s Book Row in the 1920s and &#39;30s where organized crime met America&#39;s cultural treasures in dark and crowded shops along gritty Fourth Avenue. Dealers such as Harry Gold a tough native of the Lower East Side became experts in recognizing the value of books and recruiting a pool of thieves to steal them -- many of them unemployed men who drifted up the Bowery or huddled around fires in Central Park&#39;s shantytowns. When Paul and Swede brought a new recruit into his shop Gold trained him for the biggest score yet: a first edition of Edgar Allan Poe&#39;s <em>Al Aaraaf Tamerlane and Minor Poems.</em> Gold&#39;s recruit cased the rare-book room for weeks searching for a weakness. When he found one he struck leading to a breathtaking game of wits between Gold and NYPL special investigator G. William Bergquist.</p><p>Both a fast-paced true-life thriller <em>Thieves of Book Row</em> provides a fascinating look at the history of crime and literary culture.</p>
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