B
Brigid Keely
November 20, 2024
I wish I'd read this sooner
A friend of mine suggested I read this book quite a while ago. They know me and my taste well and I dutifully added this to my "bookmark to buy later" list and then forgot about it. Someone gave me a book about a book binder and an archivist working in a cthullian museum archive and I mentioned it to that friend along with the comment that it wasn't a great book and felt like someone trying to tug on the coat tails of "Magnus Archives." Said friend asked if I'd read "Dead Collections" yet, which is about a vampire archivist.
It's about so much more than that. Sol is a vampire (and yes vampirism both is and is not a metaphor for other stigmatized stuff) and is a nerd who wrote fan fiction and is a former concert pianist and piano teacher and is a trans man and is Jewish and is... just... so deeply fundamentally human. And unlike a lot of books about archivists this feels at its core like it was written by someone with archival experience - Fellman is, in fact, an archivist.
So.
Sol is a trans man, and was purposely infected with vampirism in an attempt to avoid dying of tetanus. He isn't coping SUPER well. He's camped out in his basement office of the archive he works at, no work friends and no social friends either. He works and... he works. That's about it. Then a woman arrives with a bequest for the archive - the writings etc. of the fictional writer of several Star Trek and other SF shows who also helmed her own (fictional) queer space show. It's a show that had a…