The Dumas Club by Arturo Pérez-Reverte

Translated by Sonia Soto

For Spanish and Portuguese Lit Month, hosted by Stu of Winstonsdad’s Blog, I decided to read a book that sounded perfect for me. A bibliomystery set in the world of antiquarian booksellers, paying tribute to Alexandre Dumas, whose novels I love. What could go wrong?

The Dumas Club (or The Club Dumas – it has appeared under both titles) was originally published in Spanish in 1993 and translated into English three years later by Sonia Soto. You may have watched the 1999 film adaptation The Ninth Gate, starring Johnny Depp; I don’t think I’ve seen it, but apparently it’s very different from the book and completely removes the Dumas connection, which seems strange but maybe they thought there was too much going on and couldn’t include everything.

Lucas Corso is a ‘book detective’ who hunts down rare or valuable books on behalf of his clients. Corso has found that unscrupulous dealers and collectors are prepared to pay large sums of money for the books and don’t really care whether the methods he has used to get hold of them are particularly legal or ethical. In The Dumas Club, we follow Corso as he travels across Europe on two separate missions. The first concerns an early draft of a chapter from Alexandre Dumas’ The Three Musketeers. The chapter, titled Anjou Wine, appears to be written at least partly in Dumas’ own handwriting and Corso’s job is to prove its authenticity.

His second task is more complex and involves a very different kind of book: The Book of the Nine Doors of the Kingdom of Shadows, published by Aristide Torchia in 1666. This rare and sinister book is thought to contain the key to summoning the Devil and Torchia was burned at the stake shortly after its publication. Only one copy is thought to have survived. Corso’s client, Varo Borja, owns a copy of the book which he believes may be a forgery and he wants Corso to examine two other copies, one in Portugal and one in France, to determine which is genuine and which are fakes.

Setting out on his journey, Corso begins to encounter some mysterious strangers who remind him of characters from books. For example, he is pursued by a man with a scar who resembles Rochefort, the ‘Man from Meung’, from The Three Musketeers and he also crosses paths with a young woman who introduces herself as Irene Adler after the character from the Sherlock Holmes stories. Corso is unsure whether these people are interested in The Anjou Wine, The Nine Doors or both, so he must try to keep the manuscripts out of their hands until he has solved the two mysteries.

The Dumas Club is an unusual novel and there were lots of things I liked about it. As a Dumas fan, I enjoyed all the references to The Three Musketeers and other titles; it’s not really essential to be familiar with Dumas, but you’ll definitely get more out of the book if you are. Pérez-Reverte includes a lot of unnecessary information, though, such as a full bibliography of all Dumas’ works inserted into the middle of a chapter. This info-dumping continues throughout the book, as well as lots of long digressions into printing and binding techniques and discussions of first editions, illustrations and rare collections. Some of it is quite fascinating and I think people who love books as physical objects more than for the words they contain will find it particularly interesting, but it doesn’t make for a very quick or easy read.

Although I enjoyed following the Anjou Wine thread of the story, Corso’s second mission revolving around The Nine Doors and the occult was of less interest to me and reminded me too much of The Da Vinci Code. It didn’t help that I didn’t like Lucas Corso at all and found most of the other characters equally unpleasant. Still, the ending is clever and we are given answers to both of the mysteries, so I think my feelings about this book are probably slightly more positive than negative. I have another of Pérez-Reverte’s novels on my TBR – Captain Alatriste – and wonder if I would get on better with that one.

6 thoughts on “The Dumas Club by Arturo Pérez-Reverte

  1. Silvia says:
    Silvia's avatar

    Oh, wow, this: found most of the other characters equally unpleasant.
    It looks like we have been a bit disappointed by my Spanish counterparts lately!
    Alatriste is more well known but I haven’t read it.
    I will keep looking for a more satisfying compatriot author!

    • Helen says:
      Helen (She Reads Novels)'s avatar

      I’m sure there are much better Spanish books I could have chosen! This one was such a disappointment. Maybe I’ll still try Alatriste one day.

  2. Cyberkitten says:
    Cyberkitten's avatar

    I’ve had both ‘The Dumas Club’ and ‘Captain Alatriste’ in my book stacks for *years*. Did you know that ‘Alatriste’ was also made into a movie with Viggo Mortensen as the man himself. It’s pretty good. I still chuckle over Viggo slowly winding up a wheel-lock pistol before shooting someone with it. Not sure how realistic that is, but it looked real! The movie had some great fight scenes… Maybe I should get it together and read it at some point? [lol]

    • Helen says:
      Helen (She Reads Novels)'s avatar

      No, I haven’t seen it. It sounds fun! I might try reading the book one day, but am not in any hurry after being a bit disappointed by this one.

  3. Calmgrove says:
    Calmgrove's avatar

    This whole trope of complex shenanigans surrounding a book, manuscript or rare copy is not uncommon, and though I usually like them at first the narratives often turn to candyfloss by the end. I wonder if that’s the case here.

    It happened for me with Carlos Ruiz Zafón’s The Shadow of the Wind, Lev Grossman’s Codex, Charlie Lovett’s novels The Bookman and First Impressions and to some extent Evie Woods’s The Lost Bookshop. I really wanted the titles or rare copies in these novels to be real (and often there was a lot of convincing ‘supporting evidence’ for their existence) but the dénouements often just fizzled out inconclusively leaving me unsatisfied.

    • Helen says:
      Helen (She Reads Novels)'s avatar

      Yes, it did seem quite promising at the beginning but I struggled to stay interested all the way to the end. I haven’t read all of the other titles you mention, but I did keep thinking of The Shadow of the Wind while I was reading this book – and remember having similar problems with that one!

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