
Evans applied the Page 69 Test to The Dark Library and shared the following:
On page 69 of The Dark Library, my protagonist Estella Ecker, who prefers to be called E, has reached rock-bottom. With her father dead and her mother missing, she’s been left alone to care for the family’s brooding Gothic mansion and for her beloved housekeeper (and substitute mother) Annie, but the money that her parents had thrown around so casually has disappeared. Desperate to meet her financial obligations, she’s landed a position as a research assistant at the local college, the best job available for a woman in her small hometown in 1942. She’s sold the car. She and Annie have sealed off most of the house to save on coal. They’re growing their own food, even foraging for mushrooms and berries to cut their grocery expenses. Even so, she can’t make ends meet. The time has come to sell the family treasures.Learn more about the author and her work at Mary Anna Evans's website.
E spends the entirety of page 69 negotiating with an art dealer, Oscar Glenby, who has come to look at her father’s collection of paintings. He is breaking the news to her that the paintings are essentially worthless in wartime. She asks if her father’s rare book collection has any value and he says no, but he also asks to see it. This sets off her intuition. If it’s worthless, why does he want to see it?
This settles E’s mind about how she feels about Oscar Glenby. She doesn’t trust him, and she doesn’t want to do business with him. It’s a relief to see him go, but he takes with him her last hope to avoid financial ruin.
Is this a good enough sample of The Dark Library to tell readers whether it might interest them? I think so. It communicates just how impossible it would be for anybody, especially a woman, to find enough money during a war to save a money pit of a house like E’s. It shows her resolve to fight impossible odds. Annie doesn’t appear on page 69, but the rest of the chapter shows how much Annie and E mean to each other as they grapple with their next steps.
If the essence of a suspenseful plot is “a relatable character dealing with an impossible-to-solve problem,” then page 69 of The Dark Library gives a satisfying glimpse of E and her conundrum.
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--Marshal Zeringue