The Dewey Decimal System


The Dewey Decimal System is a 2011 science fiction/noir novel by Nathan Larson. It was first published by Akashic Books.

Synopsis

In a post-apocalyptic New York City, an amnesiac veteran – nicknamed "Dewey Decimal" for his self-imposed task of reorganizing the books in the remains of the New York Public Library – is an enforcer for the city's district attorney.

Reception

PopMatters lauded Larson's characterization, and stated that Decimal's many flaws – in addition to amnesia, he also has obsessive-compulsive disorder – make him an archetypical private eye.
The A.V. Club praised the novel's premise and setting, with "patches of roughhewn poetry", but overall found it to be "frustrating" and "stilted self-conscious", stating that Larson had insufficient "storytelling skill to match voice and vision".
Publishers Weekly felt that the relationships between characters "fail to engage", and that the "violence too often substitute for plot coherence".

Origins

Larson has said that the book's genesis was the image of a "beautifully dressed black man, asleep on the floor of the Rose Reading Room in the New York Public Library main branch", and that the character of Dewey Decimal is based partly on his cousins and grandfather, and partly on a homeless man of Larson's acquaintance named "Chicago".