Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: MONDAY, August 8, 1994 TAG: 9408120039 SECTION: EXTRA PAGE: 6 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: JEANNETTE REGALADO LOS ANGELES TIMES DATELINE: LOS ANGELES LENGTH: Medium
Out of her rustic home nestled in the foothills, she gathers her clues by phone, using anything from a name to a description. Then she narrows her choices of places to look.
Will it be that little bookstore in Los Angeles? Or maybe a shopping center in New Jersey?
Genevieve Krueger is neither a police officer nor an FBI agent, but she is a detective of sorts: a book detective. She has dedicated her life to searching throughout the country for hard-to-find or rare books for the likes of movie studios, book collectors and the few customers who drop by her home now and then to browse through her 15,000 book titles.
Yes, 15,000. Books, books everywhere. In the living room, in the dining room, in the hallways. When her kids grew up and moved out, their rooms, too, were filled with books.
In her 17 years in the very ``detail-oriented'' book-finding business, Krueger said, she never has had to advertise her services, depending instead on loyal customers and referrals from bookstores. The work is painstaking, frustrating, often dusty, but eminently satisfying.
The 59-year-old former librarian and teacher's assistant specializes in finding children's books but said she ``can find you anything, even an old car manual,'' all for a small percentage of what the book costs.
And it isn't just a business for Krueger, it is also a crusade.
``Books have their own dimension,'' she said. ``The association people have with children's books is always good. They trigger feelings in people. It is why children should read books.''
Ideally, Krueger starts a search with a book's title, author and publication date - but she rarely has that much to work with.
Some searches have taken up to five years, and Krueger is proud of a 60 percent success rate for uncovering rare and hard-to-find books.
``It really is a serendipitous thing when you find the person who has the book and is willing to sell it. There are a lot of things that never come through,'' Krueger said. ``But those are pretty good odds.''
In the book-sleuthing business, Krueger is part of a small network of people who perform searches mostly for individuals, as opposed to book scouts who service bookstores. Although many book detectives make use of facsimile machines and personal computers, Krueger still does everything manually.
For more complicated searches, she relies on her secret weapon: Booksellers, a national periodical where book buyers and sellers pay to list books they want or have.
Krueger said she has done searches for some of Hollywood's biggest names, including Steven Spielberg and Harrison Ford. To protect their privacy, she declines to say which books they wanted, but said, ``You get to know their interests, and it fills out their personality.''
Krueger did divulge that recently she provided producers of a documentary on Theodor Geisel (Dr. Seuss) with editions of ``Boners,'' a 1931 cartoon series, and some non-children's books written early in the author's career, such as ``The Seven Lady Godivas,'' published in 1937, to illustrate his early works. She also was asked to review the documentary about the man and his work when it was completed.
Many of her quests have no celebrity dazzle, but are no less fulfilling.
A desperate woman once called on Krueger for a 1932 copy of ``Tale of Corally Crothers'' by Romney Gay. The woman had just lost both parents and felt that the book - long since lost from her possessions - was her only tie to her family and childhood, Krueger said.
The small book with simple watercolor sketches tells the story of a young girl who is lonesome and packs up her belongings, leaves home and jumps into a book. The woman could recite the entire story from memory.
``She had moved around a lot as a young child and couldn't take many possessions with her,'' Krueger recalled. ``She would always take the book with her but lost it at boarding school.
``When I found it, she just cried,'' Krueger said. ``You get a response back, and you feel like you are doing something more valuable than just selling something.''
by CNB