So this book was definitely the sleeper hit of 2024 for me. I’ve generally stayed away from books which take place in libraries because . . . well because I work at a library and despite loving my profession, I don’t really want to be reminded of it during my leisure time.
Of course I never mind coming across a library while reading — it’s after all a pretty common trope in Fantasy (one I thought Arm of the Sphinx did particularly well) — but it somehow just hits different when it’s the primary setting. This is doubly so for fiction without any fantastical elements.
This aversion may also stem slightly from the fact that there are a lot of misconceptions around libraries. What they are and how they function in the modern day. Even otherwise extremely bookish people (and authors) rarely visit them, but it’s a space that everyone has a memory of, either from when they were a child, or in school, or god knows when else, and so they feel like they know it, despite hardly knowing anything about it at all.
Sorry, mini rant over.
How Can I Help You gets PUBLIC libraries “right” (I make this distinction because academic libraries are a whole other scene despite a mostly similar experience). Half the fun of reading this book was uncovering each new seemingly absurd customer interaction, planting my palm firmly on my forehead, and then laughing at the memory of some similar interaction I’ve had with a patron (except the dead bodies, thankfully that has not occurred at my branch).
Combine this with the POV of a failed author, and I don’t know if I’ve ever felt so seen.
But even if you’re not working in the library field (any customer service field really) or trying to write a book, it’s an enlightening look which may shatter a few conceptions held in a rose-colored view.
Strip away these elements — which feel uncannily tailored for me — and the book still presents and engaging cat-and-mouse game between a serial killer and an ambitious, and somewhat selfish librarian. Even by the end, it isn’t really clear who the true protagonist of the story is, and while the reader knows only one can come out on top, finding out who it will be was extremely compelling.
Doreen Sheridan over at Criminal Element describes the book as:
“. . . a compelling take on the complicated relationship between author and muse, as well as the ethics of writing fiction” – Book Review: How Can I Help You by Laura Sims
I love this description because I think it gets at another primary question that’s never far from the reader’s mind while reading: How much of this is true?
I don’t mean to imply that the author ever worked with a serial killer, but Laura Sims thanks her coworkers from South Orange Public Library in the acknowledgements. Jane Toppan, or “Jolly Jane”, was a real serial killer at large between 1895 and 1901. “Friday Guy”, Margo’s favorite porn-watching patron, is unfortunately an all too real stereo type which nearly every library has had to deal with at some point, but did Sims have her own “Friday Guy” which made it into the book?
There are some interviews with Sims out there on the web which I’ve unfortunately not yet had the time to watch, but I’m certainly curious . . .
Give ‘How Can I Help You’ a Read?
Absolutely! As I said above, this was the sleeper pick for me this year. I was somewhat warry of picking up the book because I have always assumed I’d be ‘too close’ to any books set in a library for them to be enjoyable. But boy was that not the case with How Can I Help You. If anything, it added to the effect of an already incredible book.
But this book is still a thrilling and compelling read even if you don’t work in a library/customer service capacity. Sims has mastered the “slow burn” thriller in this cat-and-mouse chase between an unexpected killer, and an even more unorthodox author/librarian. Stir in some real history, and the author’s own background with her subject matter, and you’ve got a book which leaves you with more questions than answers (in the best sort of way).
That’s all I have for you this week. Has anyone read this book already? What was your favorite part? What is the weirdest thing you’ve ever seen go down in a library? Please leave your thoughts in the comments! Looking forward to talking about this one!
(puts on customer service voice): Have a great rest of your day!


