Most of the time, I'll post what I've been reading in the column at left, but couldn't resist the opportunity to tell you all about Theodora Keogh's The Tattooed Heart. I saw a posting about Theodora Keogh on GalleyCat, one of my favorite blogs (www.mediabistro.com/galleycat), and went upstairs to our newly reopened stacks to see if we had anything by this overlooked writer. Turns out we had ten, that's right, ten of her books, many of them first editions. On Brooks Peters' blog (www.brookspeters.com/?p=610), there's a long post about Keogh that suggests that The Tattooed Heart is her best book. I'll keep you posted, but so far it's clear that though Keogh may not be our "greatest American author" as some of the hype declares, she's a wonderful writer and eminently worthy of rediscovery. I'll return The Tattooed Heart to the shelf soon, but in the meantime, you might was to read The Double Door , published in 1950. In this novel, in two adjoining houses on East 65th Street a man lives his life as a husband and father in one and as a gay man in the other, keeping the two completely separate until his teenage daughter steps through the double door.