True Detective

How Tiffany Brooks ’21 cracked the clues of a fourteen-year-old ÌÇÐÄvlogÖ±²¥Æ½Ì¨ treasure hunt.

In 2006, English Professor (TKM to students) created a campus treasure hunt to celebrate the release of his fantasy book Memoirs of a Shape-Shifter. He drafted fifteen clues drawn from the novel and ÌÇÐÄvlogÖ±²¥Æ½Ì¨ history and lore, and offered a $2,000 prize to the sleuth who could solve the mystery. But no one ever did. That was until last fall, when Tiffany Brooks ’21—with some help from friends Abby Hunt ’21, Aidan O’Neill ’23, Kiki Kavanagh ’22, Jacob Kelleher LSOE ’21, and Caitlin Mahon ’21—finally finished TKM’s puzzle after nearly a year of dogged detective work. "This was definitely one of the coolest parts of my ÌÇÐÄvlogÖ±²¥Æ½Ì¨ experience," said Brooks, who grew up watching Spy Kids and reading Nancy Drew mysteries. "I’m glad I was able to share it with other people." Here are the stops Brooks made around campus as she deciphered Kaplan-Maxfield’s clues to complete the hunt, and collect the reward.

â—‰ START: Bronze eagle atop the Dewey Column

Bapst Library interior

TKM’S CLUE:
Though you be a Know-Nothing yet,
Turn about and walk to the place
Of the tarred-and-feathered leader.
³§°¿³¢±«°Õ±õ°¿±·:ÌýThe Swiss Jesuit priest John Bapst—the namesake of Bapst Library—survived a tarring and feathering by members of the Know-Nothing Party in 1854 to become the first president of Boston College.Ìýâ—‰ÌýSTOP 2:ÌýBapst Library

â—‰ÌýSTOP 3:ÌýShakespeare stained glass window in Bapst Library

â—‰ÌýSTOP 4:ÌýGasson 100

â—‰ÌýSTOP 5:ÌýStokes Hall

â—‰ÌýSTOP 6:ÌýFourth-floor conference room at Stokes Hall

Fulton Hall atrium

TKM’S CLUE:
Where the clue has led, seek the number
Among its fellows. Read and think:
Where is there such a place nearby?

³§°¿³¢±«°Õ±õ°¿±·:ÌýIn the library database, Brooks discovered that the call number she found at Stokes Hall—Pz8.B327 Wo—is forÌýThe Wonderful Wizard of Oz. That sent her to the atrium at Fulton Hall, where design elements such as the domed tin light fixtures and the tapestries woven with the red, pink, and black hues of poppies are rumored to be inspired by the children’s book—and one of the atrium benchesÌýisÌýinscribed with the Latin "Certes, Toto, sentio non in Kansate iam adesse."Ìýâ—‰ÌýSTOP 7:ÌýAtrium at Fulton Hall

â—‰ÌýSTOP 8:ÌýBurns Library

â—‰ÌýSTOP 9:ÌýFourth floor of Stokes Hall

Fulton Hall atrium

TKM’S CLUE:
Now remember also your discovery
At Clue #4.ÌýWhere does one grow
That never grows, though always
Watered and under the sun?
³§°¿³¢±«°Õ±õ°¿±·:ÌýClue 4 had Brooks counting the branches on the trees in the muralÌýThe Church: The Education of Mankind, in Gasson 100. With that in mind, she found a tree "that never grows, though always watered and under the sun" in Peter Rockwell’s ten-foot bronze fountainÌýThe Tree of Life, on the edge of O’Neill Plaza.Ìýâ—‰ÌýSTOP 10:ÌýThe Tree of LifeÌýfountain

â—‰ÌýSTOP 11:ÌýStokes Hall S369 (Kaplan-Maxfield’s office)

â—‰ÌýSTOP 12:ÌýBapst Library sundial

â—‰ÌýEND:ÌýVolunteer & Service Learning Center in McElroy Commons
At the last stop on the hunt, Brooks found a star-shaped brooch like the one described in Kaplan-Maxfield’s novel, nestled inside a dusty book from Sundial Press. Puzzle solved! ◽