Some book dedications are straightforward. (Mark Twain dedicated "Tom Sawyer" to his wife, with affection.) Some are mysterious. ("Peyton Place" was dedicated "To George, for all the reasons he knows so well.") Some are, frankly, bizarre. (Ayn Rand dedicated "Atlas Shrugged" to her husband and her lover. And yes, those were two different men.)

In this appealing book, Marlene Wagman-Geller tells the stories behind 50 literary dedications, from Mary Shelley to J.K. Rowling.

Dedications are curious things -- often cryptically private, yet publicly proclaimed. They raise curiosity; we want to know the stories, gossipy though that may seem.

Wagman-Geller found her interest piqued by Grace Metalious' "Peyton Place" dedication, and she set about finding out who George was and what it was he had done.

George, as it turns out, was Metalious' husband, twice. Their relationship was stormy, and Grace was not interested in being a housewife. Once, when she started to clean the kitchen table, she reached for what she thought was a Brillo pad but was actually a dead mouse.

While she wrote her book, George tended house, cooked, and fed and ferried the kids. (Judging by the mouse incident, nobody cleaned.)

So, yes, I guess he knows what he did: just about everything.

The other 49 dedication stories are just as intriguing -- some are romantic, some are sad. They're fun to read, and they're better than gossip; they're true.

LAURIE HERTZEL