The Blacklist is one of NBC’s most successful shows. Now fans can expand upon their The Blacklist love with a coffee table guide book that can help keep all the players straight.

The Blacklist: Elizabeth Keen’s Dossier is essentially a who’s who of everyone we have met in the first two and a half seasons of The Blacklist. The essential premise of this book is that it’s Elizabeth Keen’s scrapbook meet journal where she tries to organize and better understand the events of the her life now that Raymond Reddington has turned it upside-down.

The book is organized into several sections: Lizzie’s co-workers, Raymond Reddington and his circle of trusted assets, Lizzie’s past life as the daughter of Katarina Rostova, those on the Blacklist who have been taken down, and Tom Keen. There are lots of details in each of the sections that give the full background of all the players, how they have intersected with Lizzie’s life, and how they are interconnected with each other. For fans who still struggle to keep the entire Cabal, Berlin, and Karakurt stories straight, there are really helpful illustrated sections set up as a crime board with string showing the connections.

The book is packed with what are supposed to be primary source items. Some of the items are presented as redacted FBI personnel files that Lizzie must have lifted and kept. Oddly, the FBI hasn’t noticed that they are missing. Everything you wanted to know about past and present co-workers such as Meera Malik and Donald Ressler is right there for you to see. All-in-all the presentation is interesting, but they have made some odd choices. Redacted information includes the dates of birth of the various agents and their addresses. On the other hand, what is purported to be their Social Security numbers are there in plain site. So no worries, if Lizzie’s book falls into the wrong hands the bad guys won’t be on Aram Mojtabai’s doorstep, but they will be making his life hell by stealing his identity.

Other primary source items are close ups of things that we have only seen briefly on screen like suspect profiles, lab reports, and crime scene photos. There are also detailed photos from inside one of Red’s homes. Regardless of the source material, there is commentary from Lizzie on what the material means to her, or unanswered questions that bother her. Most of the photos are things that fans will be staring at to pick up on details. Even if obsessed fans have hit pause on their iPads while viewing an episode, they won’t have gotten the level of detail that this book provides. There are fabulous, unobstructed views of items only partially seen on TV. I confess, I was pretty obsessed with all the photos that had anything to do with Red’s living arrangements.

You can pre-order The Blacklist: Elizabeth Keen’s Dossier on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and your local independent bookstore. The book releases on March 29, 2016.