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The Book Lovers' Anthology: A Compendium of Writing about Books, Readers and Libraries
By (Author) Bodleian Library the
Bodleian Library
Bodleian Library
8th March 2016
2nd edition
United Kingdom
Paperback
352
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
A blessed companion is a booka book that, fitly chosen, is a lifelong friend."Douglas William Jerrold
"Much reading is like much eating, wholly useless without digestion."Robert South
"If I had read as much as other men, I should have been as ignorant as they." Thomas Hobbes
Can books corrupt Do badly written books sharpen or dull the minds of their readers Ought we to take seriously the old saw that excessive reading can damage one's sightThe Book Lovers' Anthologyoffers answers to these questions and many more with a remarkable collection of reflections on books, readers, and libraries by writers whose books are among the world's best known and best loved.
Throughout the centuries, books have been a source of fascination and sometimes frustrationfor writers. Between the covers of theAnthologyare excerpts from the novels of Jane Austen, George Eliot, and Jonathan Swift, among many others, all of whom paused in their fiction to extol the virtues of the written page. Those who are taken with the smell of books will find a like mind in Charles Dickens, who waxed poetic about the "pleasant smell of paper freshly pressed." Very avid readers might even nod in knowing agreement with John Donne, who declared, "I shall die reading." Other poets whose musings on libraries or books are excerpted for theAnthologyinclude Shakespeare, Wordsworth, Milton, and Chaucer. These writings are interspersed by the meditations of essayists and diarists of centuries pastamong them, Samuel Johnson, James Boswell, John Ruskin, and Michel de Montaigne.
With contributions from major writers across ages and genres, this is an essential anthology for which any bibliophile will want to find space on the shelf.
'Fine thoughts and fine words make this a literary lucky dip with passages to amuse and entertain, confirm prejudices or provoke debate, all in good-natured, highly eloquent fashion.' * The Good Book Guide *
'Does the book have a future" is a constant question, but 'The Book Lovers' Anthology', subtitled 'A Companion of Writing about Books, Readers and Libraries', has no doubts. The Bodleian anthology . . . is a treasure trove of apt quotations from more than 250 authors, such as Shakespeare, Swift and Ruskin, in chapters covering "Literary Worlds", "The Joys of Reading" and "The Library". The whole still resonates as "an essential anthology for bibliophiles".' * Sydney Morning Herald *
The Bodleian Library produces beautiful and authoritative books which help to bring the riches of Oxford's libraries to readers around the world. They publish on a very wide range of subjects, including catalogues and other titles related to their exhibitions, illustrated and non-illustrated thematic works and facsimiles, gift books, and children's books and stationery.