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Books

The Library at night

September 4, 2008 14:05

ByGabriel Josipovici, Gabriel Josipovici

2 min read

Alberto Manguel once used to read to the blind Borges, and it is perhaps from him that he acquired his passion for books, for all forms of writing and, above all, for libraries. In his home in rural France where, after a lifetime of wandering, this cosmopolitan Argentinian has finally settled down, he has built himself a library which appears to resemble more the library of a large institution than what you or I might have at home. Here, he tells us, he comes to read and meditate. Another, smaller room in his refurbished presbytery is devoted to writing.

He makes good use of both, to judge by his published works: a history of reading, a dictionary of imaginary places, several novels and short stories, and now this fascinating and splendidly produced book.

To be a lover of libraries you have to love the physical aspect of books, regardless of what is inside them, and you have to be a "wild" reader rather than a scholar, someone who dips and skips according to his whim.

Manguel, like Borges and Walter Benjamin, is clearly one of those, and his book reflects that. It tells us about the libraries of the past, from the great lost library of Alexandria to the British Library, from the extraordinary libraries to be found on the caravan routes to Mecca in the deserts of Mauritania and in the Dunhuang Caves on the Great Silk road. There is the eccentric library built up in Hamburg by Aby Warburg and then lovingly transported to London when Hitler came to power, and the clandestine children's library in Birkenau, consisting of a mere eight books.