Review:
"This wide-ranging survey of the long and tumultuous history of libraries contains at least a dozen tantalizing bits of information per page. I was fascinated and enriched. And because these essays began as lectures delivered in a library, they illustrate beautifully one of the library's most important roles--as a stage set for writers to share what they've learned about various subjects, including Roman bathhouses, Victorian fumigators, plunder, lust, and the eighteenth-century librarian upon whose death, it was said, 'The books are grievin, 'mang themselves.'"--Marilyn Johnson, author of This Book Is Overdue!: How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All
"The Meaning of the Library covers the history of the library from antiquity to the present day. This is a very good collection of essays."--Colin Burrow, editor of Metaphysical Poetry
"The library as a topic is currently of increasing cultural interest. I enjoyed The Meaning of the Library and learned a lot from the book's eclectic and interesting mix of essays."--Richard Ovenden, Bodley's Librarian, University of Oxford
"[F]or both scholar and general reader, comprehensive bibliographic notes constitute a multilingual gold mine of historical resources on libraries."--Booklist
"As a history and an assessment of an inestimable resource and a force for good in the world, The Meaning of the Libraryis a timely and thought-provoking compilation."---Patricia Craig, Independent
"The Meaning of the Libraryis a riveting and deeply satisfying work that is bound to leave the reader not only far more aware of the sociocultural importance of the institution as a reservoir of heritage and learning, but also inspired to think of issues that lie beyond the earthly and temporal realm."---Lois C. Henderson, Bookpleasures.com
"A marvelous survey of Western libraries and books from Greek and Roman times to today. . . . It is a lovely book, handsomely designed with endnotes, author bios, bibliography, index, and an eight-page, four-color insert-illustrations of ancient and medieval book cabinets."---Wally Wood, Bookpleasures.com,
"These pleasant peregrinations exploring the role that libraries . . . have played as preservers, proponents, and providers of culture will appeal widely to library scholars and bibliophiles."--Choice
"This excellent volume, well produced and with an extensive bibliography, is not standard library history, but it is delightful reading, whether consumed as a whole or used to browse in. It should provide any library historians with new insights into their discipline and can be highly recommended."---Peter Hoare, Library & Information History
"Each essay is excellently written and researched; each new perspective illuminates a different fact in great and mind-expanding detail. . . . Bibliophiles, especially, will love [The Meaning of the Library] as it focuses attention on the deeper importance book collections hold."---Gretchen Wagner, San Francisco Book Review
About the Author:
Alice Crawford is digital humanities research librarian at the University of St Andrews Library in Scotland. Her books include Paradise Pursued: The Novels of Rose Macaulay.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.