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Loading... Bibliotopia Or, Mr. Gilbar's Book of Books & Catch-all of Literary Facts And Curiosities (original 2005; edition 2005)by Steven Gilbar (Author)
Work InformationBibliotopia Or, Mr. Gilbar's Book of Books & Catch-all of Literary Facts And Curiosities by Steven Gilbar (2005)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Fun reading for anyone interested in what's behind the books, authors, and publishers. Great to keep by the armchair for those odd minutes. You could read this book cover-to-cover in a day, but about halfway through, it starts to bog down. Better if broken up over several days. A lot of quotes, facts, and lists that I'll be going back for when I need them. What's not to like about this little book if you're a bibliophile? It's filled with trivia, useful information, interesting lists,... about books and authors. A quick read, but it can be opened anywhere and read one page at a time. A perfect book for those times when you don't have a lot of time to read, but you want to anyway. http://philobiblos.blogspot.com/2006/06/book-review-bibliotopia.html Steven Gilbar's Bibliotopia (subtitled or, Mr. Gilbar's Book of Books & Catch-all of Literary Facts & Curiosities) is an amusing and interesting collection of lists about books, authors, and other literary trivia. Decorated with appropriate and lovely illustrations by Elliott Banfield, Bibliotopia is a well-designed and useful miscellany, often reminiscent of those by Ben Schott. Gilbar's work is the kind of book to set on a bedside table or guest bedroom bookshelf, good for dipping in and out of at random. The absence of a table of contents makes sense for this type of collection, but somewhat diminishes the book's usefulness as a reference guide (as does the inexplicable omission of most - but not all - author names from the index). I must mention a couple small areas of concern: Gilbar incorrectly dates the development of paper to 405 A.D. (page 3); the date typically given for that event is 105 A.D., and even that has been proven too late (by about two hundred years) by archaeological investigations during the last decade. In the same entry, Gilbar makes the overly trite statement "With the coming of the steam-driven printing press, wood-based paper transformed society: before then a book was a rarity and most people could not read." Neither books nor literacy were as uncommon before the mid-nineteenth century as that sentence seems to suggest. Finally, Gilbar falls prey to the dangerously seductive trap of conflating book "format" with book "size", on page 7; determing format is rarely as easy as simply measuring the book's height. Those minor issues aside, Bibliotopia is a worthwhile diversion for the literary-minded; there are chuckles, "hmm" moments, and interesting new bits of knowledge aplenty to be found within. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to Publisher Seriesdetebe (23781)
What is the origin of the word "book"? What is the oldest working library still in existence? What is an "enchiridion"? An "amphigory"? A "duodecimo"? Which two Nobel laureates refused the prize in literature? How many trees must sacrifice their lives to produce a thousand copies of a 96-page volume of verse? These are some of the questions posed (and answered) in this fascinating farrago of literary trivia, a treasure trove of obscure and irresistible facts, definitions, lists, and quotations that touch on every aspect of books, including their authors, publishers, printers, collectors, critics, readers, and enemies. Under headings that explore the entire history of bibliomania from "The Invention of Paper" to "Some Horror Writers' Offcial Websites," the entries in Bibliotopia provide the insatiably curious reader a delightfully desultory literary education, the kind one might pick up at a cocktail party on Parnassus. No library descriptions found. |
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Still, a fun addition to my bookshelves. ( )