
Works by Reid Byers
The Private Library: The History of the Architecture and Furnishing of the Domestic Bookroom (2021) 146 copies, 3 reviews
Imaginary books : lost, unfinished, and fictive works found only in other books (2024) 24 copies, 1 review
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The Private Library: The History of the Architecture and Furnishing of the Domestic Bookroom by Reid Byers
While perhaps not for everyone, this magnificent volume (both in terms of content and production) is a must for anyone who loves libraries, and not just for the books they contain.
The majority of the book describes the developmental history of the private library from earliest times of which we know, through to the English country home libraries that form the archetype we possess today, and beyond. The scholarly thoroughness is impeccable, but it is conveyed in chatty, personable tones with show more witty asides and colloquial expressions. The focus is on the architecture of home libraries, and how these were incorporated into the home. If the text has an organizing idea, it is that of the "book-wrapt" environment that private libraries were meant to provide for private study. Recognition that the emotional/psychological/aesthetic experience of residing in a room in which books encompass you from all directions is often overlooked by writers on libraries. This volume shows how powerful that simple realization can be to helping us understand why people love the library, and why, despite the prevalence of the digital format, books and their library homes will continue to endure.
Because private libraries are those around which major institutional libraries are formed, this template helps us to better understand how the great national and academic libraries were formed (although that story is not part of this author's project). show less
The majority of the book describes the developmental history of the private library from earliest times of which we know, through to the English country home libraries that form the archetype we possess today, and beyond. The scholarly thoroughness is impeccable, but it is conveyed in chatty, personable tones with show more witty asides and colloquial expressions. The focus is on the architecture of home libraries, and how these were incorporated into the home. If the text has an organizing idea, it is that of the "book-wrapt" environment that private libraries were meant to provide for private study. Recognition that the emotional/psychological/aesthetic experience of residing in a room in which books encompass you from all directions is often overlooked by writers on libraries. This volume shows how powerful that simple realization can be to helping us understand why people love the library, and why, despite the prevalence of the digital format, books and their library homes will continue to endure.
Because private libraries are those around which major institutional libraries are formed, this template helps us to better understand how the great national and academic libraries were formed (although that story is not part of this author's project). show less
This is an engaging catalog of imaginary books, as the title plainly states. After some tonge-in-cheek introductions, there follows a series of catalog entries, with annotations, with images of the fictive book, and bibliographic information. A mix of history, and fiction, and things that make you go hmm. It's all neat and interesting, if you like books, book collecting, and book catalogs. As few do. Which is why this was published by the book-selling folks at Oak Knoll. I was expecting, show more maybe a tad more, and a tad slow in spots. Which is why I knocked it down half a star. But, that's my expectations. All-in-all, it is a pretty good show less
The private library : being a more or less compendious disquisition on the history of the architecture and furnishing of the domestic bookroom by Reid Byers
A very well-made book, interesting to peruse, but not really useful to me.
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