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A Gentle Madness by Nicholas A. Basbanes
A Gentle Madness by Nicholas A. Basbanes











A Gentle Madness by Nicholas A. Basbanes

Basbanes might have sketched more of the book collecting scene outside of Britain and North America. Other ``obsessed amateurs'' include Ruth Baldwin, who fiercely guarded access to her superb collection of children's books at the University of Florida Aaron Lansky, who has tried to save a lost culture in founding of the National Yiddish Book Center and Arthur Schomburg, the perspicacious documenter of black history. Describing collections now housed in great American research libraries, Basbanes tells the moving tale of the grieving mother who endowed Harvard's Widener Library in memory of a son who went down on the Titanic with a rare edition of Francis Bacon's essays in his pocket. A fascinating account of the great 17th-century diarist Samuel Pepys's collection establishes a predominant motive: creating memorials to the life of the mind. Yet the book lovers seem to have known where they were going.

A Gentle Madness by Nicholas A. Basbanes

In a medieval poem, Basbanes notes, bibliophiles were assigned a place of honor on the ship of fools. With great aplomb, syndicated book columnist Basbanes tours his reader through an intriguing gallery of case studies. This absorbing volume traces ``the cycle of books among collectors, libraries, and dealers,'' seeking to shed new light on that ``gentlest of infirmities,'' bibliomania.













A Gentle Madness by Nicholas A. Basbanes