Andrew Pettegree is professor of modern history at the University of St Andrews. A leading expert on the history of book and media transformations, Pettegree is the award-winning author of several books on news and information culture. He lives in Scotland.
Arthur der Weduwen is a British Academy postdoctoral fellow at the University of St. Andrews. This is his fifth book. He lives in Scotland.
"Ranges far and wide, covering the extraordinary story of the
library from Alexandria to the age of Google...
enthralling."--Irish Examiner
"Basic Books deserves all praise for publishing both The Library: A
Fragile History, by Andrew Pettegree and Arthur der Weduwen and The
Gilded Page: The Secret Lives of Medieval Manuscripts, by Mary
Wellesley. These are exactly the sort of engaging, ambitious works
of scholarship that serious readers want to know about."
--The Washington Post
"The Library proves that truth is more intriguing than fiction.
This survey of the creation and destruction of libraries since the
Library of Alexandria was founded two millennia ago is full of
charismatic individuals and astonishing facts."--The Times
"[A] magnificently researched and compendious book."--The
Tablet
"One of the best things about Pettegree and Weduwen's long and
engrossing survey of the library is that they show how adaptable
and creative libraries have been over time. I have no doubt that
future histories will continue to tell that story."--Financial
Times
"A splendid study of the institution of the library from its
origins until today."--Commentary
"Fascinating for all bibliophiles and people who want libraries to
survive and improve."--Library Journal
"Rigorous but riveting history."--The Spectator
"This history of the library, from the Assyrians to the digital
age, is itself a wonderful collection of knowledge... This is a
book full of fascination and ultimately one of optimism, too."
--New Statesman
"[A] fascinating deep dive into the evolution of libraries...
Bibliophiles should consider this a must read."--Publishers
Marketplace
"Enlightening... Pettegree and der Weduwen are fascinating when
they discuss great private collectors and monastic libraries, but
the most important aspect of their book is its exploration of the
practical and theoretical role of the library in the lives of
ordinary citizens."--The New Criterion
"Offers some striking insights into the past and future of
university libraries."--Times Higher Education
"This sweeping history of libraries is outstanding.... A history of
libraries from the ancient world to yesterday, it is fetchingly
produced and scrupulously researched -- a perfect gift for
bibliophiles everywhere."--Sunday Times
"Where there are books, there will be libraries, of that we can be
assured. Pettegree and Weduwen's handsome book, which is lucidly
written, mercifully free of jargon and international in its
ambition, ought to be in every one of them."--The Herald
"A lively, authoritative cultural history...packed with fascinating
facts for bibliophiles."--Kirkus
"A robust, near definitive effort, tracing the evolution of the
institution from the clay tablets of the Assyrian Empire to the
wired libraries of today."--Booklist
"Comprehensive without being miscellaneous, lively without being
anecdotal, this sweeping history of libraries shows how central
this institution has been to every aspect of human culture. At a
time when libraries and librarians are proving themselves to be
more important and more resilient than ever before, this whirlwind
tour of the different forms that libraries have taken at different
times and places will educate and inspire in equal measure."--Leah
Price, author of What We Talk About When We Talk About Books
"A sweeping, absorbing history, deeply researched, of that
extraordinary and enduring phenomenon: the library."--Richard
Ovenden, University of Oxford
"What is a 'library'? Is it a mute display of personal wealth and
power, or of a humble devotion to God? A routine community
resource, or a waste of taxpayers' money? In The Library, we are
led nimbly through the centuries, seeing how it has been all of
these things and more, as the authors place on the shelf a
cornucopia of bookish history."
--Judith Flanders, author of A Place for Everything
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