Friday, January 2, 2015

Comfortable Chaos



Any person who owns several tens of thousands of books is faced with an inescapable problem: their classification. For if the comfortable chaos of a few hundred books does not prevent their owner (and their owner alone!) from finding his or her way around them, the ordering of ten or twenty thousand books requires one to have a retrieval system. In fact, that is usually the drift of the second question invariably put by the “innocent” visitor – the first ­­one being: “And have you read them all?” A “fellow conspirator” on the other hand, the moment I leave the room, will look over the shelves, trying to work out the principle, and when I come back in, will check—with not a little pride—whether his or her hypothesis is correct. But even before that, comes the problem of their physical accommodation.  For books, unlike foodstuffs or other articles, can’t just sit in cardboard boxes or live in piles. These are no more than temporary solutions, which make it impossible to use them. If they are going to be read, they have to be arranged on shelves in a way that makes them retrievable. And bookshelves take up space, even if whole rooms—not just their walls—can be devoted to them, as in university libraries.  The ideal, of course, would be to have a purpose-built library, adapted to the books one owns, and reflecting the image one has of it.

Quotation from: Phantoms on the Bookshelves by Jacques Bonnet Trans. Sian Reynolds. MacLehose Press, London. 2008,