At Home with Books: How Booklovers Live with and Care for Their Libraries |  | Authors: Estelle Ellis, Caroline Seebohm Creator: christopher simon sykes Publisher: Clarkson Potter Category: Book
List Price: $60.00 Buy Used: $9.95 as of 9/6/2010 04:15 CDT details You Save: $50.05 (83%)
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Seller: thirdstbooks Rating: 42 reviews
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 256 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.4 Dimensions (in): 11.9 x 9.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 0517595001 Dewey Decimal Number: 027.10973 EAN: 9780517595008
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Amazon.com Review For the bibliophile anxious to enhance the home library, At Home with Books presents both practical advice and divine inspiration. Chapters on starting a collection, organizing the library, and caring for books offer useful information on categorizing, editing, storage, and space-saving--"break down the books into categories by subject matter ... and compare their quantities to the available shelf space. If necessary, measure. Consider the book's height as well as its width. You may need to adjust your shelves to optimize your space." "Library Lighting," "The Art of the Bookshelf," and "Library Ladders" further encourage collectors to create a personal space suitable for its intended purpose, yet reflective of one's passion--"shelf lighting can draw attention to cherished objects and volumes; track lights can highlight certain areas of your room." Interspersed throughout these highly helpful chapters are interviews with noteworthy bibliophiles, including Keith Richards, Loren and Frances Rothschild, Bill Blass, and Paul Getty, whose "literary lairs"--ranging from the classic book-lined walls to books in the kitchen and the bathroom--are beautifully photographed, making At Home with Books not only a valuable resource for the dedicated collector, but a beautiful addition to any collection.
Product Description At Home with Books is a visual delight, a helpful resource, and an inspiration for every bibliophile with a growing home library. Includes professional advice on editing and categorizing your library; caring for your books; preserving, restoring, and storing rare books; finding out-of-print books; and choosing furniture, lighting, and shelving. Full-color photographs.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 42
A book for the person who owns too many books April 26, 2000 Marcy L. Thompson (Sammamish, WA USA) 85 out of 86 found this review helpful
The last time I moved, I had the movers weigh our books. We hadover 5 1/2 tons of books. When you live with a lot of books,they become, by default, a major theme in your decor. This lovely,wonderful book demonstrates ways to incorporate large quantities of books into your life in a way that is stylish and beautiful, but which also permits access to the book you just have to have in your hands, right this second. The photographs demonstrate just what it means to be a bibiophile, and they provide inspiration to anyone wondering just how to deal with having too many books. And in the end, feeling that I own too many books is a result of not having a reasonable way to store them all. This book provides ideas which made it possible for me to change my attitude -- no longer an owner of too many books, I am now a book lover at home with my books. (Plus, reading this book reminds me that there are other people with large, well-read and well-loved libraries. If you are one of them, you will love this book.) END
A Bibliophile's Delight July 3, 2003 Jeffery Steele (Taipei, Taiwan) 50 out of 50 found this review helpful
Where do you put hundreds, a thousand, even several thousand books? Here are some examples from book collectors, writers, and even a Rolling Stone. "At Home with Books" highlights, with photos and text, more than two dozen offices, libraries, and studies in the U.S. and Great Britain, covering every kind of room where you might want to put a book. From large and impressive home libraries, where the books are more on display than they are for reading, to small offices, where ease-of-use is of key importance, to places where most people wouldn't even think of putting a lot of books, such as kitchens and hallways - nearly every kind of place where you might imagine a book is here. Magnificent, stately rooms are included as well as the cramped quarters of a poet; the most post-modern designs imaginable to the most traditional. One of the more interesting parts in the book is the home library of Keith Richards, the guitarist for The Rolling Stones and, apparently, an inveterate reader. My personal favorite, though, was the author Frances Fitzgerald's library in her Manhattan apartment that she shares with her journalist husband. It was a room I could imagine putting my own books. "At Home with Books" also includes useful information on how to care for your books, how to plan a layout for that future library you might build someday, and how to light your library. It has sections on bookplates and binding books, a resource directory on rare book dealers and the great libraries of the world. If you have any interest in books and the rooms they are found in, then look no further.
Inspirational for any book lover May 23, 2006 Esther Schindler (Scottsdale, AZ USA) 23 out of 23 found this review helpful
Because few decorating books address the issues of designing a room for book storage and display, this one immediately appealed to me; perhaps I would get some ideas on how to manage my own collection. I have somewhere around 300 cookbooks, 500 SF/F novels, a few dozen books on writing, at least that many books on woodworking and quilting. All those books have to go SOMEwhere, and the room labeled "family room" on the house floor plan is now what we call the Library. That doesn't count the unpacked boxes of books for which we have no shelves.
However, my expectations were far exceeded.
This book shows a whole bunch of personal (and a few public) libraries, from tight little NYC apartments to huge homes. If you want inspiration on the ways to present your books, and how to intersperse them with other art collections you might own, the book is worth the money right there. And it's certainly great as a coffee-table book for the well-read. But what I didn't expect was how much farther it goes.
At Home With Books is essentially interviews with lots of pictures. Your eye will be drawn to the pictures ("Wow! People with more books than me!" or "This person actually had all his hardcovers bound in _white_ to match the decor?!") but the interviews themselves are often fascinating. You'll read the views of people who run book binderies, who have famous collections, who run a company that makes library ladders.
I got several bits of advice that I can put to use, from how to cull your collection when necessary; one suggestion is to give away the classics in paperback; you can always find another copy of War and Peace at the corner bookshop or in the public library. Another suggestion is to donate books to prisons, a "market" (if that's the right word here) that I had never contemplated. There are long sidebars on building bookshelves, on library lighting, on protecting books from fire and water damage. It's all enlightening and entertaining.
I'm sure that professional librarians will wipe drool off the cover of their own copy of this book. But if you find that you're trying to stuff another paperback onto an already-full shelf, you'll definitely love this book for yourself. Highly recommended.
A book made in Heaven for book lovers. A MUST read !! September 25, 1999 jeanplaidyfan 25 out of 26 found this review helpful
Great books are rare. Well illustrated books sometimes even rarer. This book is both. This book is truly a goldmine of information for book lovers. It includes details on library lighting, accessories, great libraries of the world, library furnishings, book binders & restorers, book fairs in America & a comprehensive list of rare book dealers in both America & England. One of the chapters I loved the most was about Hay-On-Wye Booktown - a collection of 27 new & second hand book shops scattered up & down the narrow streets of a village along the border of England & Wales, with over 250,000 books. WOW !! Other chapters include an exclusive look inside the private libraries of some famous people, such as Paul Getty, Keith Richards, Robert Stern, the Duke of Devonshire - to name but a few. Finally, the price of the book is worth it, just for the look at some of the most glorious libraries around the world done in stunning full page colour photography. This book belongs in your library - Enjoy !
My heroes! September 30, 2002 Andrew S. Rogers (Stamford, Connecticut) 20 out of 20 found this review helpful
I start feeling a little proud of my own small collection of books sometimes, but when I grow up, I want to be like the people in this book. Booklovers of many stripes, the men and women (as well as an organization or two) profiled here have truly made their books an integral and intimate -- if not overwhelming -- part of their lives. The mere fact that they've allowed us to look at their homes, and see how they've chosen to arrange and display their books, would be enough to make this a rewarding browse. As my bride pointed out, these homes haven't been prettied up for the camera like the ones in interior design magazines. These are real, working homes, with books, papers, art, people, and dogs (often pugs, I notice) scattered about. From aristocrats like the Duke of Devonshire to academics like Barbara Kirschenblatt-Gimblett and her awe-inspiring 4,500 square foot "endless corridor of books," small-timers like me can both admire and emulate the decisions they've made. But there's more to this title too. Informative sections on bespoke bookplates, "the art of the bookshelf," lighting and other library furnishings, and a comprehensive resource directory all make this a useful reference as well as an attractive display book.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 42
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