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122 of 130 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Visitors often ask if I've read all my books;my usual answer is that I've certainly opened every one of them."
In this wonderful tome ,Alberto Manguel has given anyone who loves books a fascinating look at books,libraries and the captivating world of books in general.
Books have been a major part of the author,s life,and he shares it with us on both a personal and worldwide basis. Generally speaking,anyone who loves books,can never resist the desire to have their own...
Published on December 3, 2007 by J. Guild

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8 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Rambl'in Man
I purchased this book in the hopes of generating ideas about how to build a personal library; not just one that consists of books but one of infinite probabilities as it relates to the individual in the present or as I like to think of the present as our "point of power". The middle of the book is the author's best work. As the other reviewers allude to...this book...
Published on July 26, 2009 by Patrick Curren


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122 of 130 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Visitors often ask if I've read all my books;my usual answer is that I've certainly opened every one of them.", December 3, 2007
This review is from: The Library at Night (Paperback)
In this wonderful tome ,Alberto Manguel has given anyone who loves books a fascinating look at books,libraries and the captivating world of books in general.
Books have been a major part of the author,s life,and he shares it with us on both a personal and worldwide basis. Generally speaking,anyone who loves books,can never resist the desire to have their own library.In this 373 page book ,he touches on just about every aspect of a library,both those which are personal and those which are public or private.The reader will constantly think of their own library as he discusses all these things. How and why the books are acquired,how are they arranged,how are they catalogued,how long are they kept,how hard were they to acquire,what will become of them,what about lending them,which are your favorites and why,where are they housed;you name it ,he talks about it.
I have a place in my library where I keep "Books About Books".I love to read about books and this one will be at home with them.
This book is beautifully written with a copious amount of amazing photographs. Because the author covers so much in the book,it never gets laboured and there is something new and interesting on every page.
Some of the things are simple ,such as the price-stickers,which he so aptly calls "these evil white scabs".They annoy me as well,and I have found a product called "Goo Gone" a great help in getting rid of them.This reminds me of those "evil doer of deeds" in some bookstores who price-clip the dust jackets because in their little minds they don't think the customers can handle the published price versus what they are asking. I am always interested in the published price of older books and their actions are nothing short of vandalism in what they do. Manguel also talks about items or bookplates readers leave in books as interesting as well, as notes made by other readers and previous owners or readers. Personally,I enjoy these things because they are a bit of the story of the life of that book.
He talks about libraries throughout history and even makes comments about things today,such as; an echo of Carlyle's complaint: "Every day the library is filled with,among others,people sleeping,students doing their homework,bright young things writing film scripts-in fact,doing almost anything except consulting the library's books." Ain't that the truth!!He tells us about the personal libraries of the famous (Rudyard Kipling) and the infamous (Adolf Hitler); with pictures.He talks extensively about his personal library from the time when he was a child to the present time. The reader cannot help but compare the author's to his own.
There are an amazing 44 pages of notes at the end covering 367 sources of information,photo credits and a detailed index. This alone is a treasure trove of information.
It's hard not to go on and on about this book.So,I'll leave it at this and just suggest to pick it up,and see for yourself what a treasure it is.
Overall, a mesmerizing gift from one booklover to all of us other booklovers
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31 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Romance of Reading, July 20, 2008
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This review is from: The Library at Night (Hardcover)
Alberto Manguel has produced a romantic history of libraries which incorporates their best feature: the ability to wander down hitherto unsuspected byways and make new discoveries, often winding up far from your original objective but still satisfied by what you have found instead. This is a discursive history of libraries through various categories: Myth, Order, etc. with fascinating essays for each. Those who love reading and libraries will learn much history and philosophy and will recognize in Manguel a kindred spirit and friend.
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34 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Consolation, April 3, 2008
By 
Christian Schlect (Yakima, Washington/USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Library at Night (Hardcover)
I can not imagine a better gift than this to buy for a person who loves collections of books, whether as a professional librarian or one who simply possesses a private library (big or small).

Alberto Manguel is a wise and learned author. The lessons of his well written book go beyond libraries and touch on what makes us human, and that which connects us, across time and as people, to our historical past.
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Unique Book For Those Who Love Books, August 14, 2008
By 
David A. Plouffe (West Covina, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Library at Night (Hardcover)
The Library At Night is the first book I have read by Alberto Manguel. I can say now, after completing it earlier today, that I am looking forward to reading other selections that this author has written.

I was not quite sure what to expect from this book, from simply reading the title. I could only hope that it would not disappoint and it did not. The book is broken down into 15 chapters. Each of them begins with "The Library As...." You can fill in the blank with such words as "Power," "Myth," "Shadow," and "Chance" (among 11 others). The chapters begin with personal anecdotes from Manguel. We learn a lot about who he is as well as the extent of his personal library. Following the brief reflection, he delves into well-researched historical data that revolve around his chapter topics. The stories he tells flow nicely together and endnotes are provided in the back of the book for further reading. The chapters are quite strong, though I really was expecting more from the last two chapters.

The only negative aspects, and really they aren't negative to all, of this book are Manguel's erudite use of language. He excels at linguistics and I found myself needing a dictionary nearby to help me through the text. Manguel makes many comparisons throughout the text between books, many of which, I had not heard of before. While I was excited about these newly discovered books,at least to me, they are not commonplace. So, yes, this book is written on a somewhat high intellectual level and a portion of its charm is lost by the author speaking over the reader's head.

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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "A big library really has the gift of tongues and vast potencies of telepathic communication", April 22, 2008
This review is from: The Library at Night (Paperback)

Alberto Manguel starts this wonderful book quoting Northrop Frye. Manguel is a prolific writer who returns time and again to the joys of reading: A History of Reading, With Borges, A Reading Diary: A Passionate Reader's Reflections on a Year of Books, and this most recent triumph.

When he was seven Manguel assembled "a minuscule Alexandria, about one hundred volumes of different formats on all sorts of subjects." In Toronto he filled bedrooms, the kitchen, corridors and the bathroom with books -- his kids needed a library card to go home. In his dream library "books have no title and boast no author, forming a continuous narrative stream in which all genres, all styles, all stories converge ... a stream into which I can dip at any point of its course." He lives with 30,000 books and reads in his library at night "when the library lamps are lit, the outside world disappears and nothing but this space of books remains in existence."

Manguel analyzes the library as Order, Power, Chance, Mind, Imagination, Identity and Home, and others. He describes the library of Alexandria, the personal libraries of Montaigne, Rabelais, Borges and Hitler. "In the spring of 1945, a group of American soldiers of the 101st Airborne Division discovered, hidden in a salt mine near Berchtesgaden, the remains of the library of Adolf Hitler, haphazardly stashed in schnapps crates with the Reich Chancellery address on them." Manguel believes Hitler had 16,000 volumes, ranging from military history to spirituality, popular fiction and a few classics.

Manguel is critical of the Web: "The Web, and its promise of a voice and a site for all is our equivalent of the mare incognitum, the unknown sea that lured ancient travelers with the temptation of discovery." He points out that it delivers ephemera; 70% of its communications are destroyed after four months. "On the Web, where all texts are equal and alike in form, they become nothing but phantom text and photographic image."

Nonetheless he remembers reading for Jorge Luis Borges when he was a student. In "The Library of Babel" Borges predicted the Kindle: in a footnote Manguel that Borges wrote that the whole library, which includes every text in the world, could be reduced to one handheld book of infinitely thin pages.

The Borges note is only one of many many pleasures here. This book is playful, scholarly and erudite and a great joy for anyone who loves to read.

Robert C. Ross 2008
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A treat for every bibliophile, March 21, 2010
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This review is from: The Library at Night (Paperback)
This is a wonderful collection of musings about libraries, both personal and public. I particularly enjoyed the author's description of building his own library, but I also learned a lot about libraries and dealing with books throughout history. Manguel is a cosmopolitan renaissance man and manages to convey a lot of information and personal impressions without artifice. This is a perfect book for every bibliophile.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, May 19, 2008
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This review is from: The Library at Night (Hardcover)
For those who enjoy reading and perhaps a bibliophile or two, I found this book to be a very pleasant accounting of Manguel's love of books. It caused me to think about the reasons I appreciate books and enjoy those that are well written. Highly recommended.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Passion for Libraries, July 7, 2010
This review is from: The Library at Night (Paperback)
I loved this book. Manguel thoughtfully explains both the importance of collecting books and the reason that doing so generates such passion. The book may have a particularly strong appeal to those, like me, who are already dedicated builders of a personal library, but his fifteen meditations on the meaning of libraries can be read with profit by anyone who appreciates the comfort, the stimulation, the diversion, or the link with the past that is provided by a good book. The chapters of the book are organized as metaphors, with the library seen as myth, shadow, workshop, imagination, home, and so on. Perhaps my favorite chapter was "The Library as Island," or at least I copied down more passages from that section than any other. Manguel describes better than anyone else I can think of the joyful experience of being the "first discoverer" of a book, or a passage, or a character, even though countless numbers of readers may have been there before us. But then, I also loved what he says about the interplay between architecture and reading in "The Library as Shape." And then there is this, from "The Library as Oblivion": "To hold and transmit memory, to learn through the experience of others, to share knowledge of the world and of ourselves, are some of the powers (and dangers ) that books confer upon us, and the reasons why we both treasure and fear them" (p. 266). Manguel mentions many books from his own library, often very briefly but occasionally at length, but this is never done arrogantly. True, while reading this book you may occasionally feel that you have hardly read a thing of any real importance in a lifetime of reading, but that's neither Manguel's fault nor his intention. He is clearly passionate about libraries in general, and his own in particular, and as he discusses cherished books, stories, memories, and people (especially the Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges), we get a glimpse not only into the mind of an immensely erudite man, but into the heart of a thoroughly humane reader as well. I will read more of Manguel's work, and soon. But this is a book I will return to.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Library at Midnight, May 9, 2010
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This book is so compelling that even a dedicated reader will be re-energized. Simply a must read for anyone still in love with books and the time we spend in them.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ideal Mix, July 6, 2008
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This review is from: The Library at Night (Hardcover)
The LIBRARY AT NIGHT is an ideal blend of contemplation and observation, of thought and history. With chapters that read like short stories it is accessible to the 'not enough time" as to the "google stupidized" reader. A great gift for any librarian, or reader of books. Books in history . . . back to the shelves. Leaves the reading feeling like he's just left a scene from The Ninth Gate.
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The Library at Night
The Library at Night by Alberto Manguel (Hardcover - September 26, 2006)
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