![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Within his global, multilingual book collection, he can effortlessly travel in both time and space. Libraries are storeyed tombs and Manguel is happy to be housed in the funereal stacks. Although the softly sifting 'plankton of dust' shed both by the crinkled pages and his drying skin anticipate a longer sleep, he does not mind. Warmed by the pools of light that spill from his lamps, he does not even need to read: the smell of the wooden shelves and 'the musky perfume of the leather bindings' is enough to pacify him and prepare him for sleep. Here he sits, preferably at night, with the 'shapeless universe' outside expunged by darkness. The Argentinian bibliophile Alberto Manguel, whose books include A History of Reading, is an expert on this snugly closed circle, symbolised by the private library he has installed in a 15th-century barn in the Loire. Forget about art imitating life: literature is a self-generating, self-referring activity. Writers write because they are compulsive readers and they do so in book-lined rooms. What happens, however, when the lights go out? Those belligerent books probably settle down to make love and breed other books. In a library described in one of his satires, the volumes do not remain on the shelves but hurl themselves across the room in an exchange of insults and fisticuffs, enacting their disagreements by tearing one another's pages out. ![]()
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