Margaret WillesCritiques
Auteur de Reading Matters: Five Centuries of Discovering Books
19 oeuvres 517 utilisateurs 3 critiques
Critiques
Reading Matters: Five Centuries of Discovering Books par Margaret Willes
Signalé
Mark_Feltskog | 1 autre critique | Dec 23, 2023 | I read lots of books about historical houses, and most will give a beautiful photo of the exterior of a house, and if you're lucky, one interior pic. This book is the opposite, with big color photos of the inside of a home, which because they belong to the National Trust, are often grand mansions full of artwork, statues, carved wooden walls and marble fireplaces. It's all beautiful.½
Signalé
mstrust | Jun 11, 2014 | In 'Reading Matters', Margaret Willes explores the history of reading - or, because history is fundamentally based on records, the history of people buying books. In 9 chapters, chronologically arranged from the 15th to the 20th century, she tells the stories of several booklovers and the libraries they built during their lives. Some of the chapters are centered on notorious bibliophiles (Samuel Pepys, Thomas Jeffersen or John Soane), but others start from less familiar territory (Bess of Hardwick, for example). We meet not only the book collectors but also their families, friends, booksellers and occasionally publishers. The chapter on former defence secretary Denis Healey and his wife Edna for example also chronicles the rise of the pocket book in the 20th century.
Although anekdotes form an important part of the book, 'Reading Matters' is far from anekdotal. The author succeeds in giving a vivid description of 'what it must have been like' to buy books in, say, the Georgian era - if you were a rich baronet, that is. The common reader is generally (though not completely) underrepresented, which may of course be caused by the scarcity of sources but also by the tendency of the author to look for her historic readers in libraries managed by the National Trust. Anyone looking for information on the so-called 'common reader' will be better of reading William St.Clairs masterpiece 'The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period' (which, by the way, encompasses the whole period from the late 15th up to the early 20th century). Let there be no doubt, however, that they will find more pleasure in Margaret Willis' 'Reading Matters'.½
Although anekdotes form an important part of the book, 'Reading Matters' is far from anekdotal. The author succeeds in giving a vivid description of 'what it must have been like' to buy books in, say, the Georgian era - if you were a rich baronet, that is. The common reader is generally (though not completely) underrepresented, which may of course be caused by the scarcity of sources but also by the tendency of the author to look for her historic readers in libraries managed by the National Trust. Anyone looking for information on the so-called 'common reader' will be better of reading William St.Clairs masterpiece 'The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period' (which, by the way, encompasses the whole period from the late 15th up to the early 20th century). Let there be no doubt, however, that they will find more pleasure in Margaret Willis' 'Reading Matters'.½
1
Signalé
Steven_VI | 1 autre critique | Sep 7, 2011 | Liens
Yale University Press author page (English)
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