Gifted and eloquent, Battles has written a pertinent book, full of insight and humanity. -- Nicholas Basbanes, author of On Paper
Huge in scope...engaging. -- BookPage
Blow[s] the dust off our stodgy, conventional conception of the library to reveal the living heart of culture. -- Los Angeles Times Book Review
Battles' book is an obvious choice for bibliophiles. But the author's evident enthusiasm for his subject just might fan into flame any passion for books and libraries that smolders in the heart of the general reader, too. -- Boston Herald
Elegantly written....A great read, flowing over many time periods and geographic regions. -- Library Journal
Battles turns an all-seeing telescope on the most spectacular galaxy in our intellectual heavens-that magnificent constellation of books we call a library-and brings into focus the brightest stars and blackest holes in its dynamic history. -- Richard Lederer, author of A Man of My Words
Splendidly articulate, informative and provoking...sweeping in its inclusiveness, extraordinarily brisk in narrative vigor, and consistently lively-utterly trumping the cliches of the mustiness of libraries and the dreariness of librarians. A book among books, to be savored and gone back to. -- Michael Packenham - Baltimore Sun
This is an idiosyncratic and brave book...like many other fine works of literature, [it] is not unlike a library. -- Dallas Morning News
Fascinating...At its heart, the book is above all a celebration of mankind's ceaseless quest to quench curiosity and organize knowledge-a quest all the more timely, yet more overwhelming, in an era when our collective 'library' has swelled into the world wide web, the largest information system humanity has ever known. -- Maria Popova, author of Figuring