One can never read too many books about libraries. This is mainly a photography book, with a small explanation of where and when the photograph was taken, along with a writerly quote. The usual suspects are there : the Bibliotheque Nationale of Paris, the Pierpont Morgan Library, the Widener Library at Harvard. But there are a few pictures of small-town libraries, often largely staffed by volunteers. One or two pictures are really sad, like a photograph of a 3-room Hungarian library in Jerusalem (for those older Hungarian immigrants who are having a hard time learning Hebrew), or a 1991 picture of the National Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Sarajevo, which was bombed by the Serbs in 1992 in an attempt to wipe out an ethnic culture.
The book is introduced by a thoughtful essay by an emeritus librarian of the Library of Congress, who cogently argues that books are not yet going the way of the dinosaur.