Passer au contenu principal

A great library is a book of lives … and a life-changer

Newton, by Eduardo Paolozzi after William Blake, at the British Library (photo John McCullough / Wikimedia Commons) (S'ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)
The measure of us: Newton, by Eduardo Paolozzi after William Blake, at the British Library (photo John McCullough / Wikimedia Commons)

Like countless other writers, I owe a great debt to libraries in general. Like many, I owe a particular one to the British Library.

A great library is a book of lives. On its myriad pages, the minds of people across the ages have left their unique imprints. And I can attest to the way a great library can change lives, too.

Along with the Bodleian Library in Oxford, the British Library is a copyright library. That means it receives, by law, a copy of every book published in Britain. The need to accommodate books – and their readers – meant that it outgrew its earlier site, the famous Round Reading Room at the British Museum. That closed in October 1997, and the British Library opened its new premises next to St Pancras Station on 25 June 1998.

At the time, I was living and working in central London. I had begun research for what became my book Tolkien and the Great War at the turn of 1997–98. So the new British Library quickly became something of a home from home.

(S'ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)
Sujet Opinion

2 commentaires

Souhaitez-vous voir les commentaires ?
Devenez membre de John Garth on Tolkien’s life and works pour rejoindre la conversation.
Adhérer