Umberto Eco Quotes About Library

We have collected for you the TOP of Umberto Eco's best quotes about Library! Here are collected all the quotes about Library starting from the birthday of the Essayist – January 5, 1932! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 7 sayings of Umberto Eco about Library. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • My maternal grandmother - she was a compulsive reader. She had only been through five grades of elementary school, but she was a member of the municipal library, and she brought home two or three books a week for me. They could be dime novels or Balzac.

  • A library's ideal function is to be a little bit like a bouquiniste's stall, a place for trouvailles.

  • You must overcome any shyness and have a conversation with the librarian, because he can offer you reliable advice that will save you much time. You must consider that the librarian (if not overworked or neurotic) is happy when he can demonstrate two things: the quality of his memory and erudition and the richness of his library, especially if it is small. The more isolated and disregarded the library, the more the librarian is consumed with sorrow for its underestimation. A person who asks for help makes the librarian happy.

  • libraries are fascinating places: sometimes you feel you are under the canopy of a railway station, and when you read books about exotic places there's a feeling of travelling to distant lands

    Umberto Eco (2011). “The Prague Cemetery”, p.113, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
  • Libraries can take the place of God.

  • Until then I had thought each book spoke of the things, human or divine, that lie outside books. Now I realized that not infrequently books speak of books: it is as if they spoke among themselves. In the light of this reflection, the library seemed all the more disturbing to me. It was then the place of a long, centuries-old murmuring, an imperceptible dialogue between one parchment and another, a living thing, a receptacle of powers not to be ruled by a human mind, a treausre of secrets emanated by many minds, surviving the death of those who had produced them or had been their conveyors.

  • Libraries have always been humanities' way of preserving its collective wisdom

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