A Librarian's Open Shelf: Essays on Various Subjects by Arthur E. Bostwick

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By Juliette Moore Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Science Fiction
Bostwick, Arthur E. (Arthur Elmore), 1860-1942 Bostwick, Arthur E. (Arthur Elmore), 1860-1942
English
Okay, so you know how you sometimes wander the library shelves, just pulling random books off for no reason? This book is the literary version of that, but with a brilliant guide. Arthur E. Bostwick was the head of the New York Public Library a century ago, and this collection is his personal tour of his own mind. It’s not a stuffy professional manual. Instead, it’s a series of short, sharp essays on everything from the future of the novel and the art of reading aloud, to the weird psychology of book thieves and the quiet power of a public reading room. The real hook? It’s a time capsule that feels shockingly current. You get this wise, witty librarian pointing out problems in 1920 that we’re *still* arguing about today—censorship, information overload, how technology changes how we think. Reading it feels like having a coffee with the smartest, most curious person you’ve ever met, who just happens to work among the stacks.
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Forget any dry, dusty image you have of a librarian from 1920. Arthur E. Bostwick’s A Librarian’s Open Shelf is a delightful surprise. This isn’t a book about cataloging systems. It’s a series of personal essays where Bostwick uses his unique position—at the heart of one of the world’s great libraries—to look outward at culture, technology, and human nature.

The Story

There’s no single plot. Think of it as a curated walk through Bostwick’s brain. One chapter, he’s playfully analyzing why people steal library books (it’s rarely for profit, he argues). The next, he’s making a passionate, surprisingly modern case for why libraries must provide all sides of controversial issues. He wonders if the new ‘machine age’ is making us worse readers, champions the simple act of reading aloud to children, and even speculates on what future novels might look like. The ‘story’ is the unfolding of a sharp, humane, and forward-thinking mind, using the library as his lens to examine the entire world.

Why You Should Read It

I picked this up expecting a historical curiosity. I put it down feeling like I’d had a conversation with a friend from the past who completely gets the present. Bostwick’s insights are timeless. His essay on ‘The Librarian as Censor’ is a masterclass in defending intellectual freedom that feels written for today’s debates. When he talks about the flood of cheap, sensational fiction, you’ll swear he’s describing the internet. His voice is the best part—erudite but never arrogant, funny, and filled with a genuine love for people and the power of shared knowledge. It’s a quiet, powerful reminder that the core mission of a library—and of a thoughtful life—hasn’t really changed.

Final Verdict

This book is a hidden gem. It’s perfect for anyone who loves libraries, but also for readers interested in early 20th-century thought, the history of ideas, or just brilliant essay writing. If you enjoy the feeling of discovering a kindred spirit across the decades, you’ll find one here. It’s a slim, thoughtful volume that doesn’t demand to be read in one sitting, but one you’ll likely keep on your own shelf to dip back into whenever you need a dose of perspective and quiet intelligence.

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