Denise Gigante is the Sadie Dernham Patek Professor in the Humanities at Stanford University. She is the author of The Keats Brothers: The Life of John and George and Taste: A Literary History.
“Gigante engages in an ambitious expedition in setting these books
and their collectors in their rightful contexts.”—Michael Caines,
Times Literary Supplement
“In its complicated mixture of bookishness, scholarship and
anecdotes (many funny), Book Madness goes a long way towards
illuminating a previously unexplored era of America’s cultural
history.”—Charles Elliot, Literary Review
“A detailed study of the ways in which tattered texts won the
passionate attention of American collectors and taught them new
lessons about the hunt for old books.”—Anthony Grafton, London
Review of Books
“Noted Romanticist Denise Gigante uses the sale of Charles Lamb’s
library as a hook on which to hang larger questions: What did
English books signify for collectors on the other side of the
Atlantic? How did public libraries and university libraries draw
on, and differentiate themselves from, gentlemen’s private
collections? And most timely of all in the age of the ebook and the
audiobook, what attaches us to particular copies of books rather
than, or in addition to, the words that they contain?”—Leah Price,
author of What We Talk About When We Talk About Books
“Absorbing and brilliant. A remarkable piece of book history and a
vividly entertaining portrait of a cast of characters to whom books
were, in Gigante’s words, ‘a real way of life.’”—Seamus Perry,
University of Oxford
“In this fascinating, original, and elegantly written book, Denise
Gigante traces the stories of Charles Lamb’s books and how they
caused a sensation in America, creating the strange book madness of
America’s nineteenth-century bibliomaniacs.”—Nicholas Roe,
University of St. Andrews, Scotland
“This book is a complete delight. In Denise Gigante’s most capable
hands, the sale of Charles Lamb’s library is the starting point for
a dizzying, enlightening, and often hilarious journey into a lost
world of bibliomaniacs.”—Sir Jonathan Bate, Arizona State
University
“Beautifully written and compelling, this narrative experiment in
book history, with its varied cast of old books and book lovers,
brings bibliography and typography and the thrill of the book
auction to life.”—Felicity James, University of Leicester
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