The House of Twenty Thousand Books

House of Twenty Thousand Books

There is no end to the praise of books, to the value of the library. Who shall estimate their influence on our population where all the millions read and write ?

~Ralph Waldo Emerson in “Address at the Opening of Concord Free Public Library”

I was having dinner last week with a neighbor who, with his team, recently had a meeting with Bill Gates to discuss their project within the Gates Foundation. One of the words he used to describe Gates was “polymath.”

He spoke of Gates as having an incredibly deep knowledge in a wide variety of subject matter and how he can comprehend and discuss numerous topics at the highest level.  

Chimen Abramsky also has the polymath gene and in The House of Twenty Thousand Books noted journalist, author and Abramsky’s grandson, Sasha Abramsky, gives us a moving and stimulating look at his grandfather and the books that surrounded and sustained his life.

This is first and foremost a love story of a man and his books. 

From book collector to bookseller to consultant on Hebrew books and manuscripts at Sotheby’s, from never attending school to the head of the department of Hebrew and Jewish studies at University of London, Chimen Abramsky’s evolution is a testament to the power of words and of our printed past.  Along the way Chimen had assembled the greatest collection of socialist literature in private hands and then did it again building an unparalleled collection of  Judaica. 

At every step along this incredibly journey it was the home he shared with his wife Miriam that remained the focal point of his incredible life. It provided intellectual and physical sustenance for hundreds of the worlds leading thinkers who walked through the doors at 5 Hillway over the years. The kitchen was “a place of initiation” where Miriam held court making sure everyone was well fed and cared for while Chimen chatted with the guests, all the  while quietly evaluating them to determine their level of access to the collection, which took up most of the rest of the house. 

The House of Twenty Thousand Books  is an entertaining and passionate mix of genealogy, bibliomania and intellectual history and is a must read for the those of us living with books. 

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First published in England by Halban in 2014, the American edition is due out in September from New York Review of Books.

Abramsky’s obituary | Guardian