Through the ages, libraries have not only accumulated and preserved but
also shaped, inspired, and obliterated knowledge. Now they are in
crisis. Former rare books librarian and Harvard metaLAB visionary
Matthew Battles takes us from Boston to Baghdad, from classical
scriptoria to medieval monasteries and on to the Information Age, to
explore how libraries are built and how they are destroyed: from the
scroll burnings in ancient China to the burning of libraries in Europe
and Bosnia to the latest revolutionary upheavals of the digital age. A
new afterword elucidates how knowledge is preserved amid the creative
destruction of twenty-first-century technology.