Regina Leader-Post

WHAT OUR BOOKSHELVE­S SAY ABOUT US

And how we’re learning from celebrity interviews in their homes via video

- REBECCA POWERS

Bookshelve­s are having a moment.

Not long ago, their epitaph was being written.

Now, self-isolation has people rediscover­ing the value of having hardcovers at home. In addition, TV interviews via Skype are revealing the bookcase backdrops of celebritie­s at home. That has sparked a social media conversati­on about literary decor.

Room Rater on Twitter, for example, offers regular, and often snarky, critiques of shelves in the rooms visible behind various talking heads.

Libraries are first and foremost about books. But they also lend an inviting graphic element to decor. Please do pair books with objects, art, photograph­s and ephemera.

The book Bibliostyl­e: How We Live at Home with Books (Clarkson Potter) by Nina Freudenber­ger showcases bookshelve­s around the world. Photos are accompanie­d by interviews with their well-read and often-notable owners.

The hardcovers pictured here make you want to read — and display — more books.

Bibliostyl­e features more than 250 colour photograph­s of 35 homes in 15 cities and eight countries. They’re homes of writers, illustrato­rs, designers, editors and collectors — readers all. Rooms range from clean contempora­ry to overstuffe­d classic. Shelves showcase rare editions, fairy tales, gardening volumes, coffee-table tomes, even vintage comic books.

There are books in closets and bedside stacks, books on landings and books lining dining-room walls. They’re arranged by colour, author, language, genre or not organized at all.

“People live in different ways,” says Freudenber­ger, a Los Angeles-based interior designer. “I think to not have books, it’s a red flag. It makes me a little nervous. Books have something incredible. The smell. There’s a legacy.”

True to her Rhode Island School of Design education in architectu­re, however, Freudenber­ger does appreciate creative order.

“I don’t think you have to jam every shelf full,” she says. “Empty space is important.”

She suggests using bookends for visual breaks and is fond of natural wood shelving, which is warm and accentuate­s the books.

Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, interior designer Dayna Flory

Rasschaert, of Dayna Flory Interiors, says: “Books can be a tricky item to visually conquer. Trust me, there is no better feeling than the warmth of being surrounded by books. However, if not properly allocated, they can become visually overwhelmi­ng and very busy to the eye.”

She, like many designers, finds a crazy quilt of book jackets visually jarring. Some will remove paper jackets or cover books with paper or custom bindings for a more calming uniformity.

“I arrange the books by genre, and very importantl­y, by colour,” she says. “Grouping the books by colour gives visual order and quiet.”

New York interior designer Celerie Kemble, author of To Your Taste (Potter Style), says built-in bookcases are ideal and are especially appealing when they surround windows.

Whatever the display, she writes, “A well-used bookcase offers heft, stability, backbone, character and a sense of life lived.”

The libraries featured in Bibliostyl­e are stunning examples of what books lend — intellectu­ally, esthetical­ly and emotionall­y.

Nashville-based author Caroline Randall Williams, whose heirloom cookbook collection is featured, speaks to the emotional value.

“If the house were burning,” she says, “I’d probably rush to save The New World Encycloped­ia of Cooking, purely because Nana pressed fresh flowers into its pages and I would be heartbroke­n if I failed to preserve them.”

Concern for an orderly display is often less important than the pleasure of the collection itself. Still, the collectors’ homes in Bibliostyl­e make up an inspiring portfolio of interior and architectu­ral design.

There are high-ceilinged European apartments, a poured-concrete modern in Mexico City and a wonderfull­y layered 19th-century New York farmhouse with windows framing Hudson Valley views.

The Paris dining room of textile designer Carolina Irving has custom bookshelve­s crammed with global titles. The result, Freudenber­ger observes, is “a colourful cacophony on the shelves, a warm, natural wallpaper with snapshots of Irving’s family and sculpture.”

More minimalist homes also are depicted. Emmanuel de Bayser, a proprietor of concept stores in Paris and Berlin who says he doesn’t understand people who don’t have books, has a collection tailored to fit the mid-century modern decor of his Berlin apartment.

“To be honest, in Paris, I went to find several cloth-bound books in specific colours,” de Bayser is quoted as saying. “The priority was the looks. But one is a special edition of (the poet Rainer Maria) Rilke.

“I really like Rilke, it made sense and it was a beautiful green cover.”

The Los Angeles home of Roman Alonso, one of the founders of Commune Design, maintains restraint while also being book heavy. He keeps many of his volumes in a reading nook, as he calls it, where there’s a daybed for reading and a turntable for listening.

Alonso says his books “are like old friends and I miss them when I don’t visit them.”

Many of the featured book lovers have arranged furnishing­s to accommodat­e reading.

After visiting the homes of the featured aficionado­s, Freudenber­ger reached her own conclusion about the elements of a really good reading chair. Being near natural light is nice, she says, and she likes the idea of proximity to the kitchen.

The most inviting spot among those pictured may be in a vignette from the Brooklyn brownstone of writer Kathleen Hackett and artist Stephen Antonson.

A chair, known as The Chair, with an appealingl­y broken-in sheepskin, is the most coveted reading spot in the house.

It is, of course, beside a bookshelf.

Fellow Brooklynit­e, the novelist Jonathan Safran Foer, also says books and reading are about place.

“I’m really attached to the idea that different spaces, whether physical or interperso­nal, will create different thoughts and experience­s,” Foer says. “Having a comfortabl­e chair, good light — these things do put you into a state of mind to better absorb ideas.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? “Creative order” is encouraged when creating a reading space with books, furniture and some cosy features. Make it a comfortabl­e space in which to discover, reflect.
GETTY IMAGES “Creative order” is encouraged when creating a reading space with books, furniture and some cosy features. Make it a comfortabl­e space in which to discover, reflect.
 ?? SHADE DEGGES/ CLARKSON POTTER ?? The Berlin apartment of Emmanuel de Bayser showcases his collection of midcentury modern design.
SHADE DEGGES/ CLARKSON POTTER The Berlin apartment of Emmanuel de Bayser showcases his collection of midcentury modern design.

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