Shanghai Daily

Zhejiang Library brings books back to life

- Shi Jia

Yan Jingshu has been working as a book conservato­r at Zhejiang Library all her life, for 37 years. She just retired before the Year of the Pig arrived.

“It’s high time I let young people do more,” said Yan.

On a warm winter’s morning, when Shanghai Daily visited the two-story red-brick building where Yan and her colleagues work, the room was quietly soaked in sunlight.

The beauty and bustle of West Lake was just a few steps away. Push open the door leading to the balcony, and you can see the boats cruising on the lake, even the calmly glittering waves.

But no one paid any attention. Their eyes had been fixed on one single page lying in front of them under the light.

Yan and her colleague Wang Fan were fixing a handwritte­n genealogy book. All the pages in the book had been dismantled and piled up in order. The page that needed to be restored was placed on its reverse side.

A spray bottle was used to soften the paper, and creases and tears were first carefully flattened.

Then they tore a strip of wood fiber paper and attached it to the torn area with diluted starch paste.

“We should be thankful that these pages were not written on the back, otherwise it would be very hard for us to work on,” said Yan.

A great many ancient books that conservato­rs work on are thread-bound, where a large single-printed sheet is folded in half and stitched at the edge with the written part shown on the outside.

Restoratio­n applied to each book may vary, but there is one thing that every conservato­r must observe: No drinking cups on the worktable.

The cups are gathered instead in a corner near the entrance. This area was like a kitchen with an induction cooker, a pot, bowls filled with natural dyes which looked like some kind of soy sauce, and also paper that had been dyed to copy the color of the aged pages.

The “range hood” hanging above the table was actually used to remove water from the book when it was being cleaned.

Yan said the book they were working on was in a fairly well-preserved condition. Sometimes when a book has been soaked in water, and shrunk into a compact solid with pages tightly adhering to each other, they would put it in a steamer to allow pages to soften and be separated using tweezers.

Paper is an extremely vulnerable material and needs to be handled with extra care and attention. Yan said that in south China paper would be more easily affected by dampness, while in the north it would become brittle and fragmented.

Storage methods are also different. People in the north will place a series of books in a folding case before they stack them on the bookshelf. But in the south, the books are protected by two wooden covers at front and back, tied with ribbons at the spine.

The covers are usually made of camphorwoo­d, whose aroma may keep insects away.

Zhejiang Library owns over 1 million ancient and rare books and publicatio­ns, which include more than 830,000 thread-bound books from the Southern and Northern Dynasties (AD 420-581) to 1949.

“Our collection features many rare woodblock-printed books during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and also handwritte­n copies from late Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) to 1949, including manuscript­s of the 18th century scholar and gastronome Yuan Mei and the modern revolution­ary Zhang Binglin,” said Tong Shengjiang, deputy head of the library’s ancient books department.

One of its most well-known series is probably the Siku Quanshu, or the Complete Library in Four Divisions. It refers to a collection of more than 36,000 books gathered in the 18th century during the

 ??  ?? Yan Jingshu works on a handwritte­n genealogy book.
Yan Jingshu works on a handwritte­n genealogy book.
 ??  ?? The conservati­on center has over 200 types of handmade paper and fabrics for mending ancient books.
The conservati­on center has over 200 types of handmade paper and fabrics for mending ancient books.
 ??  ?? Some old books published before 1949 are protected by camphorwoo­d covers.
Some old books published before 1949 are protected by camphorwoo­d covers.

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