Dear readers, I’m skeptical I’ll ever find an earthly paradise, but if one exists, I have to believe it resembles the Atelier Devauchelle, where a group of female artisans painstakingly cares for antique books. At this Paris workshop, there’s an expert in gauffering — which, despite the pleasing images of Belgian waffles it inspires, refers to the process of repairing gold lines on leather book covers. One employee focuses on binding and embossing, summoning a surgeon’s focus to sew together pages with linen thread. Yet another specializes in paper restoration, bringing old manuscripts brilliantly back to life. I’m not even a rare book fetishist! But it’s impossible to gaze upon these scenes without aching for a peaceful atmosphere insulated from the hubbub of city life. (Look at the article on your phone or tablet if you can; it’s particularly eye-popping on those devices.) We’ll be observing the July 4 holiday on Friday — I plan to be curled up in an Adirondack chair with a limeade and “Middlemarch” — so I’ll see you next week. In other news
We hope you’ve enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times. Love this email? Forward to a friend. Want this email? Sign-up here. Have a suggestion for this email? Then send us a note at books@nytimes.com.
|