Keef the Librarian


I was reading a book a few years ago about private libraries called At Home With Books. Among all the other millionaire collectors was Keith Richards, explaining his octagonal library filled with books about Nazis and other such. Asked why he had hardly any books about music, and I'll always remember this, he said something along the lines of "music is for listening to, not for reading about." (That didn't keep me from reading the 33 1/3 about Exile on Main Street.) Then the other day my friend Shelia e-mailed me this from the Times Online:
Keith Richards, the grizzled veteran of rock’n’roll excess, has confessed to a secret longing: to be a librarian. After decades spent partying in a haze of alcohol and drugs, Richards will tell in his forthcoming autobiography that he has been quietly nurturing his inner bookworm.

He has even considered “professional training” to manage thousands of books at his homes in Sussex and Connecticut . . . The guitarist started to arrange the volumes, including rare histories of early American rock music and the second world war, by the librarian’s standard Dewey Decimal classification system but gave up on that as “too much hassle.” He has opted instead for keeping favoured volumes close to hand and the rest languishing on dusty shelves.

Richards has also acted as a public library, lending out copies of the latest Bernard Cornwell or Len Deighton novels to friends without much hope of getting them back. And, like the Queen at Balmoral, he leaves favoured books by the bedside for guests staying at Redlands, his moated Elizabethan farmhouse near West Wittering in West Sussex and in Weston, Connecticut.

In his autobiography, Life, due to be published in October, Richards will reveal how, as a child growing up in the post-war-austerity of 1950s London, he found refuge in books before he discovered the blues.

He has declared: “When you are growing up there are two institutional places that affect you most powerfully: the church, which belongs to God, and the public library, which belongs to you. The public library is a great equaliser.”
Along the same theme of rocker's libraries I just came across this series of videos of Thurston Moore showing off his collection of rare poetry journals:






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