A World of Books
I love journalism that makes me wonder how the story was discovered–especially when it gives no sign that it could have been researched from the armchair of social media. This story, about Mendl Uminer and his 10,000 books, is one of those.
Uminer, until recently the holder of a rented studio apartment in Manhattan’s Upper East Side, committed one of the more harmless infractions that has ever gotten a renter evicted: he had too many books. The situation:
Towering stacks of Judaica lined the walls, heaps of film criticism and opera history filled the prewar bathroom, piles of plays and poems blocked a window, and Uminer slept on a floor mattress engulfed in dog-eared novels. Waking up around noon, he spent his afternoons on his sunlit chaise, devouring the works of Yiddish writers like Chaim Grade and critics like Edmund Wilson, nourishing his mind while the city churned outside.
In defense of the building that kicked him out, the most obvious way in which 10,000 books might harm someone is by falling on them. I read an estimate that this many books might weigh between 3 and 10 tons-more than 500 book boxes worth. I have some personal experience with this. I live in a bookish neighborhood, and have walked by more than a few apartments and houses over the years that show visible signs of hoarding. Often the possessions most visible from windows are books. I have been in book-stuffed houses that show alarming cracks and twists in the walls. A recent Supreme Court justice had to move out of a centuries-old house because his library nearly broke the place.
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A scene from the book “Free Fall,” by the children’s book author David Wiesner