“The Great Library of Amazonia”

Fascinating story today in Wired News on Amazon’s new book index:

“Amazon’s new archive is more densely populated than the early Web was, but it’s still far from complete. With its 120,000 titles, the archive has about as many books as a big brick-and-mortar store. Still, this is plenty to create a familiar sensation of vertigo as an expansive new territory suddenly opens up.

“The more specific the search, the more rewarding the experience. For instance, I’ve recently become interested in Boss Tweed, New York’s most famous pillager of public money. Manber types “Boss Tweed” into his search engine. Out pop a few books with Boss Tweed in the title. But the more intriguing results come from deep within books I never would have thought to check: A Confederacy of Dunces, by John Kennedy Toole; American Psycho, by Bret Easton Ellis; Forever: A Novel, by Pete Hamill. I immediately recognize the power of the archive to make connections hitherto unseen. As the number of searchable books increases, it will become possible to trace the appearance of people and events in published literature and to follow the most digressive pathways of our collective intellectual life.

“From the Hamill reference, I link to a page in the afterward on which he cites books that influenced his portrait of Tweed. There, on the screen, is the cream of the research performed by a great metropolitan writer and editor. Some of the books Hamill recommends are out of print, but all are available either new or used on Amazon.”

I and many other academics already use Amazon to do general research, figuring out which books to read on a given subject (it’s more extensive than browsing the shelves of a university library, and the “Others who bought x also bought y“ feature is often more useful than Library of Congress subject headings). This new archive, however, has the potential to revolutionize historical scholarship in the same way that Lexis/Nexis changed the practice of content analysis within the field of Communication.

One Response to ““The Great Library of Amazonia””

  1. Sample Reality Says:

    Search Inside This Book

    Like many avid readers and scholars I am thoroughly enamored of Amazon.com’s Search Inside the Book feature. The feature debuted October 23, 2003 with the complete text of more than 120,000 books. I can’t find any recent data on how…

Leave a Reply