Books are more than texts. They are survivors. A softened page, a penciled inscription, a well-worn dust jacket—each carries traces of readers and eras now past. To collect books is to encounter these traces and decide what deserves to be preserved, studied, and lived with. In A Life Among Books: The Art of Collecting and Preserving the Printed Past , physician and collector Andrew Norris explores rare-book collecting as both a practical discipline and a lifelong intellectual pleasure. Blending thoughtful reflection with practical insight, Norris guides readers through the world of bibliophilia—how collectors learn to evaluate condition, recognize provenance, navigate auctions, and appreciate the physical craftsmanship that allows books to survive across generations. Yet this book is not a guide to speculation or trophy-hunting. Instead, it invites readers to cultivate taste slowly, to notice the small details that reveal a book’s history, and to build a library shaped by curiosity rather than fashion. A Life Among Books speaks to both seasoned collectors and curious newcomers who wish to understand the deeper appeal of printed books. At its heart, it is a meditation on the enduring cultural life of books and the quiet satisfaction of living among them. Inside the book you will explore: • how collectors evaluate condition and craftsmanship • the meaning of provenance and ownership marks • the culture of antiquarian bookshops and auctions • the role of technology in modern collecting • the deeper rewards of building a personal library A Life Among Books is both an introduction to rare-book collecting and a celebration of the printed page as a living artifact of human thought.