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Preface: The Clew to the Labyrinth


One of the most famous stories about libraries tells of the tenth century Grand Vizier of Persia, Abdul Kassem Ismael who, "in order not to part with his collection of 117,000 volumes when traveling, had them carried by a caravan of 400 camels trained to walk in alphabetical order."[1] However charming this tale may be, the actual event upon which it is based is subtly different. According to the original manuscript, now in the British Museum, the great scholar and literary patron Sahib Isma'i1 b. 'Abbad so loved his books that he excused himself from an invitation by King Nuh II to become his prime minister at least in part on the grounds that four hundred camels would be required for the transport of his library alone.[2]

A 21st Century version of the story might feature any number of portable electronic devices—a laptop, a POA, or even a mobile phone—designed to overcome this difficulty. Today, 1000 years later, the Persian scholar/statesman would have to find a new excuse for declining the job offer. Abdul Kassem Ismael (aka Sahib Isma'il b. 'Abbad) would be hard pressed to explain Why he couldn't just find what he needed on the Internet. The message seems to be that 'books are passé, replaced by ones and zeroes, the real world replaced by a virtual one, knowledge supplanted by information at best and chaotic data at worst. Have we shrunk the world or expanded it? Or have we in some way replaced it?

Untangling the Web for 2007 is the twelfth edition of a book that started as a small handout. After more than a decade of researching, reading about, using, and trying to understand the Internet, I have come to accept that it is indeed a Sisyphean task. Sometimes I feel that all I can do is to push the rock up to the top of that virtual hill, then stand back and watch as it rolls down again. The Internet—in all its glory of information and misinformation—is for all practical purposes limtless, which of course means we can never know it all, see it all, understand it all, or even imagine all it is and will be. The more we know about the Internet, the more acute is our


  1. Alberto Manguel, A History of Reading, New York: Penquin, 1997, 19. Manguel cites as his source Edward G. Browne's A Literary History of Persia, 4 vols., London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1902-24. I found the specific reference to this story on pages 374-375 of Vol. 1, Book IV, "Decline of the Caliphate." There is, sadly, no mention of the alphabetical arrangement of the library. This entire masterpiece isavailable online at The Packard Humanities Institute, Persian Texts in Translation, 23 February 2006, <http://persian.packhum.orq/persian/pf?file=90001011&ct=0> (15 November 2006).
  2. Edward G. Browne. Vol. 1, Book IV, "Decline of the Caliphate," A Literary History of Persia," 4 vols., London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1902-24,374-375. Available online at The Packard Humanities Institute, Persian Texts in Translation, 23 February 2006, <http://persian.packhum.org/persian/pf?file=90001011&ct=0> (15 November 2006).
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