The Best Fictional Libraries in Pop Culture

Here at Flavorpill, we’re always on the lookout for a great library — even if that library happens to be fictional. In fact, maybe especially then, because if there’s anything we like better than reading in a great library, it’s reading about a great library (or bookstore) in a great library. So we’ve sifted through literature, film, and television to bring you ten of the best libraries ever imagined. Check them out after the jump, and if we’ve left off your favorite, be sure to add it to our list in the comments.

The Library of Babel, “The Library of Babel,” Jorge Luis Borges

In Borges’s classic story, the entire universe is a library, a infinite labyrinth, which contains all books — that is, every possible ordering of letters and symbols, so that one full book of gibberish might differ from another only in the placement of a single comma. “Perhaps my old age and fearfulness deceive me,” Borges’s narrator muses at the story’s end, “but I suspect that the human species — the unique species — is about to be extinguished, but the Library will endure: illuminated, solitary, infinite, perfectly motionless, equipped with precious volumes, useless, incorruptible, secret.” Sigh.

Sunnydale High Library, Buffy the Vampire Slayer

At the other end of the cultural spectrum (but then again, maybe not really), sits the Sunnydale High Library, squarely on top of a Hellmouth. Don’t let that scare you away, though! This place has every book you’ll ever need on vampires, spirits, demons and beyond, and happens to be staffed by a very winsome librarian. There’s also a book cage full of weapons, just in case.

Lucien’s Library, Sandman, Neil Gaiman

In the center of The Dreaming, in Dream’s Castle, is Lucien’s library, which contains every book that anyone has ever dreamed of writing — but has never written. Here, you can read anything, regardless of whether it’s written in a language you can understand. Beware, though, that if any of those dreamers turn to writers, the book in Lucien’s library will burst into flame.

Hogwarts Library, Harry Potter series, J.K. Rowling

But of course. Any library with a Dragon section is a library we want to visit. Just keep out of the Restricted Section, if you know what’s good for you.

The Library, Doctor Who

A planet-sized library containing every book ever written? Yes, please. The Library was commissioned by Felman Lux for his dying daughter Charlotte, who loved books more than anything. Then he put her mind into the library’s hard drive, so she could read forever. And also save some people.

The Jedi Temple Library

Though it exists mostly in Star Wars spin-off novels, we couldn’t help but include this high-tech nexus of all Jedi knowledge. We’d be especially interested in getting into the section restricted to members of the Jedi High Council.

The Cemetery of Forgotten Books, The Shadow of the Wind, Carlos Ruiz Zafón

Everyone who is initiated to the Cemetery of Forgotten Books, an enormous, crumbling library of books no one remembers, is allowed to choose only one volume, which he then must protect for the rest of his life. Seems like a simple task, but you never know who might want to burn your book.

Unseen University Library, Discworld series, Terry Pratchett

Much like the Hogwarts Library, the Unseen University’s library is chiefly exciting for its shelves upon shelves of magical volumes. Oh, and also for its Librarian, who happens to be an orangutan. Sure, he was once a man, but found that being an orangutan was pretty useful for a librarian. He is pledged to enforce the three rules: 1. Silence. 2. Books must be returned no later than the last date shown. 3. Do not meddle with the nature of causality. Obviously, the second rule is most important.

The monastery library, The Name of the Rose, Umberto Eco

We’ll never get tired of the library-as-maze metaphor: it’s just so satisfying on both metaphorical and literal levels. Eco’s secret, labyrinthine library, though set in the real world of a 14th century monastery, is based on Borges’s Library of Babel — after all, its blind librarian is called Jorge from Burgos. “It was then the place of a long, centuries-old murmuring,” Eco writes, “an imperceptible dialogue between one parchment and another, a living thing, a receptacle of powers not to be ruled by a human mind, a treausre of secrets emanated by many minds, surviving the death of those who had produced them or had been their conveyors.”

The Beast’s Library, Beauty and the Beast

Look, whatever else you say about him, the Beast knows how to win a girl’s heart — by presenting her with hundreds and hundreds of books, of course, displayed in this Disney-gorgeous personal library. Gaston has probably never read a book.

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SSBN620 5 pts

Glad the monastery library made the list; also surprised the Imperial Library didn't make the cut. I guess H. Beam Piper's Cosmic Computer (aka Junkyard Planet), or "Center" from the Raj Whitehall series wouldn't count; more electronic database than library.  The London Library of Ian McDonald's "Planesrunner" was well done.

TomWarren 5 pts

We older readers will always keep our Galactic Empire Library Card from Asimov's Foundatin series:   "One of the prominent features of Trantor was the Library of Trantor (variously referred to as the Imperial Library, the University of Trantor Library, and the Galactic Library), in which librarians index the entirety of human knowledge by walking up to a different computer terminal every day and resuming where the previous librarian left off."

 

MicaelaAyers 6 pts

The library in the movie/book Fahrenheit 451 contained the last of the books not burned, and was in two forms: the remaining paper copies, and the library of the memorized books of the mind.  I mention Francois Truffaut's 1966 movie because the visuals are still stunning, both of the library and the libraries of the mind.

TheresaKP 6 pts

 MicaelaAyers

 Your comment brought to mind the Twilight Zone episode "Time Enough to Last," where Burgess Merideth finds the library books all intact after the H-bomb goes off & he's the last person alive.  Finally having all the time in the world to read, his glasses get broken. 

glcurran3 5 pts

The ultimate electronic library was a central feature of the plot in 1956's "Forbidden Planet", in which Morbius (with his artificially enhanced intellect) had for 19 years performed daily translations from the Krel's electronic compendium of knowledge, "equivalent to many millions of Earthly libraries".  Since the Krel were more than 1,000,000 years ahead of humankind, their knowledge was nearly limitless (albeit, their insight into the darker side of their own psyches was the source of their downfall).

 

Also, there was a massive subterranean library in the future Earth of an Outer Limits episode in which humankind, decimated by a bioweapon, had been reduced to a single individual played by Martin Landau.

monemartuki 5 pts

I miss the old, dusty, half-abandoned library down below Castle Black's damp cellars, where Sam Tarlly researches about The Others, in George RR Martin's Song of Ice and Fire. There are so many forgotten secrets buried down there

CrystalDawn0603 5 pts

A library planet! Best planet EVER!!! If I were in any of these libraries, I'd build a fort of books and read my way out!!

LeeTuranga 5 pts

How did the  Memory Alpha library complex not make it on this list?

SonshineMusic 5 pts

I have to add the various libraries in Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events. Libraries are the KEY to that whole mystery!

CiaraLNorton 5 pts

You can visit the Jedi Temple Library in real life fact fans...it was modeled on the Long Room Library in Trinity College, Dublin.

CarolWhite1 5 pts

Would the prison library in Shawshank Redemption count?

MrSpooky 5 pts

As god awful as the book, The Historian, is I would still love to see Dracula's library

TheresaKP 6 pts

I'd add the library from the film "The Box."

Reynardo_red 5 pts

You lie! Gaston has read books. But he only knows how to read those made up entirely of pictures...

 

Alas that Mr Darcy's library was written of too long ago to make this list...

olderperson 5 pts

One of the great libraries, though possibly not so well-known, is that in the Thursday Next series of Jasper Fforde. It is in fact a world, where the literary detectives have to solve literary crimes. In the first book, The Eyre Affair, Thursday accidentally changed the ending, so that Jane married Mr Rochford, instead of everyone ending up miserable.

CarolWhite1 5 pts

Library from the Dead Poet's Society is not in here.

Sepukku the Dwarf Monk 5 pts

OMG HOW DID THE LIBRARY FROM THE PAGEMASTER NOT MAKE THIS LIST? GOD, ALL YOU GUYS DO IS MAKE LISTS AND YOU CAN'T EVEN MAKE A GOOD FICTIONAL LIBRARIES LIST, WHATUPWITDAT?

katalia 6 pts

I clicked through to make sure the Cemetery of Forgotten Books was included. But, I agree with the comment suggesting the Jasper FForde Thursday Next series library, and I would like to add the University library in the Kingkiller Chronicles by Patrick Rothfuss. 

JillianGomez 5 pts

I clicked on this article just to make sure the Doctor Who library would be on the list. Glad to see it is!!

ejbooks86 6 pts

The library guarded by the owl spirit in Avatar: The Last Airbender!

mlscpw 6 pts

The library in Wim Wenders film, Wings of Desire

sebec 5 pts

 mlscpw That's not a fictional library, it's the state library in Berlin: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berlin_State_Library

mlscpw 6 pts

 sebec I doubt anyone's going to read this at this point, but thank you for the information. Maybe I will get the chance to visit it one day.

stevelino 5 pts

The library at Rugby School of Tom Brown's Schooldays aught be exciting

Lonita 5 pts

There's also the library that the Prince and Danielle visit in Drew Barrymore's version of Cinderella "Ever After", and the "Well of Lost Plots" library in Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next books.

dmk9561 5 pts

What about the Shermer High School library?

Clikkiv 6 pts

the Library in Jasper Fford's 'Thursday Next' series....