• Rich Barlow

    Senior Writer

    Photo: Headshot of Rich Barlow, an older white man with dark grey hair and wearing a grey shirt and grey-blue blazer, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey backdrop.

    Rich Barlow is a senior writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. Perhaps the only native of Trenton, N.J., who will volunteer his birthplace without police interrogation, he graduated from Dartmouth College, spent 20 years as a small-town newspaper reporter, and is a former Boston Globe religion columnist, book reviewer, and occasional op-ed contributor. Profile

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There are 4 comments on An Appreciation: The Last Chapter of a Bibliophile’s Life

  1. After my pre-college continental wanderings, I arrived back in Paris with scarcely enough cash for a bed and was roaming the streets when I saw George’s sign on a chalkboard hanging from the awning of that thin old abbey he had stuffed with books. I saw the lamp and was drawn in before I knew it was an impromptu hostel.
    He had a bed for me, without a fee — Hemingway’s bed. I met the most amazing collection of people I have encountered to this day: peripatetic beats fresh back from Morocco, jack Mormons geniuses, even a girl who stopped clocks. But George’s generosity holding court in his apartment, serving pancakes, was the most amazing of all.
    I went back to see George by this time he had made all the travel books. Friends and I helped clean the old monk cells in a basement that seemed to breed paperbacks. The place was at once so open and so full of mystery, and literary history.
    I wrote the biography he requested and hope one day to return, meet his daughter, and flesh it out. Salut George Whitman — yet another reason to be proud of BU.

  2. I was on of the 50,000. I’d just completed a year abroad and a student tour of Russia, Czechoslovakia, and Poland, returned to Paris with $25 in my pocket. Since it was 1972 I felt rich enough to lend $10 to someone who really needed it. I did not know that I would have to wait in Paris for 10 days before more money arrived. My hotel cost $1 a night, and after a couple of days I wandered in to the Shakespeare bookshop. There was a Canadian there staining bookshelves with strong tea. He told me that he was staying there in excange for his work. Could I stay too? Ask George. Yes, I had to read one book daily and sell books in the morning for an hour a day. I slept downstairs among the stacks and met some amazing people that week.

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