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A Noble Madness

On sale

12th August 2025

Price: £25

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Selected: ebook / ISBN-13: 9781529424027

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‘A magisterial rethinking of why we collect. I loved this book’ Edmund de Waal
‘Magnificent . . . so compulsive and entertaining’ Stephen Fry
‘Give it to the collector in your life, and watch sparks fly!’ Cathy Gere
‘A delight to read and ponder’ Jackson Lears
‘A tour de force of scholarship and storytelling’ Daniel Weiss

A captivating history of obsessive collectors: from ancient looters and idolaters to fin de siècle decadents, Freudian psychos, and hoarders.

Collectors are often praised for their taste in art or contributions to science, but there can be a darker side: their passion is sometimes driven by dangerous obsession. Roman emperors who lusted after statues; Chinese scholars obsessed with rocks and flowers; fin de siècle dandies surrounded by bibelots. History is full of stories about those who love things more than people, presenting a danger either to themselves or others.

In this sweeping history from antiquity to today, James Delbourgo tells the extraordinary story of the mad collector as a cultural figure from the tyrant and idolater to the sexually repressed “psycho” of the Freudian imagination and the modern-day hoarder. His conclusion is surprising: Because they are driven by passion rather than profit, obsessive collectors also have been cultural heroes, seen as authentic and true to themselves. Some may be mad, but theirs is a noble madness.

Reviews

Jackson Lears, author of Animal Spirits: The American Pursuit of Vitality
An extraordinarily illuminating account of a powerful cultural impulse, James Delbourgo's A Noble Madness ranges from ancient Rome and Ming China to Hearst's Hollywood and Warhol's New York; his cast of characters includes historical and fictional figures as various as Cicero and Darwin, Norman Bates and Hannibal Lecter. We could not ask for a better guide to this fascinating territory than Delbourgo-a learned, urbane flaneur who wears his learning lightly while he provides fresh insights and ready wit on nearly every page. A Noble Madness is a delight to read and ponder, not to mention an exceptional achievement in cultural history.
Erin Thompson, author of Possession: The Curious History of Private Collectors
Is a scientist plunging into a jungle in search of specimens really all that different from someone surreptitiously snipping passersby's hair to add to his very private collection? Delbourgo has great fun tackling this question by presenting a collection of collectors in a witty dash through the history of a deeply human urge.
Steven Shapin, co-author of Leviathan and the Air-Pump
Everybody has things; some people collect things; and just a few of these people are obsessives, defining themselves through their collections. What's been thought about people like that? Are they contemptible, pitiable, or admirable? Are they perverse or pious, crazy or charismatic? Delbourgo puts the collector right at the center of a historical story about what it means to be human. A Noble Madness enlightens, it provokes, and it delights
Jenny Uglow, author of The Lunar Men
A gallery of collectors from ancient times to the present -- obsessives and dilettanti, hoarders and cataloguers, emperors, scholars and libertines. Delbourgo's exploration of their 'madness,' whether uncontrolled passion, devious greed, or a desire to order chaos, is an exuberant and illuminating delight
Hartwig Fischer, former director of the British Museum
This is a wonderful book: witty, erudite, and deliciously written. The book has many layers, with different energies flowing and glowing across the pages, maintaining elegance and lightness of touch throughout. A rare combination of human empathy and critical insight. Delbourgo takes us round the world and deep into history to reveal both the dark and the bright side of collecting
Edmund de Waal
A magisterial rethinking of why we collect. I loved this book
Strong Words Magazine
An exquisitely connoisseurial survey of history's great collectors
Guardian
Every chapter of A Noble Madness is its own cabinet of curiosities
The Times
As richly detailed as it is researched... Delbourgo has a deft touch
The Independent (August Books of the Month)
This witty, anecdote-filled history ranges across the ages, taking in notorious real-life collectors (Adolf Hitler for art; Imelda Marcos for shoes) and fictional ones (such as Psycho's Norman Bates)
The Literary Review
An amusing and enjoyable book. Covering art, relics, natural science, books and even Don Giovanni and his quantitative approach to seduction, it is nothing if not stimulating
Stephen Fry
The word 'collecting' is often seen alongside the word 'mania,' but I never really understood just how intensely, wildly, hilariously and sometimes tragically obsessive true collectors can be until I read, in breathless wonder, James Delbourgo's magnificent A Noble Madness. A study of a certain kind of pathology, yes, but one that casts light on the whole history of ideas and the development of human curiosity and learning. This book is itself so compulsive and entertaining that I found myself wanting to collect the collectors whose lives and passions Delbourgo so brilliantly brings to life.
Daniel Weiss, Metropolitan Museum of Art President Emeritus
A tour de force of scholarship and storytelling, James Delbourgo explores the obsessive side of a very human impulse, and in so doing brings new insight into something deep and enduringly important within ourselves.
Cathy Gere, author of The Tomb of Agamemnon
In this fascinating, witty, and provocative book, Delbourgo's collectors range from emperors to scientists, from shopaholics to taxonomists, from bibliomaniacs to serial killers. Some appalling and others appealing, his protagonists reveal the obsessive yet strangely noble impulses behind the drive to accumulate. Give it to the collector in your life, and watch the sparks fly!
Justin Smith-Ruiu, author of Irrationality: A History of the Dark Side of Reason
I've seen the inside of James Delbourgo's New York apartment, and can report that it is surprisingly orderly, even minimalist. But the inside of his mind? What a dazzling cabinet of curiosities! He shows incontrovertibly in this mesmerizing new book the parallel between people's psyches and the objects they surround themselves with. From the high-end art collector to Jeffrey Dahmer's horrifying temple of human bones, nothing puts the human soul on display like collecting. I declare from my coffee-stained couch, surrounded by dirty plates, unopened mail, and more books than anyone could ever read, that A Noble Madness makes a fundamental contribution to the study of human psychology.