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Noble Fragments by Michael Visontay, review: ‘two stories in one book’

This gripping expedition into an arcane world of book collectors and their eccentric passions papers over an even more intriguing yarn about family history

May 9, 2025 13:33
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2 min read

There are two stories being told by Michael Visontay in Noble Fragments, and they don’t easily fit together. But separating a book into the sum of its parts is rather his focus, so perhaps he can be excused.

Visontay, an Australian journalist and son of a Holocaust survivor, tells the story of Gabriel Wells, who in 1921 scandalised the rare books community (a fairly vibrant, backbiting group, as it transpires) by slicing and dicing a Gutenberg Bible.

That manuscript, one of around 50 known to be in existence at the time, is widely known as the first book printed on a printing press in Europe. Although, like many, the copy Wells came upon was incomplete, it was near enough so. Yet Wells, a canny Hungarian émigré to America who somehow schmoozed his way to the upper echelons of the antiquarian world, recognised that rarity meant even a single fragment would be desirable to collectors. Thus he committed what critics saw as the ultimate crime of placing commerce over cultural respect, making a not insignificant fortune in the process.

That’s where Visontay comes in, although it takes a while to work out the connection. As we learn, his grandmother was murdered by the Nazis, and his grandfather remarried Olga, another survivor, before emigrating to Australia. Olga turns out to have been Wells’s niece. And it was through an inheritance from him that allowed this patchwork of a family to rebuild a life in Sydney.