Bookend
{{Short description|Object used to support a row of books}}
{{about|the physical object|other uses|Bookend (disambiguation)|the Simon & Garfunkel album|Bookends (album)|the company|Bookstop (company)}}
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File:Serre-livres, art-déco, par le sculpteur René van Dievoet (1908-1978), août 1944.jpg by sculptor René van Dievoet.]]
A bookend is an object tall, sturdy, and heavy enough that is placed at either end of a row of upright books to support or buttress them. Heavy bookends—made of wood, bronze, marble, and even large geodes—have been used in libraries, stores, and homes for centuries; the simple sheetmetal bookend (originally patented in 1877 by William Stebbins Barnard){{Cite web|url=https://patents.google.com/patent/US186974A/en|title=Improvement in book-supports}} uses the weight of the books standing on its foot to clamp the bookend's tall brace against the last book's back; in libraries, simple metal brackets are often used to support the end of a row of books. Elaborate and decorative bookends are common as elements in home decor. Bookends are usually made of metal and plastic.
The word "bookend" is also used metaphorically to refer to any pair of items which frame and define a significant or noteworthy event or place. For example, regarding the practice in the United States whereby Memorial Day and Labor Day demarcate the traditional beginning and end of summer, those two holidays could be referred to as bookends.
See also
- Bookend terrace, a bookend effect in the design of terraced houses.
- Book nook
References
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External links
{{Wiktionary|bookend}}
{{Commons category|Bookends}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20120603221955/http://www.dimensionsguide.com/bookends-sizes/ Bookend sizes]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20140208203516/http://www.justbookends.com/bookends/historyofbookendsarticle.cfm The History of Bookends]
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