"The worth of a book is to be measured by what you can carry away from it"
About this Quote
The sentence also carries a quiet rebuke to status reading. A library as wallpaper, a canon as social credential, a fashionable title photographed but not metabolized: all of that fails Bryce’s test. His measure is portable, practical, almost austere. What can you “carry away” implies scarcity and selection; you won’t keep everything. The reader is forced into an accounting exercise: what did this book actually change in me, and what was just scenery?
Context matters. Bryce lived in an age of expanding literacy, mass print, and political reform, when books were increasingly tools of civic formation as much as art objects. As a diplomat and public intellectual, he would have been surrounded by texts that competed for influence - pamphlets, histories, policy arguments, national myths. The subtext is that reading is not neutral: it equips you. A book’s worth, then, is not its heft or its reputation, but its residue - the durable part that survives the closing of the cover and shows up later in judgment, conversation, and action.
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Bryce, James. (2026, January 17). The worth of a book is to be measured by what you can carry away from it. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-worth-of-a-book-is-to-be-measured-by-what-you-66380/
Chicago Style
Bryce, James. "The worth of a book is to be measured by what you can carry away from it." FixQuotes. January 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-worth-of-a-book-is-to-be-measured-by-what-you-66380/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The worth of a book is to be measured by what you can carry away from it." FixQuotes, 17 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-worth-of-a-book-is-to-be-measured-by-what-you-66380/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.











