The burning of the Library of Alexandria is the ultimate symbol of lost knowledge, a tragedy that supposedly set humanity back by centuries. But historian Alice Harper argues in "The Smoke of Alexandria" that the popular narrative-a single catastrophic fire started by Caesar or religious zealots-is a myth that obscures a more complex and relevant truth.
Harper reconstructs the life of the Mouseion, showing it was not just a library but a research institute comparable to a modern university. She demonstrates that its decline was gradual, driven by budget cuts, bureaucratic neglect, and the shifting priorities of Roman emperors who preferred funding spectacles over science.
The book traces the survival of the texts that did make it, showing how they migrated to Constantinople and Baghdad. Harper uses this history as a lens to view our modern "Digital Dark Age," arguing that the greatest threat to knowledge isn't fire, but apathy and lack of funding. A corrective history that reveals institutions are fragile not because of enemies at the gates, but because of rot from within.