PyBaMM
Fast and flexible physics-based battery models in Python
PyBaMM 25.10 has been released!
2025-10-29

The Coffee Table Book Now

So go ahead. Buy the oversized monograph on Japanese denim. Splurge on the retrospective of René Gruau’s fashion illustrations. Stack them crookedly. Let the cat sleep on them. That is not disrespect. That is their purpose.

Text is secondary, sometimes tertiary. The photographs, illustrations, or reproductions must be breathtaking. Each spread should function as a standalone poster. The best coffee table books allow you to open to any page and immediately be drawn in — no context needed. the coffee table book

Unlike a thriller, a coffee table book has no cliffhangers. It is designed for random access. You might read a caption about a 1967 Ferrari Dino, then flip 200 pages to a full-bleed photo of a Japanese bonsai master’s hands. The narrative is atmospheric, not linear. So go ahead

And in that moment, the coffee table book will have done exactly what it was meant to do: not inform, not educate, but ignite . Stack them crookedly

In the hierarchy of printed matter, few objects occupy a space as simultaneously revered and misunderstood as the coffee table book. To the uninitiated, it is merely a large, heavy, expensive slab of glossy pages that sits undisturbed for months. To the design aficionado, it is a statement of identity. To the host, it is a social lubricant. And to the publisher, it is a glorious, beautiful gamble against the digital tide.

After all, a coffee table without a book is just a surface. A coffee table with a book is a stage.

But the modern coffee table book as we know it was born in the 1950s. Post-war America saw a boom in suburban living, disposable income, and the rise of the "living room" as a central social space. Coffee tables became ubiquitous. Publishers like Taschen (founded in 1980, but part of this legacy) and Assouline realized that people wanted books that were as much furniture as they were literature.