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ISBN-10
1982163305
ISBN-13
978-1982163303
Weight (pound)
2.31 pounds
Dimensions (inch)
6 x 1 x 9 inches
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All the Beauty in the World: The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Me is a quiet, luminous, and deeply moving memoir that invites readers behind the grand marble façade of one of the world’s most celebrated cultural institutions—the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Written by Patrick Bringley, a former New Yorker staffer turned museum guard, this New York Times bestseller is both a love letter to art and a meditation on grief, healing, and the restorative power of beauty.
At a moment when Bringley’s life appeared to be ascending—immersed in the glamour and intellectual energy of a promising career at The New Yorker—everything changed. His older brother’s diagnosis of terminal cancer shattered the rhythm of his days, leaving him emotionally untethered and searching for refuge from the noise of the world. That refuge came in an unexpected form: a job as a security guard at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a place he had long regarded as one of the most beautiful sanctuaries in New York City.
What Bringley initially imagined as a temporary escape becomes a decade-long immersion into the hidden life of the Met. As a guard, he gains rare, unrestricted access to the museum’s vast interior—its galleries, corridors, basements, and after-hours silence. Moving quietly through spaces filled with masterpieces from Egypt, Greece, Rome, and beyond, he develops an intimate relationship with art that most visitors can only glimpse in passing.
Bringley’s role renders him nearly invisible to the crowds, yet this invisibility becomes a gift. Free from distraction, he lingers with works of art, observing how they change under different light, moods, and seasons. Paintings and sculptures become companions—silent teachers offering endurance, patience, and perspective across centuries. In guarding them, he finds himself guarded by them in return.
Equally compelling is Bringley’s portrayal of the museum guards themselves: a vibrant, eclectic community rarely acknowledged by the public. Artists, musicians, immigrants, blue-collar workers, comedians, and dreamers—all converge beneath the museum’s roof. Through shared routines, quiet humor, and mutual respect, Bringley finds belonging during a period of profound personal loss. The Met becomes a microcosm of the world at its best: diverse, purposeful, and bound by a shared appreciation for something larger than themselves.
As time passes and grief softens into memory, Bringley gradually rediscovers his voice and his place beyond the museum walls. His decade at the Met does not remove him from life but gently prepares him to re-enter it—with greater humility, attentiveness, and gratitude.
Written with elegance, warmth, and restraint, All the Beauty in the World stands in the tradition of beloved workplace memoirs such as Lab Girl and Working Stiff. It is a consoling, humane, and profoundly empathetic book that reminds readers that beauty—quietly observed—can be a form of salvation.
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All the Beauty in the World: The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Me
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