•
Érik Desmazières provided etched illustrations for a 1997 edition of the short story, depicting the library as literally built in the shape of
Bruegel's
Tower of Babel. •
Umberto Eco's postmodern novel
The Name of the Rose (1980) features a labyrinthine library, presided over by a blind monk named Jorge of Burgos. The room is, however, octagonal in shape. • Russell Standish's
Theory of Nothing uses the concept of the Library of Babel to illustrate how an
ultimate ensemble containing all possible descriptions would in sum contain zero information and would thus be the simplest possible explanation for the existence of the universe. This theory, therefore, implies the reality of all universes. • ''
The Unimaginable Mathematics of Borges' Library of Babel'' (2008) by
William Goldbloom Bloch explores the short story from a mathematical perspective. Bloch analyzes the hypothetical library presented by Borges using the ideas of
topology,
information theory, and geometry. • In
Greg Bear's novel
City at the End of Time (2008), the sum-runners carried by the protagonists are intended by their creator to be combined to form a 'Babel', an infinite library containing every possible permutation of every possible character in every possible language. Bear has stated that this was inspired by Borges, who is also namechecked in the novel. Borges is described as an unknown Argentinian who commissioned an encyclopedia of impossible things, a reference to either "
Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius" or the
Book of Imaginary Beings. •
The Library of Babel, a website created by
Jonathan Basile, emulates an English-language version of Borges' library. An algorithm he created generates a "book" by iterating every permutation of 29 characters: the 26 English letters, space, comma, and period. Each book is marked by a coordinate, corresponding to its place on the hexagonal library (hexagon name, wall number, shelf number, and book name) so that every book can be found at the same place every time. The website is said to contain "all possible pages of 3,200 characters, about 104677 books". For example, a coordinate may look like "389fj39l-w4-s5-v32" where, "389fj39l" is the hexagon name, "w4" specifies wall 4, "s5" specifies shelf 5, and "v32" specifies volume 32. This has inspired similar projects for images (permuting 4,096 colours onto a grid of 416×640 pixels) and audio (permuting one-second audio clips at a quality of 44.1 kHz and 16 bits). • In
Steven L. Peck's novella
A Short Stay In Hell (2009), the protagonist must find the book of his life's story in a library containing every possible book. Borges' story is mentioned directly, although the library is structured very differently. It is also explicitly finite in size, though it is more than a million
orders of magnitude larger than the
observable universe. • Turkish media artist
Refik Anadol created the installation
Archive Dreaming (2017), inspired by Borges' The Library of Babel. Anadol's work employs machine learning algorithms to create an immersive, interactive digital archive, visually exploring infinite combinations of data and memory, thus reflecting Borges' concepts of infinite knowledge, randomness, and order. •
Library of Ruina (2021) is a South Korean deck-building video game whose titular location is heavily inspired by the Library of Babel. People defeated in combat within the library are turned into books that can be manipulated in various means, which leads to the protagonist Angela trying to find the "One True Book". • DC Comics
Justice League (2018) Issue #60-63 makes reference to the Library of Babel. The Justice League Dark members enter the fictional world of the book to retrieve Merlin's spellbook (as it is a library that has every book in existence). • The world of
Black Beacon (2024), a Chinese
ARPG, takes much inspiration from the Library of Babel. In the game, the Babel Library is an endless labyrinth formed through infinite permutations based on the space within the Babel Tower. "The library holds everything; it is the sum of all things our languages can express." ==See also==