English edit

Noun edit

book-ghoul (plural book-ghouls)

  1. (rare) Person who vandalizes books by ripping their pages out and stealing them.
    • 1881, Andrew Lang, The Library, page 56:
      There is a thievish nature more hateful than the biblioklept. The Book-Ghoul is he who combines the larceny of the biblioklept with the abominable wickedness of breaking up and mutilating the volumes from which he steals.
    • 1959 January 25, Elizabeth Lawrence, edited by Bill Neal, Through the Garden Gate, →ISBN, page 5:
      I bought the text of the volume on bulbs for a dollar. It had been priced at a hundred dollars before some book-ghoul tore out the fifty-eight plates to use as decorations for lamp shades and scrap baskets.
    • 1973 August, Julia Fields, “The Plot To Bring Back Dunking”, in Black World, volume 22, number 10, page 70:
      And the front doors were locked. Locked for what? Burglary? Ol' book-ghoul come to retrieve his pictures from E-boney?