You open Google. Nothing. You check Wikipedia. He doesn’t have a page. You check the big library catalogs. Silence.
The PDF, however, is wild. It is often a scanned copy—OCR'd just enough to be searchable, but just imperfectly enough to be funny. Try searching for "Eminescu." You’ll find "Eminescu," "Eminescu," and "Eminoscu" (the lost cyberpunk version). Dictionarul General Al Literaturii Romane.pdf
5 out of 5 coffee-stained, margin-annotated, Ctrl+F-friendly pages. You open Google
You will go in to look up the birth year of "Ion Luca Caragiale." You will emerge three hours later reading about a 19th-century critic named Titu Maiorescu and his arguments about "forms without substance." You will then fall into a rabbit hole about a little-known playwright from the 1960s who was banned by Ceaușescu. He doesn’t have a page
And then, the heavens part. A 50-megabyte PDF appears. No cover image, just raw text. You download it. You open it. And suddenly, you are no longer a researcher. You are an explorer in the Library of Babel. For the uninitiated, the Dictionarul General al Literaturii Romane (General Dictionary of Romanian Literature) is exactly what it sounds like, but on steroids. Coordinated by academic Eugen Simion, this isn't just a dusty lexicon. It is a sprawling, multi-volume attempt to catch every single drop of the Romanian literary ocean.
We are talking about everything from the medieval chronicles of Moldavia to avant-garde poets from the 1920s, from exiled writers in Paris to dissident voices from the communist era.
Because this is a scanned PDF, many copies floating around the internet come with "provenance." One famous version has handwritten notes in the margin from a professor in Iași. Another copy has a coffee ring on page 342 (the page about Mihail Sadoveanu, ironically). You aren't just reading a dictionary; you are reading someone else's academic obsession.