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Town & Country US

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February 2025

Nestled among the winding, narrow streets of Berkeley, California, which curve past a pastiche of architectural styles, including the material opulence of the spare modern mansions belonging to the tech elite, Susan Filter and Peter Koch's home stands apart.

- BY RACHEL LEHMANN-HAUPT

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Their apartment, one of three in a converted Mediterranean Revival boardinghouse built in 1909, is hidden away down a footpath in a neighborhood that architecturally mirrors the eclectic spirit of Berkeley. In the city where the Free Speech Movement took root, a vibrant intellectual and bohemian culture endures, thanks in part to couples like Filter and Koch, as well as to the authors Michael Chabon and Michael Pollan, the chef Alice Waters, and the economist Robert Reich, who live nearby. Koch, 81, is a revered master printer, book artist, and typographer; Filter, 72, is a paper conservator who has dedicated her life to repairing books and maps after spending many years studying art in Italy.

Together they have amassed a vast, Borgesian collection of 7,000 first editions, out-of-print titles, arcane maps, and literary ephemera, all meticulously looked after and each one the keeper of a story from Filter's and Koch's long history in the publishing trenches.

“Books carry more than just words,” Koch says. “They hold history, memory, and the soul of the people who made them.” This sentiment resonates deeply with me, because of my own heritage, which I describe for him. My grandfather Hellmut Lehmann-Haupt, a rare books expert, played a pivotal role in the World War II-era Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives program (famously known as the “Monuments Men”), which preserved countless pieces of cultural patrimony that had been looted by the Nazis. Many of my grandfather's books, it turns out, are in the couple's collection.

Town & Country US'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Sign Up for Real Life Downton Abbey Cosplay

Move over, cowboy. The classic British hunt takes over the American West.

time to read

4 mins

December 2025

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

CREATIVE ARISTOCRACY

Our annual guide to the people changing the world as we know it, with art, fashion, literature, food, music, film, and more. They may not be household names just yet, but trust us, it won't be long—and you'll want to be able to say you knew them all when.

time to read

11 mins

December 2025

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

What, Me Leave?

If history teaches us anything it's that the addiction to power— over a nation, a family, or a trillion-dollar corporation—is often absolute.

time to read

12 mins

December 2025

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Let's All Be Reginas

Max Mara makes a strong case for some unbridled regal glamour.

time to read

1 min

December 2025

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Choose Your Own Gem-Venture

How far can a stone take you? Come fly with me, says the jewel. Let's fly, let's fly away.

time to read

1 min

December 2025

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Send Them on the Trip of a Lifetime

A five-and-dime heiress leads the way.

time to read

5 mins

December 2025

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

LE HEIST

Nobody does over-the-top robbery like the French. Why does it keep happening?

time to read

7 mins

December 2025

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

ONCE MORE BEFORE YOU GO

Quality, style, provenance. They're all visible in one of New York City's great apartments—and also in the world class collections inside. Here, one final look before it all goes away.

time to read

5 mins

December 2025

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

The Rogue's Gallery

Jeff Goldblum may be back in theaters as the Wizard in Wicked: For Good, but the actor, musician, and fashion plate doesn't make his magic only on screen. Now, for his next trick.

time to read

8 mins

December 2025

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

1968 ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S CHRISTMAS FEAST

For T&C's December 1968 issue, we paid a visit to Alfred Hitchcock at his home in Bel Air and asked him to plan an imaginary Christmas feast for Santa. He did not disappoint. The director began by rattling off the guest list: Scrooge, Lady Chatterley, Bronco Bill, Casanova, Marie Antoinette, and, \"for a very special touch of gore, Anne Boleyn, who will arrive headless and carry her head on a claret velvet cushion.\"

time to read

1 min

December 2025

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