I Used to Love Bookshops :-(

I used to love bookshops. When I was young, that's where I spent most of my money.

But these days? The few bookshops still in existence aren't real bookshops any more. The atmosphere, the selection, the whole essence has gone.

A few days ago, I visited several bookshops (in East Sussex, England). Shops that were once crammed with books from floor to ceiling and wall to wall were now selling stationary, greeting cards, party gimmicks, toys and gadgets.
The few books they still had - usually on a single wall - were a handful of bestsellers and a lot of books by television celebrities. Celebrity cookery, celebrity kiss & tell ... no thank you.

There was nothing - seriously: nothing - to tempt this reader. I mourn for days when I could walk into a bookshop and lose myself in a choice of thousands of titles. Today, in visits to several bookshops, I found not a single book I wanted to read.
If bookshops don't provide a selection of books for genuine readers, is it surprising that genuine readers go online to shop for books?

It gets worse. One bookshop (that I would hesitate to call a bookshop, although it still had a shelf of books among the gadgets and toys) had a sign "Do not touch books unless buying."

Ahem. If I'm not allowed to pick up a book, to dip into it, to read the first couple of paragraph to see if I like the style, then I won't buy it.

Of course I'll go online where I can click 'look inside' or download sample pages to peruse at leisure.

If bookshops don't provide the selection, quality and experience that attract book loving customers, then they shouldn't complain if the customers stay away.

I hear brick & mortar bookshop owners whine about how Amazon is taking away their business... but I think they're digging their own graves.

Rayne
Storm Dancer by Rayne Hall 13 British Horror Stories by Rayne Hall Thirty Scary Tales by Rayne Hall
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Published on October 07, 2013 07:53 Tags: book-buying, book-stores, books, bookshops, rayne-hall
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message 1: by Kyra (new)

Kyra Halland I used to love going to the bookstore, too. But by the time Borders shut down, I was walking out more and more often without finding anything I wanted to buy. The books on the shelves (the fantasy shelves, where I browsed, but this was true through out the store) were filled with Latest Big Thing and Clones Of The Same. None of which interested me. And I also love the experience of going online and browsing, especially with the much wider variety of books available now that publishers don't have a lock on which books get published. It might not be a great time to be a book store, but it's a great time to be a reader.


message 2: by [deleted user] (new)

Kyra wrote: "I used to love going to the bookstore, too. But by the time Borders shut down, I was walking out more and more often without finding anything I wanted to buy. The books on the shelves (the fantasy ..."

Yes, I think online bookstores are a blessing for readers. We can browse thousands of books and read samples for any book that interests us. Bliss! :-)


message 3: by L.L. (new)

L.L. Watkin Every book store in my area has closed now. There's not even a Waterstones in the Metrocentre anymore. WHSmith has the best book selection there. If I can't even find a store there's no hope for me.

The only physical bookstore I still go to is Barter Books in Alnwick, and that's a vast and fabulous second hand store :-)


message 4: by [deleted user] (new)

L.L. wrote: "Every book store in my area has closed now. There's not even a Waterstones in the Metrocentre anymore. WHSmith has the best book selection there. If I can't even find a store there's no hope for me..."

Most bookstores here have closed. A few are ticking over, but aren't really bookstores any more.
There still is a Waterstones in Hastings, although I don't like the atmosphere there and it's threatened by closure anyway.

There used to be a marvellous charity shop in St Leonards with a big basement selling nothing but second hand books. Alas, that has closed. :-(


message 5: by W. (new)

W. ‘Tis a shame. When I lived in England (1980-83), I loved the bookshops (vs book stores in the US): delightful, stacked from head to toe, each bumbling turn dislodging Keats or Yeats.

But stores are slowly returning on the US northeast coast with a more living room feel, the most successful adding readings. Then there’s the rise of beer and book/poetry readings.

There’s hope yet.


message 6: by [deleted user] (new)

Keats or Yeats in bookstores? Not anymore.
Now it's Famous Footballer's Wife Tells All and TV Celebrity Chef Cooks Naked.

I like the idea of book shops with a living room feel and readings. Let's hope it catches on.


message 7: by W. (new)

W. Oh dear, you mean Kensington is the new Kansas?

You know what that means, publishing-wise:
Ulysses Tells All
Jane Eyre Naked (rapidly followed by the zombie edition, I reckon)
Hamlet Tells All (no, wait, we already have that one)
The Importance of Being Naked
Oliver Twisted


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Rayne Hall, Fantasy and Horror Author

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