Brian W. Aldiss was one of the lights of my youth. One of his titles, "Galaxies Like Grains of Sand", remains a favorite sci-fi title of mine.
But this volume (my copy is a 1955 first edition from London's Farber and Farber), was Aldiss's first novel and a far cry from most of his later work. At the time he was working in a book store. He used that experience to fund the material here, the 'diary' of a book shop worker. Tales of literacy puns, customer portraits, and book shop life are intertwined with peeks at his love life and family life. The solidly 50s flavor of life remains substantially different from today's electronic muddle while the bookshop keepers' life bears a strong familiarity with today's independents who stock new and used titles.
Well-written, insightful, chock full of humor, this modest volume (200 pgs.) could command days to read if one researched every allusion and reference. Aldiss is subtle and winks at us on every page.
(Illustrated with line drawings by Pearl Falconer.)
Recommended.