An essential bibliophile’s handbook. Wherever you plan to travel, pack your Rough Guide for info, your DK guide for photos, and this book to direct you to the nearest bookshops – and entertain you on your journey with author and bookseller interviews, plus plenty of bookish trivia. The book is definitely Eurocentric (and especially UK-focused – this section is nearly half the text), but Campbell is still careful to spend time on all six continuously inhabited continents. So whether you’re headed to Montana or Mongolia, there’s a bookshop for you. Beware, though; it’s not always clear whether these shops will have many English-language offerings.
You’ll enjoy learning about bookshops that are also:
• Ice cream parlors
• Bars (The Bookstore Bar in Seattle; Book & Bar in Porstmouth, NH)
• A train carriage (in Auvers-sur-Oise, France)
• A barber shop (Coney Island in 2008)
• A boat (The Book Barge, Lichfield)
• A Thai restaurant (Boulevard Bookshop, Hastings)
• A hat shop (The Madhatter Bookshop, Burford, Oxfordshire)
Single best piece of trivia: a Biblioburro = a mobile library on a donkey’s back (in La Gloria, Colombia). And the award for best bookshop name goes to The Spitting Llama Bookshop (on the banks of Lake Titicaca, in Copacabana, Bolivia)!
In April 2012 the Blackwell’s flagship store in Oxford invited Campbell to stay in their bookshop flat (across the street) and wander around the shop for a day, writing a poem for each room. This anecdote, plus the interviews with Bill Bryson, Tracy Chevalier and Audrey Niffenegger, were among my favorite bits.
I might have liked to see my beloved Hay-on-Wye get a bit more press, and the splendid London Review Bookshop gets barely a mention, but one of my new favorites, Bookbarn International in Somerset, does make an appearance. Alas, my NetGalley download didn’t have any of the images or cross-references, so I’ll just have to buy myself a print copy.
As one Cambodian bookseller enthused to Campbell, “Books are one of the greatest gifts mankind has given itself. They are knowledge, understanding, comfort, imagination … printed books are magical, and real bookshops keep that magic alive.”
Now on my bucket list:
• Shakespeare and Company, Paris
• Larry’s Corner, Stockholm (the owner’s from Detroit!)
• Fjaerland Book Town, Norway
• The American Book Center, Amsterdam
• Arkadia Bookshop, Helsinki
• Slothrop’s, Tallinn, Estonia
• Re: Reading and The Monkey’s Paw, Toronto (the latter has a Biblio-Mat vending machine that sells an antiquarian book at random when you insert $2)
• Munro’s, Victoria (started in 1963 by Jim Munro and his first wife, Alice Munro)
• Powell’s, Portland, OR
• Bart’s Books, Ojai, CA (“best outdoor bookshop in the world”)
• Parnassus Books, Nashville, TN (co-owned by Ann Patchett)
• Book People, Austin, TX
• John K. King Used & Rare Books, Detroit
• Happy Tales Bookshop, Markesan, WI
• Whitlock’s Book Barn, Bethany, CT (also has a petting zoo!)
• Baldwin’s Book Barn, West Chester, PA
• Gertrude & Alice Café Bookshop, Bondi Beach, Australia