bookshops

Books in the Wild: Eyrolles, Paris

Last week I wrote about Shakespeare and Company, this week we’ve got the other bookshop I visited on that Paris trip – Eyrolles, which is just around the corner (in Paris terms) and also has a stationery section. My sort of shop. Sadly I forgot to take a photo of the front, so apologies for that.

The first time I went into a French bookshop, I think one of the biggest differences in noticed compared to a British one was the white spines. And then I noticed the size difference. And how many of them were published by Folio. It was only when I got my first French book back to the shelf that I noticed that they write the opposite way on the spine to British books. And it’s been… well a while since that first visit, and French publishing has changed reassuringly little. There are a few differences though

And it’s not just the nonfiction shelves, a lot of fiction is the same. Except for crime fiction. A lot of them get black spines. And I spent a lot of time in French bookshops during the year that I lived there, and I’ve still not really worked out what the rule is for what gets what on that front. And my French translations of Agatha Christie have yellow covers and spines.

The bit where I noticed a change was in the romance and Romantasy where there were they now seem to be using some of the same covers as other countries rather than going for something completely different: I mean look at the cover on the French translation of Casting Off that I bought – I think we’re on the fourth generation of covers for the Cazalet series in the UK and that is nothing like any of them.

I guess it’s too early to tell if this is the BookTok influence – meaning that people all over the world want their covers to match the ones they’ve seen the US book influencers waving, no matter which language it’s in, but considering how different I know the covers used to be (which I don’t with some of the other countries where I’ve seen the same trend) it’s where I’ve wondered about it the most.

But somethings don’t change – here you see that the spines might not be white, but they’re not all the wrap around cover-spine thing that we get so much in the UK. As I said, I bought a copy of Casting Off in French, some very nice stationery (I love Seyes ruled paper, and have produced some of my best handwriting on it over the years) and felt like proper Parisians, then we went off down the road to Shakespeare and Company to be touristy!

Have a great weekend

bookshops

Books in the Wild: Shakespeare and Company

This week’s Recommendsday was inspired by the trip to Paris, so it’s only fair that I write about a Parisian bookshop – and this is probably Paris’s most famous bookshop of all.

It should first be noted that this is the second bookshop called Shakespeare and Company that Paris has had – the first was set up by Sylvia Beach just after the First World War and was where Hemingway and all the Lost Generation crowd hung around in the 1920s and 1930s. That Shakespeare and company was forced to shut down by the Nazis in 1941 and never reopened.

This Shakespeare and Company opened as La Mistral in 1951 and was renamed in 1964 on the 400th anniversary of Shakepeare’s birth in honour of Sylvia Beach and her store. And it is now iconic in its own right. It sells new, second-hand and antiquarian books and the crowds to get in start early. We came past about an hour before opening time on the day we visited and there were already a couple of people waiting. We went and had breakfast, stopped at another bookstore (about which more next week!) and came back and the queue had grown somewhat…

This is one of my photos from the queue – you can see some of the queue but also the wonderful (working) water fountain. Luckily it was quite a fast moving queue that morning – we were probably only waiting about ten or fifteen minutes to get in, which was less than I was expecting so I was pretty happy on that front.

You’re not allowed to take photos inside, so this is all I can offer – but you can see the sort of higgledy piggledy ambiance that’s going on, which is just the sort of bookshop that I love. There’s no rush to get you in and out and there are plenty of spots to sit if you want to – but we were a bit tight for time, so we had a really lovely wander around – I picked up that second hand Elizabeth Taylor you saw in Books Incoming and my sister got a cute childrens book – mine got the famous stamp, hers got the sticker, and we were very happy. It’s literally just across the river from Notre Dame, so if you’re heading there to see how the rebuild is going, it’s really easy to find.

Have a great weekend.

bookshops

Books in the Wild (sort of): Barbican Shop

Did I go and see Kiss Me, Kate for a third time this week? You bet I did. And did I take the opportunity to have a good old nosy in their shop. Why yes. I even bought something (a t-shirt not a book, I was fresh from a three book trip to Waterstones Gower Street), but they have books and it’s an interesting selection

The fiction selection has some of the usual suspects – Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow and the Dolly Alderton for example, but also some stuff I haven’t seen like Big Swiss and some of the books in translation.

Then there’s a lovely section of London-set books of all sorts, from novels to walking tours to non-fiction.

There’s also a music section – on the first picture you can see there’s another shop on the top level – and that is mostly records, but the downstairs shop also has records, including The Slits album – which reminded me again how good Viv Albertine’s memoir is.

There’s also lots of art and trinkets and some really nice prints of the Barbican or that fit with the brutalist style, but I’m back on the books – this last table has some more of the more regularly spotted literary fiction. All in all a good selection if you’re looking to pick up something in a rush!

Have a great weekend.

bookshops

Books in the Wild: Persephone Books

As well as Book Conference, my trip to Bristol a few weeks back included a day out in Bath, where I finally got a chance to go to Persephone’s Bookshop, which moved here from London a few yeas back and was basically everything I was hoping it would be.

As you may remember I got a Persephone subscription for Christmas a few years back, which yealded a fair few BotW picks, and I now have a fairly substantial collection of their books, but as with a lot of forgotten-type books, it can sometimes be hard to figure out which ones are going to be your thing from the blurbs, so it was a real joy to have so many of them in such close proximity to each other so you could have a read and sample to work it out.

And they’ve got a couple of comfy chairs for you to sit in to work it out and it all just looks so lovely and welcoming and the displays look so good. They have a multibuy going as well so if you buy in multiples of three you can save a little money. They also have a nice selection of Persephone related merch and items that you might like if you like the books and their design ethos.

And then there is this shelf of the fifty books that they wish that they had published, which includes a fair few that are on my shelves – like The Light Years from the Cazalet series, Elizabeth Taylor’s Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont, Elizabeth Jenkins’s The Tortoise and the Hare, Nancy Mitford’s The Pursuit of Love and Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca.

I bought two books for me (which you’ve already seen), a third that was a gift and a little fabric pouch to put your book in to keep it nice in your bag – which is an improvement on the padded envelope that I had been previously using. All in all a great stop on a lovely day out.

Have a great long weekend if you have a bank holiday on Monday.

books, bookshops

Books in the Wild: Daunt Marylebone

One of the reasons I love wandering over Daunt Books in Marylebone is because the building is pretty and I like to see what they’re highlighting in their windows – because it’s usually totally different to the other book shops in central London. So imagine my delight this week when they actually changed one of the window displays while I was browsing in the shop!

This was the one they swapped out – you can actually se there are already a couple of empty blocks in the picture – which is for a shiny new edition of a 1950s novel that I had never heard of, but that sounds really interesting. Green Water, Green Sky is about a divorcee and her daughter who lead an itinerant existence in the sort of European spots that rich people liked to hang out in, and what happens when the daughter tries to break free of her mother.

And this is what it was replaced with – The Damascus Events – which is about the 1860 massacre in Damascus, which I’m going to admit that I’d also never heard of, but which was significant in the change from the old Ottoman order towards the modern Middle East.

On the other side we have Family and Borghesia – which is two novellas about domestic life, isolation and the passing of time, which I’m sure are excellent but really don’t sound like a me thing!

The little window was Back to the Local which is a new edition of a book from 1949 about the pubs of London, which seems just perfect for the location!

Then the multi-book window just has all sorts of things – including several from my list of things I’d like to buy when the pile gets to a sensible state – like Once Upon a Time World about the French Riviera, Erotic Vagrancy, the latest in the stream of books about Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton and the sequel to Days at the Morisaki Bookshop, and Abroad in Japan.

The crime tower and table has quite a lot of stuff that I’ve read 0 but also enough stuff that I’ve still got on the pile to make me feel guilty enough not to buy any books! So along with the stuff I’ve read like the Richard Osman and Rev Richard Coles (who Him Indoors had not realised were not all Richard Osman), Eight Detectives and The Cracked Mirror which I’m reading at the moment, there’s also The Strangers Companion, Helle and Death and The Mystery Guest which are all sitting on the Kindle…

This side of the crime display was much less guilt inducing – just the Tom Hindle Murder On Lake Garda that’s sitting on the pile, and then the third Cesare Aldo and the Grave Expectations sequel that I want to read, but that I can resist until they come out in paperback!

And finally, a new hardback fiction display – featuring Welcome to Glorious Tuga which I’ve read, and The Divorcées which is on the actual pile because I haven’t and Background for Love and Anita De Monte Laughs Last which sounds like I might really like them, if I can just get the pile under control some time…

Have a great weekend!

bookshops

Books in the Wild: Summer Releases

Two different Waterstones in todays post – because I can to be honest, just be glad I didn’t include Birmingham airport W H Smith – but there wasn’t anything different to these two this time – I was actually disappointed with the options I had for the holiday really.

Anyway least start with Waterstones Piccadilly. This was the week before the holiday, on the first bumper release day in June. To be honest I think the only reason I took the photo of this fiction shelf is because Mona of the Manor made the cut!

This one has got the book I went for – the final Maisie Dobbs The Comfort of Secrets which was new that day, as was Death in le Jardin but there are also a few here I hadn’t seen before, like Everyone on this Train is a Suspect and The Book of Secrets. Then there are the ones I’ve read like The Antiques Hunters Guide to Murder and The Potting Shed Murder.

And then this is the upstairs window display in the fiction section of Waterstones Gower Street this week – it’s got some of the same stuff as that first photo from Piccadilly, but it’s also got The Ministry of Time, which I have on the pile and got nominated for the Waterstones Debut Fiction prize this week, as did Glorious Exploits on the far right.

Have a great Saturday everyone

L

books, bookshops

Books in the Wild: Works summer update

I wasn’t going to do this this week but then I went into my local The Works and they had a tonne of summer books and I though that I had to flag it to you all so you can get your holiday/vacation purchasing underway.

This is the new book section – and there’s a few that aren’t my thing but there’s the new Emily Henry, some of the big memoirs from Christmas at a bargain price (now coming out in paperback which is presumably why) the paperback of Yellowface, some TV tie-ins and cook books.

Let’s start by saying that if it wasn’t for NetGalley, pre-orders and airport purchasing, I would have spent a tonne of money because they have such good stuff at the moment. There’s the new Olivia Dade, the Tessa Bailey I bought on the way to Manila, Elle Kennedy, the new Amy Lea, and so many of the current New Adult favourites.

This is the slightly older but still not old enough to be in the 3 for £6 selection – all the Richard Osmans, Lessons in Chemistry, The Maid, the first Megan Clawson (the new one is in the first photo), Beth O’Leary and a tonne of sagas and crimes that are too much for me!

This shelf was where I learned that there are now three Finlay Donovan books! And I still haven’t read the first one. There’s a tonne of magic, sports romance, murder mystery and paranormal. Basically there are books for you in all the key genres that are trending at the moment no matter what sort of budget you’re working on. As long as you don’t read as many books as I do. For once I managed to resist purchasing, but that’s only because I was heading to buy a stack of books to give as a gift and couldn’t carry any more!

Have a great Saturday everyone

book related, books, bookshops

Books in the Wild: Heathrow Terminal 5

You all knew this was coming once you saw I’d been to Lagos didn’t you? I don’t go to Heathrow very often – it’s not the most convenient airport for us for where we live if we’re sorting our own holiday out, and package holidays don’t tend to leave from there if we’re doing that. So I was excited to get a look at what Heathrow had to offer. And then it turned out that what Terminal 5 had to offer was disappointing. At least at the end of the terminal we were at before we had to hustle off down to our gate.

So in the interests of completeness, these are the new book options they had – everything else was backlist or magazines, and we all know that’s not what I’m there for. So this is the paperback selection – where you can see that a lot of the last year’s big hardback releases – including stuff I liked like Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow and the fourth Thursday Murder Club – are not out in paperback and near the top of the charts.

That theme continues on the second paperback case – with last year’s Emily Henry, Curtis Sittenfeld’s Romantic Comedy and Monica Heiny in there, along with the tie-in edition of Romancing Mr Bridgerton and This Summer Will Be Different by Carley Fortune, which I would have bought if I hadn’t already just bought the Kindle edition because it was on offer.

On to the airport exclusives, and you will see that I am already doing pretty well on the, – and a lot of the stuff that I would have bought, I already have. Like this year’s Emily Henry and the new Anthony Horowitz. This was the point where I started panicking that I wasn’t going to find anything I wanted, and I hadn’t brought a paperback with me. Not that it would turn out to matter, as I didn’t have a lot of reading time, and the time I did have I spent on the Kindle. But I didn’t know that at that point!

And this photo is awful, but there wasn’t a very wide aisle and I was crammed in and this is the best I could do. But this is the point where I heaved a sigh of relief, because The Ministry of Time was the book I was hoping to find at the airport – it’s the buzzy book of this summer and I think it has the potential to be this year’s equivalent of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow if you know what I mean. So I snaffled that, and then had to figure out what else. And I did find another one for the offer – but I’m going to tease you and make you wait until the next Books Incoming to see what!

Have a great weekend everyone – enjoy the bank holiday if you have one where you are.

books, bookshops

Bookshop visit: Óbidos Part 2

Last week I said there was more from Óbidos and so here it is!

This is the Livraria do Mercado, which is a bookshop and an organic market. I have no idea what the proportion of books to produce is when it comes to sales, but in terms of the look of the place, it’s mostly books!

I also have no idea what how the prices for the produce stack up compared to in the other stores, but it seemed to be good quality and I know I’d be happy to buy my veggies in a bookshop – after all I’ve done my fair share of book buying in supermarkets over the years, and this is definitely the better way around!

It’s mostly Portuguese books (obviously) but they have also got a section with foreign language novels – including lots of Portuguese authors in translation and, in English at least, some very random secondhand books!

You’ve already seen this one, but this is the book exchange – and this is all English books (or the vast majority anyway). It’s run by volunteers who have moved to the area and raises money for local charities. As you know, I picked up a few books while I was there!

And that’s it! Have a great weekend and I hope you have a comfy spot and a good book to read in it!

book related, books, bookshops

Bookshop Visit: The Hedgehog Bookshop, Penrith

Were we in the north recently? Did I find a bookshop to visit? Did I make a purchase? Yes on all counts. And it was a delightful bookshop so of course I’m writing about it!

The Hedgehog Bookshop has two floors of lovely books and goodies. The first floor has kids books and stationery and all that sort of thing. But upstairs is where the good stuff is on a book front from my point of view.

In one room there’s a nice comfy sofa with a hedgehog cushion where you can sit and peruse your choice from what seemed like a very thoughtfully curated selection of fiction, with something for practically anyone I would have thought.

There are best sellers, BookTok picks, recent top sellers, modern classics, evergreen picks and a big old selection of crime and mystery of various types. This was not the only crime bookshelf…

And in the other room there’s an eclectic mix of non-fiction, again with something for pretty much anyone across history, celebrity memoir, cookery, the whole lot.

My purchase was a book about the history of cathedral architecture which you could see in the bonus books incoming the other week. Have a great weekend.