I finally got around to a few books on my To Be Read list
and one was “The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend.” A bookshop is a central feature, almost a
character, in this delightful book set in Broken Wheel, Iowa. The back cover blurb captures it well: “A
heartwarming reminder of why we are booklovers,
this is a sweet, smart story about how books find us, change us, and connect
us.”
Booklovers will get a
kick out of the references to books and authors and be thankful for the lists in the back of the book. I was reading about one of the characters
being taken with Idgie and was tickled that I finally recalled that Idgie was a
character in “Fried Green Tomatoes.”
That book prompted me to think, “Gee, I think there are other
books I’ve read that take place in bookshops,” and I was right. There were a
few whose titles I couldn’t recall, but I’ve come up with most of them.
Years ago, I read the Carolyn Hart mysteries that take place
in and around the Death on Demand bookshop on Broward’s Rock, a South Carolina
island. I likely read the first five or six
and enjoyed all the references to books and authors. I wasn’t surprised to learn there are 26 in
the series, and I may have to get back to them.
You don’t have to be a Jane Austen fan to enjoy Charlie
Lovett’s “First Impressions,” a tale of a previously unknown Austen manuscript.
The heroine is recently graduated from Oxford and works in an antiquarian
bookshop in London. Since I just last
year took a trip to England and visited Oxford, I especially enjoyed
recognizing the Oxford references.
I discovered John Dunning’s series of books featuring
bookshop owner and former Denver police officer Cliff Janeway when my sister
passed along “Booked to Die,” the first in the series. Now I know there are four more in the series,
so they’re going on my TBR list.
I’ve mentioned Nina George’s book, “The Little Paris
Bookshop,” in a previous column, but this whimsical story of a bookshop housed
on a boat belongs on this list as well.
Wouldn’t you love to visit a floating bookshop?
Still on my TBR list is “The Storied Life of A.J.Fikry,”
about the owner of Island Books on the imaginary Alice Island located somewhere
near Boston.
Another book I’m looking forward to reading is “The Diary of
a Bookseller,” a Christmas gift from a friend who knows me oh-so-well. This one
is nonfiction, written by Shaun Bythell, who owns The Bookshop in Wigtown,
Scotland. Described as “a wry and hilarious account of life at a bookshop in a
remote Scottish village,” it promises to be a behind the scenes look at the
life of a bookseller.
As for cats, as I recalled these books, I couldn’t help but
think about Books Unlimited, a cozy, inviting bookshop in Franklin, North
Carolina, where Nancy the cat roams from the
chair to the window to the counter,
perfectly at home. If you’re lucky when you visit, she may even curl up in your
lap. And, if the books I’ve mentioned end up on your reading list, Nancy and the book shop owner will happily find them for you.
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