books about bookstores?

Anonymous
The Bookstore on the Beach

The Librarian Spy
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I got you! All of Madeline Martin’s books are about bookshops (or in a few cases, Liberians). The Last Book Shop in London was both sweet and interesting. Set in WW2.

For a lighter read, there’s the Secret, Book, and Scone Society by Emery Adams. Set in present day. A woman owns a small bookstore in a mountain town with a hot spring/spa, so she has a mix of locals and tourists coming in. Her past is interesting (unfolding over the first two books) and she has a small group of friends who make up the “society.” Really interesting characters!


Such a good book!

If you sign up for Madeline's newsletter, you'll get a short story set at Christmas at the book shop. It was so nice to revisit the characters.

I read the new book, about librarians in Poland. It was incredible!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I got you! All of Madeline Martin’s books are about bookshops (or in a few cases, Liberians). The Last Book Shop in London was both sweet and interesting. Set in WW2.

For a lighter read, there’s the Secret, Book, and Scone Society by Emery Adams. Set in present day. A woman owns a small bookstore in a mountain town with a hot spring/spa, so she has a mix of locals and tourists coming in. Her past is interesting (unfolding over the first two books) and she has a small group of friends who make up the “society.” Really interesting characters!


Such a good book!

If you sign up for Madeline's newsletter, you'll get a short story set at Christmas at the book shop. It was so nice to revisit the characters.

I read the new book, about librarians in Poland. It was incredible!


DP - Are you talking about The Keeper of Hidden Books? I enjoyed it enough to read it, but not enough to keep it on my book shelves. How would you rate it compared to the London one?
Anonymous
Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan
The Midnight Library by Matt Haig
The Library Book by Susan Orlean


Not about libraries or bookstores, but for similar interests:
The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I got you! All of Madeline Martin’s books are about bookshops (or in a few cases, Liberians). The Last Book Shop in London was both sweet and interesting. Set in WW2.

For a lighter read, there’s the Secret, Book, and Scone Society by Emery Adams. Set in present day. A woman owns a small bookstore in a mountain town with a hot spring/spa, so she has a mix of locals and tourists coming in. Her past is interesting (unfolding over the first two books) and she has a small group of friends who make up the “society.” Really interesting characters!


Such a good book!

If you sign up for Madeline's newsletter, you'll get a short story set at Christmas at the book shop. It was so nice to revisit the characters.

I read the new book, about librarians in Poland. It was incredible!


DP - Are you talking about The Keeper of Hidden Books? I enjoyed it enough to read it, but not enough to keep it on my book shelves. How would you rate it compared to the London one?


The Last Book Shop in London was, IMO, a bit better. Both end on a high note, but the London one is a little sweeter.

Someone else mentioned The Librarian Spy and that's by the same author.
Anonymous
Booklovers by Emily Henry if you want something fairly light-hearted / romance-y
Anonymous
Susan Coll’s book Bookish People is about her time at Politics and Prose. I’m not sure it’s her best book, but it’s great for the local interest by a local writer.
Anonymous
Days at the Morisaki Bookshop
Anonymous
What you are looking for is in the library. Very sweet, cozy book set in Japan.
Anonymous
84 Charing Cross Road is a grandparent of this genre.
Anonymous
Shadow of the wind.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The Storied Life of AJ Fikry


This was a good book!
Anonymous
Cozy sweet BS books, or books whose authors actually know how bookstores work, and that they're not full of teacups and cozy murders?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:You by Caroline Keynes


+1
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Cozy sweet BS books, or books whose authors actually know how bookstores work, and that they're not full of teacups and cozy murders?


The time has come for a grim and gritty post-apocalyptic bookstore novel!
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