Enjoy bookshops? I do, and I can’t imagine the vast majority of book readers not doing the same. Bookshops by Jorge Carrión is a blend of his travels and chapter-by-chapter essays on history and philosophy, showing how bookshops shape us in our pursuit of the books we want to read or simply want to own. It’s a love letter to bookshops, and one I thoroughly enjoyed.
Covering shops from the ancient to the new, Carrión pays homage to the familiar—Shakespeare & Co. in Paris—and to many in the Latin world that were completely new to me. He writes that visiting a bookshop is like crossing borders without needing a passport. Bookshops, he says, are places of ideas that shape intellectual exchange, fight censorship, and simply make us readers happy. He draws a clear distinction between the physical bookshop—bricks and mortar, where we step inside and become part of the shelves and the atmosphere—and the online bookstore, cheap but impersonal, a warehouse of “click and buy” that never requires us to leave the lounge room.
The first chapter, Always a Journey, lets us understand that bookshops are doors into other worlds—travel, fantasy, memory, discovery. Browsing offers encounters with the unexpected. It sets up the ideas that run through this essay-like book and invites us, as bookshop lovers, to reflect on our own lives as readers.
Finishing the book made me reflect on how much I have always loved bookshops. I thought about the many I’ve haunted in my home city of Brisbane. As a youngster there were several, with Folios always my first choice, sadly closed after Covid. Archives Fine Books seems to have been around forever and is still going strong—a second-hand bookshop claiming over a million books on its shelves. I love it; it embodies Carrión’s ideas of memory and discovery. I have vague memories of the Red and Black bookshop which, during the censorship and control of the Bjelke-Petersen years, felt wonderfully subversive.
Among the independents I still haunt is Avid Reader in West End, which leads naturally to the wonderful second-hand Bent Books just down the road. Not far away is The Book Merchant Jenkins, once connected to a free swap library over the river that has sadly disappeared. Logical Unsanity’s 24-Hour Book Shed was near where I worked for a few months, and I was like a moth to a lamp—such were the treasures I found. Lifeline Bookfest remains a must-visit; as I write this, it's only a couple of weeks away, and the lure of finding something I’ve craved is strong.
These days, the independents also include the little neighbourhood street libraries. In fact, I found this one in such a library. Such as this book, they add to the memory and discovery this reader will crave forever.
Even though Bookshops was released in 2013, it is highly recommended for anyone who loves the physical bookshop.