susanne
dB
What are your favorite book stores?
I love a great book store as much as I love the books themselves. Not so much the ubiquitous megastores like Barnes & Noble (although I love those, too), but the unique, quaint, little stores that reflect the owners' love of books, and the used book stores with shelf after shelf of mildly musty hidden treasures.
Portland is blessed to have possibly the greatest used book stores in the world: Powells Books -- an entire city block (now spilling onto another block, plus other outlets around town) with multiple levels of fabulous new and used books. Keith and I have long consider Powells our favorite cheap date and can spend hours lost in the stacks. They have an in-house coffee shop, where you can take books you are considering (or just want to look through. The amazing thing is that, as big as Powells is, it is never cold or impersonal. Every stack, every aisle, every quirky corner feels like home.
Sadly, the small book stores and even the mighty Powells are being affected by ebooks. I feel guilty that almost all of my fiction reading is done on my Kindle, but I want to continue supporting the local stores and plan to purchase the hard copies of my favorite fiction -- and still, of course, buy all of my nonfiction reading in true book form.
I love a great book store as much as I love the books themselves. Not so much the ubiquitous megastores like Barnes & Noble (although I love those, too), but the unique, quaint, little stores that reflect the owners' love of books, and the used book stores with shelf after shelf of mildly musty hidden treasures.
Portland is blessed to have possibly the greatest used book stores in the world: Powells Books -- an entire city block (now spilling onto another block, plus other outlets around town) with multiple levels of fabulous new and used books. Keith and I have long consider Powells our favorite cheap date and can spend hours lost in the stacks. They have an in-house coffee shop, where you can take books you are considering (or just want to look through. The amazing thing is that, as big as Powells is, it is never cold or impersonal. Every stack, every aisle, every quirky corner feels like home.
Sadly, the small book stores and even the mighty Powells are being affected by ebooks. I feel guilty that almost all of my fiction reading is done on my Kindle, but I want to continue supporting the local stores and plan to purchase the hard copies of my favorite fiction -- and still, of course, buy all of my nonfiction reading in true book form.