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- From: ecl@cbnewsj.cb.att.com (Evelyn C. Leeper)
- Subject: Bookstores in Various European Cities List (rec.arts.books)
- Expires: Thu, 25 Mar 1993 22:38:37 GMT
- Organization: AT&T
- Date: Fri, 25 Dec 1992 22:38:29 GMT
- Approved: ecl@cbnewsj.att.com
- Message-ID: <1992Dec25.223829.3461@cbnewsj.cb.att.com>
- Followup-To: rec.arts.books
- Keywords: monthly
- Supersedes: <1992Nov25.163427.7311@cbnewsj.cb.att.com>
- Lines: 207
-
- Archive-name: books/stores/european
-
- Last change:
- Tue Dec 22 08:45:21 EST 1992
-
- Changes: various clarifications in Edinburgh
-
- Copies of this article may be obtained by anonymous ftp to
- pit-manager.mit.edu (18.172.1.27) under
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/books/stores/european.Z. Or, send email to
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- usenet/news.answers/books/stores/european", leaving the body of the
- message empty.
-
- Miscellaneous correction and additions to Edinburgh.
-
- Additions:
- Stockholm
-
- ============================================================================
- Cities include:
- Oxford, England
- Edinburgh, Scotland
- Glasgow, Scotland
- Stockholm, Sweden
-
- [Note 1: I collected these comments from a variety of people. I personally
- have no knowledge of many of these places and take no responsibility if you
- buy a book you don't enjoy. :-) Phone numbers and precise addresses can be
- gotten by calling directory assistance for the appropriate city. Call ahead
- for precise hours, as even when I list them they are subject to change.]
-
- [Note 2: If you can add information for any of these, in particular
- addresses when they are missing, please send it to me.]
-
- [Note 3: I am cross-posting this to rec.arts.sf.written, but the bookstores
- listed include *all* types of bookstores, so please don't tell me that a
- particular store has a limited SF section unless I have specifically claimed
- otherwise.]
-
- [Note 4: I know they're bookshops in Britain, not bookstores. In the text
- I try to follow this; the introductory material is used world-wide and
- uses "bookstores" instead.]
-
- Anyone who wants to compile a complete London guide to bookshops is welcome
- to the task! :-)
-
- ============================================================================
- Oxford:
-
- Blackwell's. "The typical university bookshop but often missed is the rare
- books and special editions that Sir Basil Blackwell collected and
- put on display in a rather pleasant country house just south of
- Oxford. The problem is, I cannot remember the village. Near
- Nuneham Courtney? Clifton Hampden? Someone will know. Sometimes
- a special book deserves a special typesetting, printing and
- binding." Also has various second-hand sections.
- Book Bargains (2 St. Ebbe St).
- Bookshop on the Plain (cross Magdaelen Bridge and start up the Cowley Rd;
- it's immediately on your left).
- The EOA Communist Bookshop (across the road from Bookshop on the Plain).
- Might carry Irish stuff for all the wrong reasons, I suppose, but
- being a Tory I wouldn't know :-."
- Thorton's. "Look out for Thornton's as it's *dear*."
- Waterfield's (36 Park End St). Good philosophy section.
-
- "There's also a large second hand bookshop on the way down to the railway
- station, go down the hill from the Westgate centre, past Nuffield College
- and the prison, and straight on past the Queen's Arms, it then appears on
- the right. The antiques emporium just before it and the Jam Factory over
- the road by the traffic lights also house minor booksellers amongst their
- other denizens."
-
- ============================================================================
- Edinburgh:
-
- Bargain Books (Princes Street). Very limited selection, but a good place
- for picking up, say, the complete Shakespeare/Conan Doyle/Brothers
- Grimm practically free.
- Bauermeisters (on the Bridges).
- Castle Books (Canongate). Used.
- Church of Scotland Bookshop (George Street). Stocks a wide range of
- Christian books. The Church of Scotland has recently sold its
- chain of bookshops, but the terms of the deal constrain the new
- owner to continue them as Christian bookshops without much change.
- Forbidden Planet (Teviot Place). Science fiction.
- Old Grindle's (Spittal Street). Used.
- Macnaughtons (Haddington Place, Leith Walk). Used.
- Second Edition (Canonmills). Used.
- Sheena McNeil (Bruntsfield Links). Sheet music.
- James Thins (South Bridge). The biggest bookshop in Scotland and (after
- John Smiths in Glasgow, the second oldest. Some people think it's
- great; others think it's the worst they've dealt with. One sums up
- both sides, I think, with: "They have half a dozen branches in
- Edinburgh, a vast academic section, and maintain close contacts
- with the Universities. However, they do tend to be rather
- complacent and unhelpful at times, and tend to act as if they were
- a monopoly supplier, with a `like it or lump it' attitude." For
- those who follow such things, another reader says, "They are also
- a bunch of hypocrites, handing out propaganda in favour of
- retaining the Net Book Agreement, while marking up the prices of
- Non-Net Books higher than Waterstone's and Co."
- Tills (Buccleuch Street). Used.
- Waterstone's (Princes Street and also Georges Street). Large chain.
- West and Wilde (Dundas Street). Gay/lesbian
- West Port Books (West Port near Lothian Rd.). Used.
- (a couple of shops in Teviot Row). Medical, new and used.
- (a shop in Spittal Street). Second-hand football programmes.
- (a remainder shop opposite Thins).
- (a couple of used book shops in Broughton Street and at the top
- of Leith Walk and several used book shops in the Grassmarket).
-
- You can pick up a leaflet with a full list of used book shops from any one
- of them.
- The Assembly Rooms in George St. often holds book fairs on Saturdays
- where many of the second-hand booksellers exhibit.
-
- ============================================================================
- Glasglow:
-
- Bargain Books (chain of small shops). Limited stock but excellent bargain
- prices.
- Caledonia Books (Great Western Road). Used.
- Church of Scotland Bookshop (Buchanan Street near the Underground Station).
- Near Forbidden Planet. The Church of Scotland has recently sold
- its chain of bookshops, but the terms of the deal constrain the new
- owner to continue them as Christian bookshops without much change.
- Centerpeace (Stockwell Street). Pacifist/feminist/Third World.
- Clyde Books (Parnie Street). Radical/socialist/feminist/green.
- Dillons (the Argyle Street/Union Street corner). A very large branch.
- More modern than Smiths and a great place to pick up book
- bargains. Close to Smiths and Waterstones.
- Dowanhill Books (in a lane off Byres Road opposite Hillhead tube station).
- Used.
- Forbidden Planet (Buchanan Street). Science fiction and comics.
- Futureshock. American imports and OLD paperbacks as well as imports.
- Gilmorehill Books (Bank Street). Used.
- Obelisk (Virginia Galleries, Virginia Street). Used science fiction and
- mysteries.
- John Smith and Sons (St. Vincent Street). Quite close to George Square.
- This is the main branch and is famous enough for you to be able to
- ask directions to it. It has 5 floors and keeps books on just about
- any subject you can think of. Main public transport terminals
- nearby (i.e., walking distance) include Central Station (trains),
- Queen Street Station (trains), Buchanan Street Station (buses) and
- Buchanan Street Underground Station. Close to Dillons and
- Waterstones.
- John Smith and Sons (University Bookshop, University Avenue, Hillhead) (west
- of the city centre). A strictly academic bookshop, they specialise
- in stocking books on the recommended reading lists for students
- supplied by Glasgow University (who keep close links with the shop).
- Most university courses are in evidence in the shop - medical books
- particularly so. Main public transport terminal nearby is Hillhead
- Underground Station.
- John Smith and Sons (Byres Road Branch, Byres Road, Hillhead). A mainstream
- three-storey bookshop. Simply a scaled-down version of the main
- shop. This shop is located next door to the Hillhead Underground
- Station. The university shop is 5 minutes away on foot. A nice
- area in general, well worth a look: there are several famous
- cafes/coffee shops around here too (e.g., The Ubiquitous Chip, The
- Underground Gallery).
- Voltaire and Rousseau (Otago Street Lane). Used.
- Waterstones (Union Street very close to Dillons). Large branch.
- More modern than Smiths. Close to Smiths.
- Word of Mouth (Bank Street). Food and cookery; this place is amazing.
- (a comics shop in Byres Road)
- charity shops in Byres Rd, all of whom sell books, starting with Cancer
- Research, Oxfam, Dr Barnado's, Save the Children, Glasgow
- University's settlement(?), as well as the back alley secondhand
- books (next to Oxfam) and occasionally DeCourcy's arcade)
-
- Regarding Smiths, one reader says:
- "There are other branches of Smiths, but these three should cover all
- your needs wherever you are in Glasgow. All Smiths shops are tied by a
- computer network allowing the facility for quick look up of stocks
- elsewhere in the city and quick transfer between branches in the case
- where a particular book is not in stock at a certain branch. They can
- also order ANY book in print as long as they can locate the ISBN, and
- send it to any address you please. They have British and Overseas Books
- in Print on Microfiche for this purpose."
-
- Regarding some of the other chains, another reader warns:
- "AVOID the new, plush bookshops that are branches of big English chains
- (Dillons, Hatchards, Waterstones). These have a limited range of yuppie
- best-sellers and their attempts to fuck publishers over through the years
- (unilaterally refusing to pay before three months after invoicing and later
- attempting to smash the Net Book Agreement) have been very destructive.
- They have nothing in stock you can't get from John Smiths or Thins."
- But on the other hand, yet another says:
- "Someone bad-mouths Waterstones in the Glasgow section, but I use them a lot
- because they have the longest opening hours of any bookshop in the city that
- I know of. They generally seem to have a good range of Scottish books too,
- better than Thins."
-
- W. H. Smiths and John Menzies are huge UK-wide chains that sell magazines
- and airport bestsellers.
-
- ============================================================================
- Stockholm:
-
- SF Bokhandeln (Atlasgatan 8). Specializes in science fiction. Open
- weekdays 1500-1900, Saturdays 1100-1500.
-
- ============================================================================
-
- Evelyn C. Leeper | +1 908 957 2070 | ecl@mtgzy.att.com
-
-