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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!linus!alliant!merk!spdcc!dyer
- From: dyer@spdcc.com (Steve Dyer)
- Subject: Re: Cambridge mimes & Third World Bookstores (was Re: Git)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec24.072902.10283@spdcc.com>
- Organization: S.P. Dyer Computer Consulting, Cambridge MA
- References: <1992Dec12.032112.21626@athena.cs.uga.edu> <1992Dec13.220921.27378@athena.mit.edu> <1992Dec24.004613.7037@Cadence.COM>
- Date: Thu, 24 Dec 1992 07:29:02 GMT
- Lines: 47
-
- In article <1992Dec24.004613.7037@Cadence.COM> vince@cadence.com (Vince Gibboni) writes:
- >> Still, for bookstores generally the Square is great. A
- >> guide to Cambridge Bookstores lists 19 in the vicinity and 32 in
- >> Cambridge.
- > Yes, but if you are, say, looking for some _particular_ book, and not
- > just out to view large numbers of books in general, you are pretty much
- > on the wrong track in Harvard Square. If you could (theoretically, of
- > course) park somewhere, and manage to make your way to all nineteen
- > bookstores without being shot, stabbed, or accosted by some tofu-crazed
- > street performer, you would find that, in fact, all nineteen stores have
- > _exactly the same books_.
-
- It is unfortunately the case that there has been a tendency in the
- Square over the past decade or so for specialized bookstores to
- disappear (Temple Bar became Benetton) and the broad mass-market
- bookstores to become more homogeneous, but after a bit of reflection, I
- have to say that Harvard Square and Cambridge in general is still a
- great place for books. First, if you're looking for a particular book,
- you go to the store which specializes in the genre. All 19 stores most
- definitely do not have exactly the same books. Mandrake is great for
- art and architecture, Schoenhof's for foreign books, Grolier for poetry,
- Harvard Book Store for remainders, WGBH Learningsmith (cutesy-icky,
- but arguably a bookstore) for science and education, just to name a few.
- Slightly further afield are Kate's Mystery Books in Porter Square,
- Divinitas in Central Square for religion and philosophy, and Quantum
- Books in Kendall Square for computer-related materials. Even among the
- more broadly based bookstores (Wordsworth, Barillari, the Coop, Reading
- International--what am I forgetting?), there's a difference between
- them which you come to appreciate if you spend time in each of them.
-
- > Anyway, one trip to Borders, and one trip
- > to the convenient Much-Ado used bookstore (right in Marblehead) will,
- > in my experience, generally be more much productive (and all-around
- > _nicer_) than any amount of shopping in Harvard Square.
-
- Borders isn't a bad bookstore, but sometimes you're better off
- seeing a specialist. Call me a snob, but I have trouble taking
- suburban bookstores very seriously: it's a phenomenon similar to
- quality restaurants--they become scarcer and scarcer as you move
- from the city (here, Boston/Cambridge) to the suburbs, and valiant
- attempts to assert standards end up serving Danielle Steele and
- Surf 'n Turf as they struggle to survive after their audience doesn't
- respond.
-
- --
- Steve Dyer
- dyer@ursa-major.spdcc.com aka {ima,harvard,rayssd,linus,m2c}!spdcc!dyer
-