Friday, April 27, 2012

Bookseller Review: The Book Room -- Richmond

The Book Room
5458 W. Broad St.
Richmond, VA
804.282.0633


The Book Room is a new and used-book store specializing in Sci-Fi/Fantasy and Romance paperbacks. They offer their used books at 50% off the list price and have frequent sales. They have stores in both Richmond and Charlottesville, VA.

What we like: For us, finding a Riverside Editions copy of Charles Dickens' Bleak House made us love The Book Room in Richmond.  

What we don't like: It is paperbacks only, and the selection of classics is limited ... unless you're after new Penguin Classic editions of great works.

Would we go again? We'd have to, since we had such a good experience there. We might walk out emptyhanded more often than not, but we certainly would make a plan to stop each time we visit Richmond.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Bookseller Review: Book People

Book People
536 Granite Ave. 
Richmond, VA
804.288.4346


Book People is an old-fashioned books shop that prides itself on personal service, above all else. They have four rooms and over 20,000 titles in stock of half new, half used and collectible volumes. 

What we like: Off-the-beaten-path bookstore that's simply a house full of books. We definitely like that. Fair collection of fiction, with many older editions. The woman who appears to run it is extremely kind, and very helpful.

What we don't like: The organization system is unique, and not the easiest for browsing, let alone finding what you're looking for. Prices are kind of all over the place, and seem much too high for some items.

Would we go again? Yes, we would make a point to stop here anytime we make the trip over to Richmond.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Bookseller Review: Richmond Book Shop

Richmond Book Shop
808 W. Broad St.
Richmond, VA
804.644.9970


Richmond Book Shop sells used books, records, back-issue comics, underground comix and vintage magazines. They also have a large collection of prints, posters and postcards, and some original artwork. They keep irregular hours and it is best to call before going. 

What we like: There is a great long shelf full of classics, many older editions and a good amount of hardbacks in the mix.

What we don't like: Parking isn't that great -- we got lucky with a spot right out front. It is basically right on the VCU campus and tends to skew more to college kids. 

Would we go again? Yes. Even if we don't end up finding anything there is enough in the store to keep us entertained. 

Not for purchase, but surely noteworthy

Today we took a walk over to UVa to check out a new exhibit at the university's "Institute for American History, Literature and Culture."

The exhibit, titled "Bestsellers: Popular Fiction in America," just opened last month, and will be on display through August.

From the exhibit's website:

"'Bestsellers' features rare and beautiful first editions from the University Library's Lillian Gary Taylor Collection of Popular American Fiction. Mrs. Taylor compiled a significant collection of bestselling novels and painstakingly recorded details of each book in her collecting journals. Mrs. Taylor's notebooks, authors' manuscript materials, early bestseller lists, scripts and photos from film adaptations, and modern bestsellers complement the books from the Taylor Collection."

It took all of two minutes to find something in the exhibit which was completely jaw-dropping. After initially having my attention drawn to a first edition of Last of the Mohicans, I saw just to its right an original manuscript of James Fenimore Cooper's The Pathfinder, or The Inland Sea.

There, in what must have been a roughly 15x6 in. book, was Cooper's handwriting filling page after page detailing the story that was the resurrection of Natty Bumppo into American Literature. Deborah and I were in awe, to say the least, not only because of what we were actually seeing, but also because the manuscript went a long way toward resolving a question we've been wondering about: How hard must it have been to be an editor back then?

Well, one look at this book and we were convinced that editing and typesetting was a massive task when handwriting was the only means for an author to get his or her words down on paper. The proofreading and the back and forth between author and publisher to make sure everything was just right must have been insane.

Sadly but understandably, we weren't allowed to take photographs in the exhibit, but we did learn that the special collections library at UVa does allow visitors to get a firsthand look at (and hopefully feel of) the items they house, so hopefully we'll have an even more intimate look at that manuscript, and more, in the fall.

Other notable items on display at the exhibit: First editions of The Great Gatsby, A Farewell to Arms, The Catcher in the Rye, Uncle Tom's Cabin, To Kill a Mockingbird, Catch-22.

Another Riverside Edition added

Today, we found No. 18 in our collection of Houghton Mifflin Riverside Editions. We have a "standing order" at Heartwood Books for these books, but since we were in the area, we thought we'd stop in and look around, and there it was.

It's hard to know how many are out there in this particular collection of Riversides, but we keep coming across new ones. It might be time for a new shelf dedicated to the Riverside collection.


Book added: Prose of the Romantic Period, Edited by Carl R. Woodring

Publisher:  Riverside Editions, Houghton Mifflin, B57

Year: 1961

Where obtained: Heartwood Books, Charlottesville, Va.

Price: $2.00