“It is what you read when you don’t have to that determines what you will be when you can’t help it.” Oscar Wilde

Having owned a bookshop for five years, I’ve had to read a lot of books. They haven’t always been books I’ve wanted to read but I’ve needed to plough through nonetheless because I needed to be able to talk intelligently about them to my customers.  I haven’t spent enough time reading books that have called out to me – many of them are waiting patiently on our bookshelves – nor have I spent enough time re-reading titles I’ve loved and which I want to go back to.  I haven’t spent enough time browsing other bookshops and making unexpected and wonderful discoveries of books I never knew I needed in my life.

So one of the things I’m planning to do here is to keep a record of some of the books I read and enjoy.  Some will be books I already own, some will be proofs sent by authors and publishers but most will be books that I’ve bought myself, those hidden treasures that I mentioned earlier.  I’m finding it immensely pleasurable to browse bookshops as a reader rather than a bookseller.

I’ve also got used to being able to summarise a book in the space allowed by a ‘staff recommends’ card that gets tucked inside the volumes on the bookshop shelves so I’m going to try and stick to that 250 word max limit.  If you’re a bookseller who wants to use any of them in your shop do feel free although do leave a comment to say you’re doing that – it’s always lovely to connect with other booksellers.  My aim is not to write literary criticism as it’s often laboured and self-important whether on blogs or in the TLS.  Rather I want to talk about a book as a bookseller would and hopefully I’ll be able to steer a few people towards great books that they might have missed otherwise.

Posted in Reading | Comments Off on “It is what you read when you don’t have to that determines what you will be when you can’t help it.” Oscar Wilde

Come in, sit down, kick off your shoes and pour yourself a cuppa…

Welcome to my new online home.  Since we sold The Edinburgh Bookshop a week or so ago I’ve felt a little bit rootless without the anchor of opening hours and routines of stock ordering and shelving and talking to customers.  I’m going to be concentrating on our sadly neglected publishing company, Fidra Books, and that’s going to take up a lot of time – bibliographic data needs to be tidied up, customers to reconnect with, authors conversed with about plans for the future, printers to organise and a sales plan to be devised – but the unfamiliar feeling of freedom still feels strange.

What is interesting though is that since it’s become common knowledge that I’ve moved on from the time-pressured world of bookselling all sorts of interesting people have been suggesting we get together to talk about all sorts of mysterious but interesting-sounding projects so I think freelance life is going to be full of literary wonders.

Hence I decided that I needed a website, this being the digital age and all that.  It’s still very much a work-in-progress although I don’t intend to ever make it terribly complicated, but as I owned this domain it seemed sensible to make use of it.  This is where I’ll be writing about the books I read, the places I go, some of those mysterious projects when they start to take shape but I daresay there will also be ramblings about other things such as cooking, travel, art and ships and shoes and sealing wax, cabbages and kings.  There’s a page up there where I’ll keep track of what I read (old habits and all that) but I need to write a bit of code for that so it won’t be functioning for a few days.

So welcome – take a seat and introduce yourself. I’ll put the kettle on and you bring the biscuits.

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