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Bookstores

Onward to Pennsylvania

July 8, 2013 by rachelreadsfiction Leave a Comment

pennsylvaniaMapThis time, in researching independent bookstores in Pennsylvania, I decide to look outside of the big cities because the bookstores in Philadelphia remind me of bookstores in Seattle.  There’s the college bookstore, a couple of big bookstores, the LGBT bookstore, an artsy bookstore and some used bookstores.  I’m sure they’re all great but I think I need to cast a wider net.  Pennsylvania is vast.  Maybe I need a rural or small town perspective.  I log onto the internet and find Whistlestop Bookshop in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.  I’m not sure why it appeals to me.  The website is not very fancy. But I love their philosophy, The objective of our business is to put the right books in the hands of the right people. This is clearly the place for me!  I’m also drawn to the bios of the booksellers.  There are so many of them and they all sound like people I’d like to meet.  Of course, Carlisle is a college town.  I imagine it filled with bookish students and professors.  Whistlestop originally opened in 1985 in Gettysburg, with a second shop in Carlisle a few years later.  After nineteen years, the Gettysburg shop closed and moved to Carlisle.  Find it here:  http://www.whistlestoppers.com/

whistlestopBooks [Read more…] about Onward to Pennsylvania

Filed Under: Bookstores Tagged With: Appointment in Samara, Carlisle, Gatsby, John O'Hara, Pennsylvania, Whistlestop Bookshop

Literary Road Trip

May 29, 2013 by rachelreadsfiction 3 Comments

PlayfulBooksI’m a reader.  I read all kinds of books, mostly fiction.  Sometimes a friend will suggest a book for me to read, or I’ll check out the New York Times Book Review on Sundays, or the Staff Picks shelf at my favorite independent bookstores.  It’s all pretty random. 

But recently I’ve become interested in the idea of place in literature.  The way that, in some novels, setting is character.  Think Dickens’s London — the characters who come alive in that city’s debtor’s prisons, courts of law, counting houses and blacking factories.  Those characters are unique reflections of Victorian London, where coal smoke continuously chugs into the damp air and lingers, trapped by fog, where there are no child labor laws and where poverty prevails. They could not exist anywhere else.  And what about modern fiction?  Are there good examples of novels today that evoke their setting in a way that makes them come alive, makes you feel like you’ve been dropped into a different world, a distinctive place with a flavor all its own?  I believe so.  I’ve read some.  And I’m on a quest now find one or two from each of the United States.  Hence this literary road trip.  I’ll start with Delaware, the first state, and keep going until I get to Hawaii.   I’ll choose books to read by looking up independent bookstores in the state, calling them up, and asking for a recommendation.

I’m excited but also a little concerned that, with the increasing homogeneity of the United States, those characteristics which distinguish one place from another have blurred over time.  Drop me off in a shopping mall anywhere from California to Pennsylvania and it’s likely I’ll have trouble figuring out where I am.  What distinguishes one city or state from another today when the same big box stores, retail chains and coffee shops are everywhere?  When we’re all connected by television and the internet.  Where we can wake up in one time zone and go to sleep in another just by taking a short plane ride.  Where children grow up in one state, go to college in another and find their first job in yet another state? I’m hoping to find out and write about it here. [Read more…] about Literary Road Trip

Filed Under: Bookstores Tagged With: Christopher Castellani, Delaware writers, independent bookstores, Place in literature, Rachel Simon

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