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259 pages, Hardcover
First published July 8, 2008
I found this book accidentally when I was browsing my library for a memoir to complete a reading challenge. I was intrigued by the description. Well, it's titled Books: A memoir, I couldn't simply put it back on the shelf! The opening lines pulled me in and I was hooked. I don't remember my parents reading me a story - perhaps that's why I've made up so many. They were good parents, but just not story reader."
The author tells the story how he got his first book and what it meant to him. He is an author and screenplay writer but in here, he didn't really goes into how he became those two but he tells about how he started collecting books which led to he and his partner, opening a secondhand bookstore. He also shares a lot what he thinks about reading, his worries about the condition of secondhand books industry. Readers could relate to him in the way that we read; we read a few books at once, we re-read a lot and we become obsesses about one type of books or genre and read only that until the obsession disappeared. Or should I say, I am like that. 😆
An unfavorable about his writing is that it's not consistent. He would at one moment telling us about his time in college but then blabber on about someone he knows and a chapter later, went back to his college. My reading was a bit distracted with the nonlinear storytelling that he used. Later on, at chapter 57, he supposedly explained that it was a trend. It's called interrupted narrative and it was started by "Dickens and other popular, serially published nineteenth century novelist..".
It was partly what I was expecting & partly not. Overall, I enjoyed it and I'm going to look out for his Lonesome Dove book series.
”One reason I’ve hung on to book selling it that it’s progressive - the opposite of writing, pretty much. Eventually all novelists, if they persist too long, get worse. No reason to name names, since no one is spared. Writing great fiction involves some combination of energy and imagination that cannot be energised or realised forever. Strong talents can simply exhaust their gift, and they do.
Book selling, though, being based on acquired knowledge, is progressive. At least, that seems to be the case with the great dealers. The longer they deal and the more they know, the better books they handle.”
”As workers in an ancient trade we feel, with Whitman, part of all that we have met; and those that we have met in book selling are part of us in the most tangible of ways: their books, though in diminishing numbers (we hope), remain on our shelves.
We feel Booked Up to be a kind of anthology of bookshops past - or, that is, past and ongoing.”