new york city

You are currently browsing articles tagged new york city.

I like it when Leslie travels, I like it more when I’m with her, but regardless of who she’s with, she finds bookstores.   Her daughters, who receive new books, and I, who learn about great stops, are direct beneficiaries of her adventures. Here’s a sampling of the bookstores she recently in Brooklyn (Book Court, Community Bookstore and Pranga Bookstore):

I LOVE Brooklyn.  During our latest trip, we spent much time discovering, yet again, a new Brooklyn. The borough dates back to the 1600’s when the Dutch settled it.  The population exploded in the 1880’s when the Brooklyn Bridge was completed. It’s gone through it’s ups and downs over the last hundred years, but in the last two decades most areas of Brooklyn have undergone major changes.  Brooklyn is “hot” again and just gorgeous. (By the way, the nickname for Brooklyn is “The City of Churches”. There are magnificent churches, of every denomination throughout the borough with stunning architecture and appointments including Tiffany windows).

One of my favorite neighborhoods is Cobble Hill.  It’s a neighborhood where there are scores of unique, reasonably priced, privately owned shops all within walking distance of each other.  Court Street runs the length of Cobble Hill and hosts three bookstores within a mile of each other.  Each is quite different. Nestled in between the book stores are other wonderful retail stores and restaurants or storefronts where one can get Brooklyn egg creams, Italian ices, fabulous pastries, Brooklyn style pizza, frozen hot chocolate  - which is just heavenly – Italian hoagie sandwiches, just baked bread and other gourmet goodies! Reading and eating are my two favorite past times, especially since you can do them concurrently.

Book Court

Book Court is the bright community oriented bookstore that every area needs to be a true neighborhood.  It has a terrific selection of staff picks, along with well chosen fiction, non-fiction and books about Brooklyn and other local sites. As I’ve mentioned in previous posts, one of my bigger challenges is finding age appropriate books for my pre-teen girls. I’m a fan of any bookstore that can point me to books for them that are new to me.  Three cheers for Book Court, they suggested new reads for both of my around-the-clock reading daughters.

Luckily for the Court Street neighborhood, Book Court is expanding its role as a community anchor by expanding the store.  A plan is in the works to expand the store to allow for more books, a cafe and an event room.   I look forward to visiting it again when the expansion is completed, or if I’m lucky, even sooner.

Book Court

163 Court Street

Brooklyn, New York 11231

Tel.:  (718) 875-3677

Truly, books everywhere

Community Bookstore

Community Bookstore is truly the most unique bookstore I’ve ever seen. It is a large store by indie standards and offers just about any book, new or used, that you could possibly want. Best sellers and current fiction are available at fairly substantial discounts. This is the place to find literary treasure.   It is truly disorganized. Books are everywhere – scattered among overflowing bookshelves, stacked on the floor in the middle of the aisle and stacked on tables. I’m sure there was a method at one point, but there no longer seems to be a rhyme or reason to how things are arranged. Unfortunately, I did not meet the owner (he may know exactly where everything is), but I did browse around and found some very interesting finds at bargain basement prices. There probably are, among the stacks, some real gems waiting to be uncovered. Digging through the books in this Read the rest of this entry »

Share

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Facing $37 million in budget cuts, the New York Public Library turned to Improv Everywhere and asked for help getting the word out that donations are needed.  The infamous “Ghostbusters” movie begins in the stunning Rose Reading Room causing the following panorama of smiles and chorus of cheers.

Jump over to the Improv Everywhere website to view behind-the-scenes photos and other Improv Everywhere videos.  Like what they do?  Consider buying their book Causing a Scene:  Extraordinary Pranks in Ordinary Places with Improv Everywhere. Personally, I think that’s a great end of the year gift for any teacher of performance.

Share

Tags: , , , , ,

How to open a bookstore with a splash heard all over the country?  Follow the example of Greenlight Bookstore in Brooklyn, NY.  Two women with a dream to own a bookstore found each other and crafted a thoughtful plan to make it work (okay, maybe I’m spending too much time watching Tim Gunn with my daughter).  I wrote about them in detail on the Bookshop Blog the day of their official opening.  Here they tell their own story:

Share

Tags: , , , ,

Here is another adventure that Mark and Liz Koussa experienced in New York.  Thank you Mark for sending us another review of a terrific bookstore!  Oh, and I have read The Final Solution and you’re going to love it, and can I borrow Black Echo?

Strolling through Greenwich Village, this inconspicuous little Mystery Bookstore snuck up on us as quickly and quietly as the protagonists it has dedicated itself to.  At first glance, Partners & Crime looks just like another one of the Mom & Pop shops that lined Greenwich drive, albeit with a catchy name.  Figuring I could always use a good mystery novel, I decided to head inside.  If nothing else, it would not take very long, as the store was also no bigger than the neighboring locally-owned shops it resembled.

Walking into the store felt much like walking into a library.  It was deafeningly quiet, with a small reading room in the back.  Never to be mistaken for a place to study, the store owner is quick to remind you — should you forget as I did — that “you don’t have to whisper, it’s not a library.”  The shelves were not remarkably expansive, but made up for it in its specialty categories, which included tough guys, historical, espionage, and exotic locale.  Perhaps the most endearing and impressive aspect of Partners & Crime is that their employees appeared to have read every single book in the store.  One worker was able to provide thorough insight into every book a patron questioned him about.  After three or four visitors, I had to resist the urge to test him by grabbing books at random and asking “what about this one? and this one?”  There is a passion for their books that is reflected in their everything from their expansive categorization, to their schedule of authors slated to visit the store, to their prominently displayed signed first editions and British Imports.

I stumbled on their collection of Michael Connelly books and recalled a friend raving about Connelly’s Harry Bosch novels.  Before I could even finish my seemingly elementary questions, the store’s worker responded that “Black Echo” is the first of the Bosch novels, and yes, they are as good as everybody says.  I strolled over to the $1 used book table towards the front of the store, and found a tattered copy of Black Echo, which I promptly purchased.  Before leaving I glanced through their shelves dedicated to Sherlock Holmes (my personal favorite), filled with collector’s editions and “new novels” covered by authors such as Michael Chabon and Laurie King.  ”I haven’t read Chabon’s Final Solution yet but it is supposed to be an excellent short story if you like Sherlock Holmes.”  OK so maybe they have not read every book in the store, but it is a safe bet that not too many conversations there start with “I haven’t read…”

Partners & Crime

44 Greenwich Ave

New York, NY

T:  212.243.0440

Share

Tags: , , , ,

A few weeks ago, Keith and I had dinner with our friends Mark and Liz Koussa.  They had just returned from a trip to New York.  Mark mentioned visiting a couple of bookstores and the conversation switched to bookstore tourism and buying books.  Keith is used to these long tangents, he just continued eating, Liz looked a little horrified at the thought of visiting anywhere with both Mark and I.  She feared she would never get out of a bookstore, my family could tell her she is right to be afraid.  I asked Mark to write about his New York trip and here is his first installment:

After a long day of shopping through SoHo…well, watching my wife shop through SoHo…I expected to cash in my “good husband” tokens and declare myself done  for the year.  Instead, after treading miles up Broadway Avenue, I flipped the script and asked for another 18 miles of purchasing?  No, I wasn’t angling for that new HDTV I have had my eye on.  I saw the Strand.  

At the corner of 12th and Broadway, this 55,000 square foot bookstore is a bookworm’s amusement park.  Opened in 1927, the Strand was originally located on Fourth Avenue, in New York’s legendary Book Row.  In 1956, this family bookstore was moved to its current location on Broadway, where the Bass family rented 4,000 square feet.  Although the Guinness Book of World Records lists New York’s Barnes and Noble flagship store as the largest bookstore in the world, the Strand is widely considered the largest based on shelf space.  
Prior to even crossing the threshold of this behemoth’s modest, classic exterior, the Strand’s claim to fame quickly makes itself apparent.  Wrapped Read the rest of this entry »
Share

Tags: ,

« Older entries § Newer entries »