travel bookstore

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In honor of this weekend’s Book Tourism event, I’m posting a a couple of reviews this week of stores participants can visit during their eight hours of exploring Greenwich Village.

The entire five days I spent in New York City, I exited the subway station to the street and turned in the correct direction only once.  Even when I thought ‘my instincts say it’s to the right, so I’ll go to the left,’ I went the wrong way.  I was so sure I heading the correct direction down 19th Street to Idlewild Books that I walked blocks and blocks away from the store.  It’s a lovely neighborhood, I know because I’ve seen it at a pedestrian’s pace.  Actually, a little quicker.  On the way back it started to sprinkle, then it started to rain, then hard, and I started to sprint.  When I entered Idlewild Books I was dripping.  I literally shook myself off on the landing like my golden retriever.

Some of the stained glass and chairs are from the original Idlewild Airport

David, the owner of the store, asked “Did you forget your umbrella?”

I said, “I’m from Los Angeles, I don’t even own an umbrella.”

I’m sure the store is beautiful in any weather, but it is perfect for a stormy day.  It exudes warmth.  Check out the picture with the wooden floors, huge front window and bookshelves everywhere.  There is an alcove or two for curling up in.  In fact, the entire time I was there a man was diligently working on his laptop in a corner.  In Los Angeles, he would be a screenwriter, but since I was in New York I assumed he was writing the next Great American Novel (no, it wasn’t Franzen).

I hesitate to say that Idlewild Books is a travel bookstore because I fear that the title invokes the travel section at Borders with sloppy shelves of guidebooks.  Idlewild Books has guidebooks (they looked neatly organized), but its charm is as an advocate for traveling with or through literature.  In the last 18 months, I think I’ve purchased about a dozen books there (a set for each family vacation) and only one was a guidebook that David practically had to beg me to buy when he found out I loved Italian art.  My experience has been to tell David where I’m going and what I’m interested in and he tells me the books that will add an entirely new dimension to the trip.  I should add, it’s not just me, he recommends the books my teenagers will carry with them.  [What we read on our latest family vacation, including David's suggestions, will be in a future post.]

The store is divided geographically with all the guidebooks, novels, YA, classics and non-fiction about the appropriate area in one location.  By providing novels relevant to the literature, culture and history of various countries, the store is also a treasure trove of translated literature.  When I was looking for books to read while Read the rest of this entry »

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Idlewild Books – A Traveler’s Paradise

Happy First Year Anniversary to Idlewild Books!   This bookstore has received a lot of press for its unusual stocking method, full event schedule and beautiful location (check out the airport seating, old style).  Instead of guidebooks, travel gear and Rick Steves’ luggage (nothing against his luggage, I own three pieces), all types of books are grouped by area.  Going to Argentina?  You’ll find guidebooks along with literature and non-fiction in the same place.

Ever since I started traveling as a college student, I have read literature and non-ficiton about the area or from the area both before I leave and during the trip.  Idlewild Books makes the choice of what to read easy.  If you want something more than a Michner novel for where you’re going (or on the off chance that he didn’t write about where you’re going), Idlewild Books scours small publishers of translated works, takes customer recommendations for books, and uses their own experience to hand-pick the best books for wherever you’re traveling.

Destination Kits

For those of us who don’t live in NYC, Idlewild Books offers a service called “Destination Kits.”  Tell them where you’re going, what you like to read and you’re budget and they’ll suggest a variety of books.  A girlfriend and I tested the Destination Kit service this week and it’s terrific. Dianne sent in an e-mail yesterday morning about her trip to Japan and Glen from Idlewild called back before lunch.  Glen recommended two books for her daughter that were on the Japanese young adult bestseller list and a series for her younger son.  For her, a guide that is part map, part paperback Read the rest of this entry »

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