Bookshops by Jorge Carrión

  • Year2018
  • LanguageRussian
  • Edition3000
  • Pages304
  • BindingPaperback
Garage publishing program in collaboration with Ad Marginem Press

More than merely a place to buy books, today’s bookshop is a contemporary reader’s sacred space.

Jorge Carrión regards bookshops as an important cultural phenomenon: unique and enclosed worlds. He writes about how the first bookshops came about, traces their development in various cultural contexts, including under dictatorships, and explains how some books could bypass the censorship, while others got destroyed.

Carrión’s work explores the phenomenon of the bookshop in a broad cultural context, comparing, for example, its role in Eastern and Western cultures. But these general thoughts are balanced by an abundance of curious stories and details, such as Goethe, Zweig, Borges, and Mallarmé’s ideas on bookshops or the list of books Fidel Castro read while in prison.

Carrión also writes about Europe’s best-known bookstore chains and discusses their influence on the production of books, the culture of selling books, and reading.

Author

Jorge Carrión (b. 1976) is a Spanish writer and literary critic, author of essays, novels and short stories. He teaches literature and creative writing at Pompeu Fabra, where he also studied. His works have been published in National Geographic, El Pais, and Planet Magazine.

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