Seven Kinds of People You Find in Bookshops
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Narrated by:
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Peter Kenny
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Written by:
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Shaun Bythell
About this listen
A wickedly witty field guide to bookstore customers by the curmudgeonly shop owner and author of Confessions of a Bookseller. Shaun Bythell knows them all - from the “Person Who Doesn’t Know What They Want (But Thinks It Might Have a Blue Cover)” to the “Parents Secretly After Free Childcare”. The business of books has never been funnier.
In a tradition that runs from R. M. Williamson’s Bits from an Old Bookshop in 1904 to Jen Campbell’s Weird Things Customers Say in Bookshops in 2012 (with George Orwell’s 1936 Bookshop Memories in between), here is the latest and perhaps most complete attempt to classify people who shop in bookstores. It does take all kinds.
Employing something like Linnaean taxonomic groups, there’s the Expert (divided into subspecies from the Bore to the Helpful Person), the Young Family (ranging from the Exhausted to the Aspirational), and Occultists (from Conspiracy Theorist to Craft Woman). Then there’s the Loiterer (including the Erotica Browser and the Self-Published Author), the Bearded Pensioner (including the Lyrca Clad), the The Not-So-Silent Traveller (the Whistler, Sniffer, Hummer, Farter, and Tutter), and the Family Historian (generally Canadians who come to Shaun’s shop in Wigtown, Scotland).
Two bonus sections include Staff and, finally, Perfect Customer - all add up to the funniest sell-and-tell in the house of books.
©2020 Shaun Bythell (P)2020 Blackstone Audio, Inc.What listeners say about Seven Kinds of People You Find in Bookshops
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Miss Amber
- 2022-01-14
Good humour
The stories had me laughing, and I could listen to the narrator speak all day!
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Roberta W
- 2021-10-21
Delightful
Probably worthy of 5 stars but I enjoyed Bythell’s The Diary of a Bookseller SO much, I had to separate them in my mind. I would definitely recommend reading Diary first as it’s that context that made these observations especially amusing.
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