Tagline: ‘If you enjoy sarcastic humour, you will be highly entertained. And with the strange questions asked by customers, there is plenty of opportunity for dry and sarcastic humour’.
Welcome back! This is probably the most consistent posting schedule I have had since I started this blog. Had this post been just a few days earlier (on Wednesday) it would have been near perfect. Which does give me some hope that I will be able to post more regularly than I previously have done – but apologies if at any point I do go a few weeks (hopefully not months) without any blog posts.
Anyway, let’s go into the actual review! This time I will be reviewing Confessions of a Bookseller by Shaun Bythell, which is the second book of this series. For those of you that didn’t read the first book, The Diary of a Bookseller (just as a sidenote, you should definitely read it), Shaun Bythell is the owner of ‘The Bookshop’, the largest second-hand bookstore in Scotland, which is based in Scotland’s National Book Town – Wigtown.
The store itself also gained some publicity from its social media pages on which you will see posts similar to what you will read in the diaries (customers doing rather extraordinary things – and now in a good way), postcards which customers from across the world send in, and the occasional photo/video which involves the destruction of a Kindle. There are even a few music videos they have put together, with the two most viewed being ‘Reader’s Delight’ (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2caiU5Bu-k) and ‘The Bookshop, Wigtown’ (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rC-oA4zKZlI).
Having enjoyed the first book, I immediately felt that I had to get this book, and weirdly managed to buy it a day before the supposed release date in Foyles (I considered: 1. Whether I had mixed up what day it was, in which case I would be in a lot of trouble with work for not turning up; or 2. Whether I had stepped into a portal which took me one day into the future. In which case I would again be in trouble with work for not turning up. Neither were true, the Foyles bookstore I went in had just been selling the book early). So, I was looking forward to seeing if this book was as good as the first.
Background
As suggested above, this is a continuation of Shaun Bythell’s previous book ‘The Diary of a Bookseller’, which is exactly what both books are – a diary of his days working at The Bookshop (with the occasional diary entry being when he is away from the store). The diary entries provide an intriguing insight into the customers he encounters – from those who chat too long, to those who are just outright rude – the people he has worked with, and his family and close friends.
I am sure a lot of us have wondered what it would be like to own your own bookstore – working in a place where you will be surrounded by books (what’s not to love!). Well, this book lets you get a glimpse into what it would be like, without having to actually deal with the difficult customers, the admin side of things, and the financial side of things. And the book does not seem to omit any details (the book is, a lot of the time, brutally honest), so you do get a full insight.
Review – 3 and a half stars ✯✯✯(+1/2)
As above, you do get a very thorough insight into what it is like to work in a second-hand bookstore. However, you do also get an insight into the people working at the bookstore, what they are like, and Shaun Bythell’s own thoughts both about work and about life generally. I felt that this allowed you to ‘connect’ with the people who work there, rather than seeing it as just a bookstore with faceless people, and I found that this added a lot of charm to the book.
But, the main thing about this book is its humour. Unfortunately, if you do not enjoy ‘dry’ and often sarcastic humour, you may not find this book as entertaining. But if, like me, you enjoy sarcastic humour, you will be highly entertained. And with the strange questions asked by customers, there is plenty of opportunity for dry and sarcastic humour.
While I admittedly preferred the first book (and in all fairness, given that a lot of days will be quite largely the same, I imagine it must have been difficult to keep finding new things to write about day to day – but he has done a good job of it), I still found this book to be very entertaining on its own merit.
I hope you enjoyed my review of Confessions of a Bookseller – if you have read it and would like to share your thoughts, or would like to suggest my next read, then feel free comment down below. If you wish to see more of my reviews in future, please do follow/like/other – my social media pages are available on the ‘Contact & Social Media’ tab at the top of the page.
TBT


