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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2024-04-16 09:00 am
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Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea  (Tomes & Tea, volume 1) by Rebecca Thorne 




An underappreciated bodyguard casts her current career aside in favour of romance and small-town entrepreneurship, thus earning the incandescent fury of her absolute monarch ex-boss.

Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea  (Tomes & Tea, volume 1) by Rebecca Thorne 

[personal profile] mikeda 2024-04-16 04:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Most of the books ARE printed. They're just printed in a place that DOES have the printed press.
mecurtin: drawing of black and white cat on bookshelf (cat on books)

[personal profile] mecurtin 2024-04-16 04:31 pm (UTC)(link)
That's a *little* better, in that books are now as expensive as a *used* car.
oursin: Books stacked on shelves, piled up on floor, rocking chair in foreground (books)

[personal profile] oursin 2024-04-16 04:55 pm (UTC)(link)
It might actually make more sense to set up a circulating library?

[personal profile] ba_munronoe 2024-04-16 05:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Books normally kept chained to the shelves to make sure nobody walks off with them.
jsburbidge: (Default)

[personal profile] jsburbidge 2024-04-16 10:13 pm (UTC)(link)

That's sort of my thought. There were certainly bookstores before the late 19th Century - Hello, St. Paul's Churchyard - but the financial and social model when they are printed via formes set with movable type is emphatically not that of the modern-day bookstore where many middle-income buyers come in regularly to browse and pick up a new read. That's why Jane Austen's heroines use circulating libraries. (But Mr. Bennett, a gentleman with a respectable income and less popular tastes, buys his books ... probably from booksellers in London.)

Not having read the reviewed book, I am only guessing that it assumes a very mid-20th century model for the bookstore at a social level. Victoria Goddard's Greenwing and Dart series certainly does, in an otherwise Regency world, and it sets my teeth on edge.

oursin: Painting of Clio Muse of History by Artemisia Gentileschi (Clio)

[personal profile] oursin 2024-04-17 09:02 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, people buying books depended a) on changes in paper and print technology in the C19th and b) a new marketing model of cheap reprints (not new books) for railway travellers initiated by WH Smith, sold alongside newspapers and periodicals on station bookstalls.
jsburbidge: (Default)

[personal profile] jsburbidge 2024-04-17 11:16 am (UTC)(link)

Whence the (almost unreadable) British Railway Shakespeare, set in something like two-point type...

(Anonymous) 2024-04-18 02:07 am (UTC)(link)
Two-point type. Okay ... now I've gone blind ...

-Awesome Aud

(Anonymous) 2024-04-18 11:49 am (UTC)(link)
... and the typesetter went blind too ....
roseembolism: (Default)

[personal profile] roseembolism 2024-04-17 06:54 pm (UTC)(link)
It occurs to me that book selling in the 18th century style would be interesting, given that they would be luxury products. Things like negotiating with fussy customers, meeting with other booksellers in fact coffee shops to set prices, racing to estate sales and defunct private libraries to acquire trigger of books- in order to destroy them to maintain high prices....

In fact, translating James Lackington and "The Temple of the Muses (the predecessor to modern bookstores(, who scandalized his letters by offering *gasp* fixed prices for books would make for a fine cozy fantasy. Pity this book isn't it.

[personal profile] ba_munronoe 2024-04-16 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)

How large was the market for European books in 18th century Egypt?

[personal profile] mikeda 2024-04-16 06:43 pm (UTC)(link)
It's not that scale of distance. Basically one of the neighboring kingdoms has printing presses.

[personal profile] ba_munronoe 2024-04-16 10:57 pm (UTC)(link)

I was thinking in terms of cultural, rather than geographic distance. Weren't a lot of European works circulating in the Ottomans empire of the time, AFAIK, in spite of common borders with central Europe. On the other hand, if this neighboring nation shares a culture (and a language?) with the one they're in, it's odd printing hasn't spread already - it certainly spread quickly throughout Europe. (Unless the Evil Queen has made printing illegal for the usual autocratic reasons - in which case the bookstore would be highly illegal).

(Anonymous) 2024-04-18 02:11 am (UTC)(link)
In such a setting, I fear there wouldn't be sufficient literacy in a small town to support a bookstore.

-Awesome Aud