james_davis_nicoll (
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
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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.
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Whence the (almost unreadable) British Railway Shakespeare, set in something like two-point type...
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(Anonymous) 2024-04-18 02:07 am (UTC)(link)-Awesome Aud
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(Anonymous) 2024-04-18 11:49 am (UTC)(link)no subject
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.
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How large was the market for European books in 18th century Egypt?
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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).
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“How old is the technology?”
“New enough to be exciting to a Queendom citizen, apparently. Old enough that printed books in Shepara are cheaper than handwritten ones.”
And the Queendom is notorious for being backward:
“[...] the Queendom snubs progress, innovation, and entertainment of any sort.
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(Anonymous) 2024-04-18 02:11 am (UTC)(link)-Awesome Aud