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My Favourite Bookshop


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Anna Metcalfe enjoys the eclectic selection at Church Street Books.
Tim Watson opened Church Street Books on its current site in 1994 but was selling books for thirteen years before that.
So he’s been whetting N16’s literary appetite for a good quarter of a century, and knows how to do it. Piles of recent
arrivals, in cardboard boxes scraping the ceiling behind his counter, lend the place a delightful, overflowing shabbiness.
Specialising in contemporary fiction and children’s books (women and buggies are his weekday stalwarts), the £1 bargain
boxes are also well worth a rummage. And there is much else to satisfy the over-fives. Literary and historical biography
shelves host a merry bunch of figures, from Flaubert, Betjeman and Pushkin to William Cobbett, William Morris and Mussolini;
the travel section is joyfully comprehensive (complete with OS maps should you find yourself inspired to go right away to
that craggy bit of Yorkshire moor you’ve been reading about), while the literary studies section is packed with
eccentricities from Frances Wilson’s Literary Seductions to Gilbert Adair’s Surfing the Zeitgeist.
A bookshop where Jordan’s A Whole New World sits next to Marguerite van Geldermalsen’s Married to a Bedouin,
on a street where a certain Edgar Allan Poe once went to school (circa 1820), is frankly the sort of place I prefer to bring
my book-buying custom. And at the end of it all you can take your purchase away – like a sly liquor bottle – in a good
old paper bag.
Church Street Books
142 Stoke Newington Church Street
London N16 0JU
If you have a bookshop you’d like to recommend to Pen Pusher readers,
then we’d like to hear about it – send suggestions of up to 380 words to
editors@penpushermagazine.co.uk
or alternatively send them to:
Pen Pusher Magazine
13a Myddelton Square
London EC1R 1YE
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