would recommend Granth (Juhu) and Kitabkhana (Fort) in Mumbai.


On Thu, Aug 4, 2016 at 5:41 PM, Venkatesh H R <[email protected]> wrote:

> IMHO
> There are 3 types of bookstores:
> 1. Big chain stories, like Crossword, landmark etc. Where you have
> best-seller lists, best fiction, best non-fiction so on. They're
> predictable places. I once visited Landmark in Chennai and bought some
> great stuff there. I remember finding a Matt Rees book there I hadn't found
> anywhere else.
>
> 2. Stores with haphazardly put together books. You need to search these
> stores for gems, but you'll definitely find them - like Blossom in B'lore,
> Midlands in Delhi, nagashri in B'lore, etc.
>
> 3. Stores with carefully curated books. These, I find to be the best. Fact
> & Fiction was one such. The Bookshop in Delhi too, and maybe Lotus in
> Bombay at one point. Unfortunately these tend to be passion-driven,
> independent bookstores which don't make money. I miss them the most. Strand
> bookstore in NY is probably the last such big store anywhere in the world.
>
> Alas.
> On Thu, Aug 4, 2016 at 5:27 PM Suresh Ramasubramanian <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> > She was doing a going out of business sort of sale a while back – the
> > Connemara was damaged by the floods and they used that as an excuse to
> boot
> > her.
> >
> > Pity – excellent if rather idiosyncratic collection crammed into a
> > surprisingly small place.  And she knew what she was talking about.
> >
> > On 04/08/16, 5:18 PM, "silklist on behalf of Udhay Shankar N"
> > <[email protected] on behalf of
> > [email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >     There used to be this store inside (I think) The Connemara hotel in
> > Madras.
> >     Reminded me of the late lamented Premier Bookstore in Bangalore. Any
> > idea
> >     if it is still around?
> >
> >     Udhay
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>

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