Bishop backs rhino monument to paperback shop behind book festival

IT COULD be a landmark to rival Greyfriars Bobby, but perhaps not as
cute.

Visitors to Edinburgh may one day be charging across the city to see a
rhino sitting on the site of a historic bookshop, at least if one senior
churchman has his way.

The Bishop of Edinburgh, the Right Rev Brian Smith, of the Scottish
Episcopal Ch

urch says that The Paperback bookshop, opened in 1959 by a recently
demobbed US soldier called Jim Haynes in Charles Street, deserves to be
commemorated as a cultural nexus from which the ideas and impetus for
the Edinburgh International Book Festival and Traverse Theatre emerged.

As Britain's first paperback-only shop, it became popular with
university students and fans of forward-thinking literature of the time,
and the stuffed rhino's head that hung outside the door was a well-known
landmark in the area.

The block of buildings was later demolished and the site used as a car
park for a number of years.

Smith, who had just started studying at the university at time of its
establishment, said that the shop's second role as a theatre venue was
pivotal in creating what amounts to a cultural landmark.

He said an apt memorial for the shop would be the representation of a
rhino, either as a plaque or a sculpture, echoing its former sign.

"If you talked to anyone in Edinburgh who was around at the time, the
fact that the shop had this trademark was well known. It would be the
obvious way to mark what was a very seminal and creative focus for
Edinburgh life around 1960," Smith said.

Edinburgh author Alexander McCall Smith shared the bishop's enthusiasm
for the idea. "One of the problems about that part of Edinburgh, is that
the physical memory was obliterated because of the destruction of so
many parts of the old city there that had character," he said.

"I think particularly given that Edinburgh is a Unesco world city of
literature, these are important seeds of this literary movement."

McCall Smith added: "I would readily pay for it if he wanted to do.

"I can't imagine it would cost very much and would be willing to fund it
within reasonable limits."

Haynes, who went on to become a pivotal figure in London's
counter-culture literary scene, and now lives in Paris, said: "I think
it's true The Paperback Bookshop was a major source of creative energy.

"It brought people together from all of Scotland, England and Europe to
proclaim their creativity."

--
http://www.scotsman.com/news/Bishop-backs-rhino-monument-to.6712113.jp
Via InstaFetch

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