| The
South West encompasses an area of predominantly rural England stretching from
the Midlands and the Welsh Marches down to Britain's most westerly point at Land's
End in Cornwall. Cities are few with small market towns being the norm. Gloucestershire
Bookshops are still fairly plentiful in Gloucestershire, with the greatest concentration
around Cheltenham and Stroud. In the south of the county, Wotton-under-Edge once
again has a bookshop. In Cheltenham "Peter Lyons Books" is good for
art, children's and modern firsts, "Moss Books" has a brisk turnover,
and there are now no less than three charity bookshops. Sadly, Michael
Rayner's shop has closed following his sudden death. Bristol Sadly,
the number of non-charity bookshops in Bristol continues to decline, redued to
barely half the number it enjoyed five years ago. However, the opening of a Bookbarn,
with a current sock of a million books and capacity for three million, will be
seen by many as a plus. Many thanks to Gerald Baker for his update.
Wiltshire
Salisbury has lost another of its shops with the closure of Water
Lane Books, and is now home to only two of Wiltshire's rather thinly
spread shops. Anthony Spranger's closure reduces Marlborough's bookshops
to two, but there are books in the Antique market as well. Bradford
on Avon, once something of a Mecca, is reduced to one shop from
it's heyday in the early 90's.
Somerset
North Somerset
has become a book buying destination for many with the opening of the huge Counrty
Bookbarn at White Cross (replacing those in Glastonbury and Wells). Extraordinary
as it seems, Bath is now reduced to three shops, but the prestigious "George
Bayntun" and the multi-dealer "Bath Old Books" are still worth
a visit.
Crewkerne in the south of the county has two shops including "Gresham Books". Devon
Devon's bookshops
tend to be concentrated along the coasts, particularly around Barnstaple and Bideford
in the north and Exeter and Plymouth in the south. "The Dartmoor Bookshop"
in Ashburton manages to combine high turnover with quality, while the three bookshops
in nearby Totnes offer a great diversity of stock. Honiton to the east claims
to have "three of the best secondhand and antiquarian bookshops in the West
Contry", but Honiton Old Bookshop is now by appointment only. Cornwall
Cornwall has
a scattering of shops along its three main tourist routes but most
of them are to be found around Falmouth, Truro and Penzance. Truro
still has two established bookshops, both of which are worth a visit,
but there have been two recent closures in Falmouth. Penzance Rare
Books closed at the end of 2008, but the reopening of Newlyn Books
in new premises in Penzance is good news. Sadly, Pascuzzi's Books
and the Hayle Gallery, two recently opened shops, have both closed
after trading for less than two years.
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