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The Bookshop That Floated Away (2014)

por Sarah Henshaw

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828327,565 (3.05)9
In early 2009 a strange sort of business plan landed on the desk of a pinstriped bank manager. It had pictures of rats and moles in rowing boats and archaic quotes about Cleopatra's barge. It asked for a £30,000 loan to buy a black-and-cream narrowboat and a small hoard of books. The manager said no. Nevertheless The Book Barge opened six months later and enjoyed the happy patronage of local readers, a growing number of eccentrics and the odd moorhen. Business wasn't always easy, so one May morning owner Sarah Henshaw set off for six months chugging the length and breadth of the country. Books were bartered for food, accommodation, bathroom facilities and cake. During the journey, the barge suffered a flooded engine, went out to sea, got banned from Bristol and, on several occasions, floated away altogether. This account follows the ebbs and flows of Sarah's journey as she sought to make her vision of a floating bookshop a reality.… (más)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 8 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
The true account by Book Barge owner Henshaw of giving herself six months of taking her narrowboat, converted into a bookshop, around England to try and turn a profit.
Mired in debt from low sales, a long term relationship recently ended, and feeling like she has made wrong decisions about her life, she has given herself six months more with her bookshop boat to decide if this is the right path. She tells the reader about the good and bad customers, receiving lots of kindness from social media, and the hardships of living on a narrowboat. Her boat was burgled while moored, by the men in the very next boat, and people scream at her for taking too long at the locks. There's an inordinate amount of time spent talking about locks, and waiting at locks and working the locks. I didn't care for the long pieces of her fiction stuck in, and sometimes her sentence structures had me rereading to understand, especially as she sometimes dips into fantasy willy-nilly.
I thought I'd like this more, that it would be more fun, but it's interesting. ( )
  mstrust | Jul 13, 2023 |
Many people have dreams. Some want to shrug off the ties that a property can have, others dream of opening a bookshop. Very few combine both of those dreams, but Sarah Henshaw is one that did. Have written an eclectic and unusual business plan and submitted it to her bank requesting £30,000 to be able to buy a narrowboat and a pile of books, the manager considered her request.

And said no.

Thankfully her parents had the capital to enable her to fulfil her dream and six months later the Book Barge opened. A little bit of a novelty, it attracted a fair number of eccentrics and a growing customer base, but as this was the time of the credit crunch and the rise of the eBook so business was hard. On a whim she decides to travel the round the country via the canals and waterways, with the hope of bartering books for accommodation, tea and cake. It was an eventful journey, as she had very little experience of travelling by narrowboat or navigating locks. On the journey she managed to flood her engine, had a brief sea trip, got robbed, provided countless cups of free tea, floated away and even managed to get banned from Bristol harbour. And all the way round she is hassled continually by her bank as the debts increase. B

What comes across in the book is her tenacity and her drive. She really believes in this venture, and is prepared to give it her all in making it a success. What you also get is the impression that business acumen isn’t her strong point either, as she struggles to make ends meet. In general it is a nice tale of her scrapes and successes. I ended up giving this two stars rather than three because of part 2. It is a fictional account of the narrowboat’s life from the perspective of the book, and for me didn’t really work. It might have been better to split it and have it as the lead in to each chapter. Apart from that it was good to read about someone who is prepared to follow her dream of owning a bookshop. ( )
  PDCRead | Apr 6, 2020 |
What can I say about this little gem? It made me laugh, it made me sigh, it wasn't a rollicking adventure but rather a comfortable slide into another life, a life I have wondered about myself at times. Excuse me while I run off to Google narrow boat prices. ( )
  jhullie | Mar 20, 2018 |
I picked this one up as I work in a small indie bookstore. So the struggles of someone in a similar situation I thought would make for very interesting reading. The problems of customers using your store to browse and then telling you happily that they can get it cheaper online "but thanks for the ideas" and similar are very familiar. I have to say though that I think Sarah is possibly the worst business owner/sales person ever. She lives in fantasy land about cash flow and with such a quirky store she should be able to attract heaps of signings and events. I can't help but think the while 2011 was a bad year for bookstores ( there has been quite a recovery since) she is her own worst enemy to business success. ( )
  SashaM | Apr 20, 2016 |
I found this an unusual book - there were parts that I enjoyed for example the section where the author related the link between Dickens's "Our Mutual Friend" and the Thames. And there were other parts such as the long section written in italics (so hard to read) where she anthropomorphises Joseph, her narrowboat, and he tells his version of the story. This I found really awkward.

I wanted to feel sorry for her as I support having bookshops but I can't, and I confess I got a sample on Kindle and then borrowed it from Palmerston North City Libraries. Maybe I expected a different kind of book which led to my disappointment. Attractive cover. ( )
  louis69 | Aug 23, 2014 |
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In early 2009 a strange sort of business plan landed on the desk of a pinstriped bank manager. It had pictures of rats and moles in rowing boats and archaic quotes about Cleopatra's barge. It asked for a £30,000 loan to buy a black-and-cream narrowboat and a small hoard of books. The manager said no. Nevertheless The Book Barge opened six months later and enjoyed the happy patronage of local readers, a growing number of eccentrics and the odd moorhen. Business wasn't always easy, so one May morning owner Sarah Henshaw set off for six months chugging the length and breadth of the country. Books were bartered for food, accommodation, bathroom facilities and cake. During the journey, the barge suffered a flooded engine, went out to sea, got banned from Bristol and, on several occasions, floated away altogether. This account follows the ebbs and flows of Sarah's journey as she sought to make her vision of a floating bookshop a reality.

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