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The Last Bookstore in America

por Amy Stewart

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14511188,185 (3.63)3
Fiction. Humor (Fiction.) HTML:

Bestselling author and bookstore owner Amy Stewart takes an offbeat and lighthearted look at the future of the book.

After the ebook renders bookstores obsolete, a young couple finds themselves in the unlikely position of owning one of the last bookstores in America. But if it isn't keeping itself afloat selling books, what is it selling? A hilarious glimpse at a future that is almost here.

Nothing is what it seems in the offbeat and out-of-the-way town of Eureka, California. Shrouded in fog and hidden behind a curtain of redwoods, this rundown mill town is home to a peculiar cast of characters, a unique homegrown horticultural industry, and one of the last bookstores in America.

No one is more surprised by the unlikely survival of the Firebreathing Dragon than Lewis Hartman, its newest owner. By the time his uncle Sy died and left the bookstore to Lewis, even the most ardent bibliophiles had abandoned printed books in favor of a charming and highly literate digital device called the Gizmo. Bookstores all over the country had closed their doors. But somehow, the Firebreathing Dragon has kept going.

So how has the Firebreathing Dragon managed to survive the death of the book? And if it isn't keeping itself afloat selling books, what is it selling? Reporters, federal agents, and corporate executives out to salvage their own imperiled industries all converge on the bookstore to uncover its secrets. What they discover is a small town that has fallen under the spell of the Firebreathing Dragon's unique offerings.

In her first work of fiction, Amy Stewart explores the strange dynamics of small-town life and the future of that marvelous two thousand year-old communication device, the printed book.

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Mostrando 1-5 de 11 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Wow what an amazingly accurate book and it was fiction. ( )
  zmagic69 | Mar 31, 2023 |
Amy Stewart usually writes volumes about poisonous plants, worms or the like. This novel presupposes The Gizmo, a more fully accepted and capable Kindle that totally supplants hard copy books. The bookstore of the title is in Humboldt County, CA, and has long ago used book sales only as a mask for selling large quantities of terrific weed. Light reading with a happy ending (of sorts). Giving it one more star than it probably deserves for its imagination and plot that moves forward in quirky ways. ( )
  abycats | May 11, 2018 |
This is a fun read that isn't really about what you think it's about. ( )
  EllsbethB | Sep 3, 2016 |
Very amusing concept and story — and written by a bookstore owner! It contains some interesting musings on the fate of the book and bookstores in a digital world. We’ve already seen many bookstore closings and trouble for Barnes & Noble (though the indies are holding on, and the past year saw increased sales in some months). I loved the book’s setting and its quirky characters, though wish some had been more fully developed. And I loved the spirit of Sy that inhabits the bookstore and pervades the tale. Light fare and fun to read. It would make a great movie!

I liked: “Sy believed that literature, like jazz and Impressionism, was born out of intoxication, bred in bars and coffee houses and opium dens, and meant to be shared at parties and in backyards and living rooms and out on the street. He was suspicious of writers who swore off booze and cigarettes and late nights in favor of a pot of tea and yoga at sunrise. Healthy living, he believed, was the enemy of literature.”

What bugged me: The book contains a number of errors that should have been caught by a proofreader (words left out here and there; a character’s name misspelled; lay instead of lie; a buttered “role”). And how ironic that this should happen in a book that contains the following lament: “. . . [A]s publishing houses collapsed, the job of editing a book fell to freelance editors, and writers who couldn’t stand to see their precious prose tampered with in the first place decided to skip the editing process altogether. It made for books riddled with foolish errors and long-winded digressions.”

Indeed, the book is self-published. Why didn’t Stewart hire an editor? Or a more careful one?

Does anyone want to hire me??? ( )
  toniclark | Mar 24, 2016 |
3 1/2 stars. I ultimately really enjoyed The LastBookstore in America, although there were parts when I thought I wouldn't. And a very interesting premise - the "gizmo" ereader that can do everything (I think it's an iPhone myself, even though others have suggested the kindle) becomes so popular that paper books, and the corresponding bookstores, die out ( )
  Booklover889 | Mar 17, 2016 |
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Emily Short and Lewis Hartman thought they had seen the last of books. Not "books" in the sense of novels or presidential biographies or nonfiction narratives that explore the hidden side of everything. There would always be plenty of those. No, Emily and Lewis thought they had seen the last of the dead tree variety of book.
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Fiction. Humor (Fiction.) HTML:

Bestselling author and bookstore owner Amy Stewart takes an offbeat and lighthearted look at the future of the book.

After the ebook renders bookstores obsolete, a young couple finds themselves in the unlikely position of owning one of the last bookstores in America. But if it isn't keeping itself afloat selling books, what is it selling? A hilarious glimpse at a future that is almost here.

Nothing is what it seems in the offbeat and out-of-the-way town of Eureka, California. Shrouded in fog and hidden behind a curtain of redwoods, this rundown mill town is home to a peculiar cast of characters, a unique homegrown horticultural industry, and one of the last bookstores in America.

No one is more surprised by the unlikely survival of the Firebreathing Dragon than Lewis Hartman, its newest owner. By the time his uncle Sy died and left the bookstore to Lewis, even the most ardent bibliophiles had abandoned printed books in favor of a charming and highly literate digital device called the Gizmo. Bookstores all over the country had closed their doors. But somehow, the Firebreathing Dragon has kept going.

So how has the Firebreathing Dragon managed to survive the death of the book? And if it isn't keeping itself afloat selling books, what is it selling? Reporters, federal agents, and corporate executives out to salvage their own imperiled industries all converge on the bookstore to uncover its secrets. What they discover is a small town that has fallen under the spell of the Firebreathing Dragon's unique offerings.

In her first work of fiction, Amy Stewart explores the strange dynamics of small-town life and the future of that marvelous two thousand year-old communication device, the printed book.

.

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