IndiaCatalog.com
Search:
Browse Books...

Accessories
Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Calendars
Catálogo de libros en español
Children's Books
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Large Print
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sheet Music & Scores
Sports
Teens
Today's Deals in Books
Travel
e-Books & e-Docs
Sixpence House by Paul Collins
Sixpence House Sixpence House by Paul Collins
Publisher : Bloomsbury USA
List Price :$23.95
Amazon Price :
Used Price : $1.90
buy from amazon.com
Avg. Customer Rating:4.5 of 5.0

Reviews for Sixpence House

From Publishers Weekly
Hay-on-Wye, a Welsh town of 1,500, is heaven on earth for people who love books, especially old books. It has 40 bookstores, and if you can't find what you want in one of them, you can fork over 50 pence and visit the field behind the town castle, where thousands more long-forgotten books languish under a sprawling tarp. McSweeney's contributor Collins moved his wife and baby son from San Francisco to Hay a few years ago, intending to settle there. This book is Collins's account of the brief period when he organized American literature in one of the many used-book stores, contemplated and abandoned the idea of becoming a peer in the House of Lords, tried to buy an affordable house that wasn't falling apart (a problem when most of the buildings are at least a century old) and revised his first book (Banvard's Folly). Collins can be quite funny, and he pads his sophomore effort with obscure but amusing trivia (how many book lovers know that the same substance used to thicken fast-food milk shakes is an essential ingredient in paper resizing?), but it's hard to imagine anyone beyond bibliophiles and fellow Hay-lovers finding enough here to hold their attention. Witty and droll though he may be, Collins fails to give his slice-of-life story the magic it needs to transcend the genre.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
The McSweeney's gang may be the closest thing we have to a genuine literary circle; if its members have produced smug, postmodern chapter titles, such as "Chapter Two relies on the travelogue cliche of a garrulous cabdriver," they've also written some books that whistle like fresh air through the bookstore. Collins' travelogue/memoir is a book lover's delight, minus the pretense you might expect from someone schooled in obscure eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature. With his wife and young son, he moves to Hay-on-Wye, Wales, a village with one bookstore for every 37.5 residents. The narrative is structured around his house-buying attempts and the impending publication of his first book, but the meat of the work lies in his meandering asides and bookstore discoveries. His intellect changes focus often, but crisply, and it's a pleasure to observe him in the act of observation: Who would have thought there was still new ground to cover on the topic of Anglo-American differences? Collins muses often on the impermanence of books, but this one will grace shelves for years to come. Keir Graff
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


,Boston Globe,
"Sixpence House is the bookworm's answer to A Year in Provence." --This text refers to the
Paperback edition.

Review

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

,Readerville,
"Collins' gift is that you don't care where you end up. The journey is enough." --This text refers to the
Paperback edition.

Book Description
A bibliophile's pilgrimage to where book lovers go when they die-Hay-on-Wye.

Paul Collins and his family abandoned the hills of San Francisco to move to the Welsh countryside-to move, in fact, to the little cobblestone village of Hay-on-Wye, the 'Town of Books' that boasts fifteen hundress inhabitants-and forty bookstores. Antiquarian bookstores, no less.

Hay's newest citizens accordingly take up residence in a sixteenth-century apartment over a bookstore, meeting the village's large population of misfits and bibliomaniacs by working for world-class eccentric Richard Booth-the self-declared King of Hay, owner of the local castle, and proprietor of the world's largest and most chaotic used book warren. A useless clerk, Paul delights in shifting dusty stacks of books around and sifting them for ancient gems like Robinson Crusoe in Words of One Syllable, Confessions of an Author's Wife, and I Was Hitler's Maid. He also duly fulfills his new duty as a citizen by simultaneously applying to be a Peer in the House of Lords and attempting to buy Sixpence House, a beautiful and neglected old tumbledown pub for sale in the town's center.

Taking readers into a secluded sanctuary for book lovers, and guiding us through the creation of his own book, Sixpence House becomes a meditation on what books means to us, and how their meaning can still resonate long after they have been abandoned by their public. Even as he's writing, the knowledge of where his work will eventually end up-rubbing bindings with the rest of the books that time forgot-is a curious kind of comfort.


About the Author
Paul Collins is the author of Banvard's Folly. He edits the Collins Library for McSweeney's Books, and his work has appeared in McSweeney's, Lingua Franca, Cabinet, and Business 2.0.


Listmania!
Read customer reviews about Sixpence House at Amazon.com
Buy Sixpence House at Amazon.com

Customers who shopped this item also shopped for

Banvard's Folly : Thirteen Tales of People Who Didn't Change the World - Paul S. Collins
Publisher - Picador
Not Even Wrong : Adventures in Autism - Paul Collins
Publisher - Bloomsbury USA
A Splendor of Letters : The Permanence of Books in an Impermanent World - Nicholas A. Basbanes
Publisher - HarperCollins
Not Even Wrong : A Father's Journey into the Lost History of Autism - Paul Collins
Publisher - Bloomsbury USA
Among the Gently Mad: Strategies and Perspectives for the Book-Hunter in the 21st Century - Nicholas A. Basbanes
Publisher - Henry Holt and Co.

Home :: Web Directory :: City Guide :: Business Profiles
Hotel Directory :: Health Directory :: IT Directory :: Advertise :: Link to us :: About us

    © 1999 - 2009 IndiaCatalog.com. All Rights Reserved Privacy Statement