Buying Books By Mistake
Aug. 4th, 2006 04:30 pmI realised that I needed a guide book to Washington, since it is many years since I was last there, and there must be a lot of things I want to see. The guide I have is dated 1993…
So I walked into town and went to Waterstones on George St. In the store, there were several tables piled high with books. (It was a bookshop, after all.) Most of the titles seemed to be telling me to do something. (“Sleep With Me” screamed one; it was next to “The Girl With The One Track Mind”, which was kind of appropriate.)
A lot of the titles or their authors were familiar to me; I haven’t bought many books recently (if only because I haven’t been reading much over the last year or so; I blame LJ, myself!), and there are many things I have seen which I thought I would buy.
I had to weave between all these tempting tables to find the Travel section. By the time I found it, I had a pile of six books. (This was ok… Since they had a three-for-two offer, it was really only four books…)
The pile consisted of:
I had to balance these books whilst I hunted for a guide to Washington. They only had one, which I didn’t like, so instead I bought the six books I hadn’t intended and walked to the Princes St branch of Waterstones where they had several guidebooks to Washington. I also saw a whole lot more books I wanted to buy; but I reckon these six will do for the moment.
So I walked into town and went to Waterstones on George St. In the store, there were several tables piled high with books. (It was a bookshop, after all.) Most of the titles seemed to be telling me to do something. (“Sleep With Me” screamed one; it was next to “The Girl With The One Track Mind”, which was kind of appropriate.)
A lot of the titles or their authors were familiar to me; I haven’t bought many books recently (if only because I haven’t been reading much over the last year or so; I blame LJ, myself!), and there are many things I have seen which I thought I would buy.
I had to weave between all these tempting tables to find the Travel section. By the time I found it, I had a pile of six books. (This was ok… Since they had a three-for-two offer, it was really only four books…)
The pile consisted of:
- The Accidental, by Ali Smith
- Freakonomics, by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner
- Why Do Buses Come In Threes, by Rob Eastway and Jeremy Wyndham (someone once told me why buses comes in threes, but I can’t remember, which annoys me; so this is to stop me being annoyed)
- A Short History Of Tractors In Ukrainian, by Marina Lewycka
- Blink, by Malcolm Gladwell
- Who Moved My Blackberry™, by Martin Lukes (with Lucy Kellaway)
I had to balance these books whilst I hunted for a guide to Washington. They only had one, which I didn’t like, so instead I bought the six books I hadn’t intended and walked to the Princes St branch of Waterstones where they had several guidebooks to Washington. I also saw a whole lot more books I wanted to buy; but I reckon these six will do for the moment.