Books

Books : reviews

Shaun Bythell.
The Diary of a Bookseller.
Profile. 2017

Thursday, 24 April
An elderly customer told me that her book club’s next book was Dracula, but she couldn’t remember what he’d written.

Meet Shaun Bythell, bookshop owner, bibliophile and misanthrope extraordinaire. He lives and works in The Bookshop, Wigtown, whose crooked shelves contain anything from a sixteenth-century Bible to a first-edition Agatha Christie. A booklover’s paradise? Well, almost…

In Shaun’s honest and wryly hilarious diaries, he reveals the highs and lows of life in the book trade, as he contends with eccentric customers, bin-foraging employees and a perennially empty till. Along the way he'll take you on buying trips to old estates and auction houses, recommend lost classics – and introduce you to the thrill of the unexpected find.

Shaun Bythell.
Confessions of a Bookseller.
Profile. 2019

As the owner of The Bookshop in Wigtown, Scotland, you might think Shaun Bythell’s days are taken up with sorting through rare and valuable first editions – or snoozing by the fire with the latest literary gem. But you'd be wrong.

Instead, beset by bizarre requests from customers who appear not to know what a shop is, locked in an endless struggle with Amazon and terrorised by his bin-diving, poultice-making employees, Shaun’s trials and tribulations make his life very far from a fairy tale.

Warm, honest and very, very funny, Confessions of a Bookseller is the real story of a life lived in books.

Shaun Bythell.
Seven Kinds of People You Find in Bookshops.
Profile. 2020

In twenty years behind the till in The Bookshop, Wigtown, Shaun Bythell has met pretty much every kind of customer there is – from the charming, erudite and deep-pocketed to the eccentric, flatulent and possibly larcenous.

In Seven Kinds of People You Find in Bookshops he distils the essence of his experience into a warm, witty and quirky taxonomy of the book-loving public. So, step inside to meet the crafty Antiquarian, the shy and retiring Erotica Browser and gormless yet strangely likeable shop assistant Student Hugo – along with much loved bookseller favourites like the passionate Sci-Fi Fan, the voracious Railway Collector and the ever-elusive Perfect Customer.

Shaun Bythell.
Remainders of the Day: more diaries from The Bookshop, Wigtown.
Profile. 2022

After twenty years running The Bookshop in Wigtown, Scotland, Shaun Bythell’s life has settled into a mostly comfortable routine: days spent roaming between the shelves, poetry nights by the fire, frequent drop-ins from friends with gossip.

But while customers come and go – whether or not they’ve paid – there’s never a quiet moment in The Bookshop. Apart from the usual stream of die-hard trainspotters, antiquarian porn collectors and toddlers looking for somewhere cosy to urinate, Shaun still must contend with his employees’ increasingly eccentric habits, the mayhem of the Wigtown Book Festival and the shock of the town’s pub changing hands.

Warm and witty, with Shaun’s iconic mix of deadpan humour and grouchy charm, Remainders of the Day is the latest in his bestselling diary series.