THANK YOU FOR READING THROUGH TODAY'S REVISION OF THIS PAGE
HEREWITH OUR CLICKS & MORTAR JOTTINGS FOR THE DAY
This page was freshly revised & updated on Saturday 4th. February 2012, evening (GMT)..
From the shop in the last few days, we have sold a fair quantity of North American history
and natural history, mainly flower and bird books. Certainly far more than the british equivalents.
Much American political history has been sold from the shop, especially since Tuesday.
There have been very few outrageous eccentics in the shop over the last month.
Does the bad weather keep them at home? Britain is often supposed to have more than its
fair share of them. I tend to agree, but also believe that this town (Southport) has them to excess.
Helena Brookfield, at the sandwich shop round the corner, suggests that there is a portal
to all parallel universes just outside her premises. There are, she holds, far too many
looneys in Southport for a single universe.
Certain Liverpudlians have suggested that we make idle boast of the large number of Southport eccentrics.
Liverpool, they tell, us has quality rather than quantity. Their best of course is the man
who used to "play" silently a brown cardboard cut-out banjo in the city centre.
We have just found some boxes of pinned beetles in the big storeroom.
They're too delicate for posting out but will make nice shop items if we can
rummage out some suitable display boxes.
This site is well worth your time.
All lancastrians will find it delightful.
I'm told the site is doing well. Lancastrian expatriates are visiting in fair numbers.
I've been told also that Gerard Swarbrick invented Appledore cheese. Is that so? You can now
buy it at Grandma Singleton's cheese shop just by Preston market.
There are builders on Waterstone's roof, two doors away. 'Have been letting them through our property
at 8 a.m. each morning. No bad thing for my punctuality. Lots more store-room boxes of surprises have been unpacked
in the time before shop opening. The workmen are remarkably tidy too.
It's a pity Waterstone's are having such a rough time. One wonders, though how much of the shops have
been given over to the undiscerning buyer. Large format books, high on pictures, low on textual information
and ghost-written for some celeb posing as an expert, sell there new at fifteen quid upwards but re-sell in our
bargain ginnel still 'new' at 50p. The same goes for most of the fiction aimed at the same market.
The chavs were bound to go over to Kindle in the end.