The Bwog
Beyond the Strand

Looking to pick up some summer reading? The woman at the desk of Partners and Crime, in the East Village, told Bwog reporter Emma Jacobs that Manhattan's bookshop scene's just not what it used to be--but we didn't believe her. You can still find some of the best bookshops around hanging in on Manhattan to serve every taste. Click here for a map of the bookshops, and happy browsing!

jgjThree Lives & Co.
154 West 10th Street, Greenwich Village

Wooden shelves and red brick. This one's a classic, traditional bookshop in a cozy space in the West Village.

Unoppressive, Non-Imperialist Bargain Books
34 Carmine Street, West Village

In an incredible corner of the Village, you'll find amazing prices on remainders focused around politics and art. Children's bookshop is next door. Also, the name is awesome.

Housing Works Used Bookstore Café

126 Crosby Street, Soho

Beautiful Soho space sells used books and coffee, with proceeds going to help homeless New Yorkers living with AIDS. Great monthly concert series too.

Partners & Crime
44 Greenwich Ave

This place has exclusive mysteries and detective novels. The staff know their stuff inside and out.

Alabaster Bookshop

122 4th Avenue, East Village

Another small-scale classic with used books and rare titles. It has a cat and amazing bargain carts outside.

jgjSlotnick Bonnie Cookbooks
163 W 10th St , West Village

A bookstore for you cooks and gourmands with lots of hard to find vintage cookbook titles you never knew you'd missed.

Shakespeare & Co.
716 Broadway Frnt, Greenwich Village
939 Lexington Ave, Midtown East
137 E 23rd St, Gramercy Park

There's more than one, and they're all adorable.

McNally Robinson Booksellers LLC
50 Prince Street, Little Italy

To be honest, this place is a little blander, but the selection is good and it has a teahouse. Who doesn't love a teahouse?

St. Mark's Bookshop
31 Third Avenue, East Village

A little like Labyrinth, an academic place, but with an especially great collection for starving artists.

The Mysterious Bookshop
58 Warren Street, Tribeca

Surprised that one mystery bookshop can make it? Well, there's another.

Drama Bookshop
250 W. 40th St., Midtown

For more dramatic tastes, offers a collection of sheet music, plays and movie scripts.

gjhfgForbidden Planet
840 Broadway, off Union Square

A bookstore of comic books, graphic novels and assorted supplies to realize your personal geekdom.

Urban Center Books
457 Madison Ave, Midtown

Architecture and design bookstore of the Municipal Art Society.

Read more: Adventures, Books

Posted by You forgot: [#1] [reply] [track]
( posted May 20, 2007 at 3:10 PM )
Westsider Books at 80th and Bway. Adorable little used bookstore that's actually close to Columbia.

Also, RIP Ivy's Books and Murder Ink.
Posted by hello: [#2] [reply] [track]
( posted May 20, 2007 at 3:13 PM )
this is a great list btw, thanks bwog
Posted by nice: [#3] [reply] [track]
( posted May 20, 2007 at 4:41 PM )
list. there's a cool little bookshop on bedford in w'burg that I forget the name of, too.

interesting fact- mcnally robinson's original (and only other) location is in western canada somewhere - like calgary or winnipeg. it was a big gamble for them to open in NYC.
Posted by Armin Rosen: [#4] [reply] [track] (in reply to #1)
( posted May 20, 2007 at 4:46 PM )
Westsider's a classic black hole of bookstore--if you wander in there's a pretty good chance you may never find your way out. They also convert vinal records and tapes to CDs and VHS to DVD.
Posted by Also: [#5] [reply] [track]
( posted May 20, 2007 at 4:52 PM )
Let's not forget NYU's equivalent of the Broadway booksellers, who hang out on West 4th between Mercer and Washington Square East -- a good bit better than CU's (I'm sad to admit it), and with lots of pencil-marked as-is books for two bucks. It makes up for the high prices at Think.
Posted by Good stuff: [#6] [reply] [track]
( posted May 20, 2007 at 6:03 PM )
Thanks Bwog.
Posted by What if: [#7] [reply] [track]
( posted May 20, 2007 at 7:19 PM )
What if we aren't interested in "adorable" bookstores with teahouses?
Posted by umm: [#8] [reply] [track] (in reply to #7)
( posted May 20, 2007 at 7:25 PM )
then you can take yourself to one of the dozen obvious locations of barnes and noble around the city...
Posted by Barnes & Noble: [#9] [reply] [track]
( posted May 21, 2007 at 12:46 AM )
Barnes & Noble

Borders

Both very good and lots of locations nationwide
Posted by ugh: [#10] [reply] [track] (in reply to #9)
( posted May 21, 2007 at 6:02 AM )
Blasphemy!
Posted by you forgot: [#11] [reply] [track]
( posted May 21, 2007 at 9:19 AM )
Biography Bookshop, 400 Bleecker St.

All books are new and nearly half-price.
Posted by floretbroccoli: [#12] [reply] [track]
( posted May 21, 2007 at 9:37 AM )
Don't forget Kitchen Arts & Letters on the upper east side. Best cookbook store in town. The owner, Nach Waxman, is revered by chefs all over the world.
Posted by oh no you didn't: [#13] [reply] [track]
( posted May 21, 2007 at 10:01 AM )
you forgot 192 books on 10th & 21st?! (192books.com)
Posted by capitalist: [#14] [reply] [track] (in reply to #9)
( posted May 21, 2007 at 10:06 AM )
borders and b&n are great, but still better is amazon.com. it's got a larger selection than any other bookseller in the world, and you'll save valuable time, which you could even spend actually reading books! plus, with user reviews and amazon recommendations, you can choose things you actually want to read rather than leaving things to hazard.
Posted by who said: [#15] [reply] [track] (in reply to #14)
( posted May 21, 2007 at 10:12 AM )


Who said that going to bookstores had anything to do with reading books?

Posted by capitalist: [#16] [reply] [track]
( posted May 21, 2007 at 10:46 AM )
bwog said "Looking to pick up some summer reading?"

and in any case, i think it's fair to assume that people go to bookstores to buy books.
Posted by Erm.: [#17] [reply] [track] (in reply to #16)
( posted May 21, 2007 at 12:47 PM )
The question, I guess, then, is "what do you do with all the time you save, if you don't enjoy actually going to physical places and experiencing things?"
Posted by bookstore: [#18] [reply] [track] (in reply to #15)
( posted May 21, 2007 at 12:49 PM )
a store where books are sold."

Books are primarily sold to be read.

Going to a bookstore has to have at least something tangentially to do with reading books, since it would not exist otherwise. Even if nobody who bought any of the books there read them, the books themselves would still have been printed because people read books.

Posted by capitalist: [#19] [reply] [track] (in reply to #17)
( posted May 21, 2007 at 1:28 PM )
i never said that i "don't enjoy actually going to physical places and experiencing things".

perhaps you're asking what i do with all the time i save through buying books on amazon.com rather than going to physical bookstores?

the answer to that question is... i read books.
Posted by anonymity: [#20] [reply] [track]
( posted May 21, 2007 at 2:31 PM )
(this is not in ref to these particular comments, but to bwog comments in general): [ external link to www.penny-arcade.com ]

soo true
Posted by also: [#21] [reply] [track]
( posted May 22, 2007 at 6:14 PM )
Don't forget Skyline Books (W. 18th b/t 5th and 6th Ave.) -- used books, including great back issues of old quarterlies, and, last time I was there, an actual First of Lolita (Olympia Press, 2 vols.), in a glass case.
Posted by Who, me?: [#22] [reply] [track]
( posted May 22, 2007 at 9:03 PM )
Spoonbill and Sugartown.
Posted by one more: [#23] [reply] [track]
( posted May 23, 2007 at 3:27 PM )
bluestockings books on allen st. anarchist, alternative bookstore. they have great events too!
Posted by Columbia Bookstore: [#24] [reply] [track]
( posted May 28, 2007 at 6:39 AM )
Have you seen this place? Very convenient to campus dwellers, it's right on 115th and Broadway.
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