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Books are an important part of my life - on a couple of different levels. I had a feel for them long before I joined James Thin; they were a way to access information for one thing, and information is one of the main things that makes us all different from each other. There are incredibly vast amounts of it available, particularly nowadays since the internet came along, and no two people can possibly have the same knowledge and therefore exactly the same view of a subject. I am always astonished to think of what it must have been like to be thirsty for knowledge back in the days before printing was invented and the only books were hand-written and therefore extremely scarce. On that level I could just be content to read about subjects on-line, but books are somehow different in another way. Probably only a collector or an antiquarian booksellers will understand but there seems to be a character about an old book; something that identifies it with the time it was written in and the people who read it. If you're reading this then you're
probably interested in what type of books I read. Well curiously I don't
read as many books as I used to largely due to the amount I read on-line,
but when I do I have a fairly diverse collection to choose from. Favourites include: There are the books on Photography as well. There I'm less interested in the instructional and technical side these days since I long ago digested the classic texts on darkroom work and subjects like the Zone System - now I just look at the pictures!! I love the work of Ansel Adams, but also that of Fay Godwin and the Japanese photographer Shinzo Maeda, whose delicate studies of trees and leaves are a delight. Favourites: I used to read a lot of computer manuals but these days
they are out of date so quickly that it hardly seems worth it!! Hill-walking books make up a fair percentage of my collection too - both the how-to-climb-Ben-X type and also the more biographical and narrative sort. Again, standing alone on top of a hill and surveying the surrounding areas can sometimes seem to bring earlier ages almost within reach, and writers like Tom Weir and Hamish Brown have a happy knack of making that sort of scene come alive for the armchair walker. Favourites: At school we read things like DH Lawrence, which I found rather depressing, though nothing like as bad as JD Salinger whose Catcher in the Rye I was forced to reject as a course study book as it left me feeling almost suicidal with it's hopeless outlook. Strangely, considering that I was always fervently Scots, I didn't get into any of the classic Scottish writers like Scott, Stevenson, Hogg, etc. and I'm ashamed to say I still haven't read most of their novels. (Perhaps when I retire I'll get time to catch up!!) The few examples of historical fiction that I did read were pretty dire and I dismissed the genre. One author I did enjoy in my mid-teens was Sir Arthur Conan Doyle - his short stories as well as the Sherlock Holmes books. His intricate plots turned out to be useful practice for later! Many years later (1994) when I first set up an email account for Thins, one of the first contacts I had was with a customer of ours who was amongst a large number of regular buyers of books by Dorothy Dunnett, and I soon realised that this writer had an unusually devoted following. In fact I was more familiar with her husband Alastair who had been editor of The Scotsman newspaper around the time I first started reading it. One email soon led to many others and it became apparent that many of Dorothy's overseas fans had internet accounts and were in contact with each other. I was pushing to set up a web site for the shop and noticed that many of them asked the same questions about the availablility of her books and suchlike, so maybe they'd be interested in a Dunnett web page? Well, interested was an understatement. The response was immediate and incredibly enthusiastic. Soon, with their help and encouragement, I had launched into the research, refined the early versions of the page, corrected the mistakes and incorporated the suggestions. The emails came thick and fast and so did the orders. Soon the emailing list had outstripped the old snail-mail notification list and the first new book to come out after the web page was set up - To Lie with Lions - sold twice as many in advance overseas orders as did the previous one. (The next - Caprice and Rondo - doubled that again, and the final volume Gemini saw the now legendary metric ton of books being dispatched around the globe). What impressed me was not just that these people were keen, but that they weren't the sort of fiction fans you might get for the mass market writers - they numbered professors and researchers, writers and historians, computer programmers and many more, and were quite prepared to criticise and probe in a highly intellectual manner while still declaring the writer to be the best they'd ever read. There were times when it felt a little strange dealing with their emails every day; while I had lots of information at my fingertips I would often have to go looking for more and was being treated as a Dunnett expert when in fact I hadn't read a single one of her books! That's often the lot of the bookseller - when I worked in the Science Dept I used to have physicists and engineers come back and ask me for a better book on their pet subject and seemed to expect that I'd read them all - no doubt every other bookseller must have experienced the same thing. In the middle of all this I got to meet Dorothy a few times and was captivated. She wasn't at all like the stuffy popular image of a historian or the sometimes precious image of the writer - rather she was warm, bright and lively, the intelligence and imagination seeming to flow immediately from those mischiveously glinting eyes, and without a single sign of the airs and graces that many people in her position would adopt. Despite my reservations about reading historical fiction I knew that I would have to read one of her books - you don't pass up the chance to connect to such an personality. I started in July 97 with Game of Kings - the
first of the Lymond Chronicles - and read them with increasing admiration;
then managed to finish the first seven House of Niccolo books just in
time to read Gemini when it came out. All I can say is that if
you enjoy complex plots, meticulous attention to detail and historical
accuracy, and the myriad interactions of human nature, then you should
definitely read these books. They are without compare. Sadly, after 5 generations and 152 years, James Thin Ltd got into financial difficulties and went into administration in Jan 2002. My website was one of the first things to be closed down and I was made redundant after 21 years of service. The rest of the middle management soon followed and the group was eventually split up and sold off - the academic shops being bought by Blackwells and the general ones by Ottakers. Along with the earlier demise of the even older John Smiths of Glasgow, this marked the end of an era in British bookselling. I find most of the large chain booksellers to be soulless places with little real understanding or empathy with the volumes they sell. Smaller bookshops still retain that feel but they are under more and more pressure and of course their breadth of stock is inevitably limited. I was sad to see on a recent trip to Dunkeld that the bookshop there has now gone. I fear that the world of bookselling has changed irretrievably as has the world of publishing, and it may be that new technology will after all eventually overcome it. A pity, books are different, special, and the pressure of the marketplace have been allowed to destroy that. |
Books - Chess - Photography - Music - CV - Dorothy Dunnett