Home > Shop Books >

Reading the Room: A Bookseller's Tale
Reading the Room: A Bookseller's Tale by Paul Yamazaki
by Paul Yamazaki
 
Paperback.
Price: $13.95

Qty:

Description
 
Chicago, IL: Ode Books | University of Chicago Press (April 2024)

Paperback.

As new.

"All booksellers are the unsung heroes of American literature, but Paul Yamazaki is a superhero."
-Colson Whitehead, author of The Underground Railroad, Harlem Shuffle, and Crook Manifesto

Reading the Room is Paul Yamazaki's love letter to the work of bookselling and an engaged life of the mind.

Over twenty-four hours, Paul Yamazaki leads us through the stacks of storied City Lights Booksellers in San Francisco; the care and prowess of his approach to book buying; his upbringing in a Japanese American family in Southern California and moving to San Francisco at the height of revolutionary foment; working with legendary figures in the book publishing industry like Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Sonny Mehta, and others; and his vision for the future of bookselling. Navigating building trust with readers and nurturing relationships across the literary industry, Yamazaki testifies to the value of generosity, sharing knowledge, and dialogue in a life devoted to books.

Paul Yamazaki has been the principal buyer at City Lights Booksellers, the legendary San Francisco bookstore and publisher founded by Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Peter Martin, for more than fifty years. A champion for national and global literature, writers, publishers, and independent bookstores, Yamazaki was the recipient of the National Book Foundation's 2023 Literarian Award for Outstanding Service to the American Literary Community. He has mentored generations of booksellers across America.

Rick Simonson
has worked at Seattle's Elliott Bay Book Company, one of the US's leading independent bookstores, since 1976. He is Elliott Bay's senior buyer and founded their internationally renowned author reading program forty years ago. He presently serves on the governing boards of Copper Canyon Press, the University of Washington Press, and UNESCO Seattle City of Literature.

Share your knowledge of this product. Be the first to write a review »