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Date: Tue, 10 Dec 1996 22:30:10 GMTServer: NCSA/1.4.2Content-type: text/htmlLast-modified: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 02:56:30 GMTContent-length: 15795<html> <head> <title>UW CSE - Bookstores in and around Seattle</title><Body> <!WA0><a href="http://www.cs.washington.edu/area/bookstores//"> <center> <!WA1><img border=0 vspace=5 src="http://www.cs.washington.edu/general/nameplate_small.gif"></a><br clear=all> <!WA2><img alt="RESEARCH" src="http://www.cs.washington.edu/general/region.gif"> <br clear=all> <font size=+1>BOOKSTORES</font> </center><p><font size=+1>Seattle</font><dl><dt><b>AKA Books</b><dd>CLOSED, alas. It has a successor, though: <!WA3><a href="#recollection">Recollection Books</a><dt><b>Bailey-Coy Books </b> 414 Broadway East 323.8842<dd>Pleasant, moderate-sized shop, excellent for browsing, good fiction and poetry sections. The place is festooned with helpful little stick-it (in the adhesive sense) recommendations from staff and customers. This is awonderful place to find the new book you didn't know you were looking for.<dt><b>Barnes & Noble</b> University Village<dd>It's big. It's imposing, in a faux-marble shopping mall way. On principle,I'd opt for U. Books purely for local boosterism and to avoid the rampantbourgeois feel of Barnes & Noble, or I'd opt for Borders for the betterselection. B&N is convenient and comprehensive, though you'd never mistake the U. Village location for their flagship store on lower Broadway in NYC.<dt><b>Beauty and the Books</b> 4213 University Way NE 632.8510<dd>From the inconsiderate ambience (a TV was blaring last I visited), the poor selection, and the profound indifference (bordering on hostility) of the staff, one can only assume this is a deeply troubled shop. Perhaps it'llimprove one day; for now, don't bother with it unless you're keen onbeing annoyed, or wish to witness first-hand a case study in how not torun a bookstore.<dt><b>Beyond the Closet Books</b> 1501 Belmont Ave, 322.4609<dd>A comprehensive selection of books, journals, and magazines dealing with gay/lesbian/bisexual issues. Comic books, too.<dt><b>Blackbird Books </b> 1316 E Pike 325-3793<dd>A good selection of books related to African-American issues. Also toys, posters, children's books, and music.<dt><b>Borders Books </b> 1501 4th Ave 622.4599<dd>Yes, they're a chain, but no longer owned by K-Mart. The selectionis magnificent; they're evidently willing to stock specialized titles intechnology, literary criticism, and philosophy that aren't availableelsewhere in Seattle except via special order. The store is spacious andpleasant in a postmodern Art Deco way, unless you're agoraphobic.<dt><b>David Ishi, Bookseller </b> 212 First Ave S. 622.4719<dd>Tiny shop, premium-priced hardbacks and memorabilia. He specializes in fine first editions, but during a recent phone call didn't recognize who Proustwas -- maybe it was a bad connection? Anyway, he does rare book searches onrequest.<dt><b>Elliott Bay Book Company</b>(Pioneer Sqaure) 624-6600<dd>They're open late, which in Seattle is itself a reason to rejoice.They've got a coffeeshop and a playroom for kids. Famous and not-so-famouspeople give readings there. Excellent for fiction and poetry, decent for literary criticism, rather sparse philosophy section. The wonderfulprint department is, alas, gone. Elliott Bay Books is big but eclectic --you may browse for hours, and then go home with books other thanthe ones you set out to find.<dt><b>Flora and Fauna Books</b> 121 First Ave S. 623-4727<dd>Best nature bookstore in town, with both new and used/rare titles. Eclectic: everything from A.C. Bent's <i>Life Histories of North AmericanWood Warblers</i> (all 734 pages) to <i>What Bird Did That?</i>, a kind of`Roger Tory Peterson meets scatology' field guide.<dt><b>Half-Price Books</b> 4709 Roosevelt Way 547-7859<dd>Cheap remaindered and used books. Nice for browsing. Unlikely you'llfind a specific title there, but it's fun.<dt><b>Horizon Books </b> 425 15th E. 329-3586<dd>Just your typical old house full of books, including the bathroom, whichis handy if you're gonna browse a while or have a stomach ache. Extensive sci-fi, alternative religion, and life styles selection (which may or may not be implicated insaid stomach ache). If the guy with the beard isn't toogrouchy, he'll buy and trade books.<dt><b>Killing Time Mystery Bookstore </b> 2821 NE 55th St.<dd>Great selection of mysteries. Is your mother travelling to Stockholm on vacation? This bookstore's staff will know of a mystery thattakes place there -- a great bon voyage present.<i>Killing Time review courtesy of anonymous.</i><a name="leftbank"><dt><b>Left Bank Books </b> 92 Pike 622.0195<dd>Collectively-run and entirely excellent radical bookstore. Strong collection of titles relating to feminism, culture studies & commodity aesthetics, philosophy, art, labor,history, and contemporary literature. Cool posters and bumper stickers, too.Pay with your Visa Gold card and watch their faces! </a><dt><b>Magus Bookstore </b> 1408 NE 42nd 633.1800<dd>Typical university used bookstore. A perpetually grumpy staff is a big plus.<dt><b>Multilingual Books and Archive Books</b> 4748 University Ave 522.2488<dd>Unvisited thus far (plan to, though). They reportedly have books inover 100 languages, plus they specialize in pulp fiction and literature. Web site at <!WA4><a href="http://www.esl.net/mbt/">http://www.esl.net/mbt/</a>.<i>Review pending</i><dt><b>Mystery Bookshop </b> 117 Cherry 587.5737<dd>Lots of new and used mysteries.<dt><b>Old London Bookstore </b>111 Central Ave, Bellingham 733.7273<dd>A seventeen-room historical mansion in the dead center of town; primarily a mail order business.<dt><b>Open Books </b> 2414 N. 45th 633.0811<dd>Poetry, poetry, poetry. Also, poetry.<dt><b>Pistil Books and News </b> 1013 E. Pike 325.5401<dd>Way cool selection of fringe magazines, journals, new & used fiction, et cetera. Moody, engaging ambience. We love it and you need to visit it. On the next block is <i>Toys in Babeland</i>, for your sex-toy shopping convenience.<dt><b><a name="recollection">Recollection Used Books</a></b>4519 University Way 548-1346<dd>This is clearly a bookstore run by people who love books. Check outthe modern first editions behind the counter (despite the sign above them that says <i>expensive puppies</i>, the prices are quite reasonable). Thefiction section is quirky but full of treasures; the selection ofmysteries is small but high-quality. A sci-fi fan wasn't impressed withtheir offerings in that genre, but the selection of non-English titlesin the comfortable room upstairs (complete with chairs and a chess table)more than made up for that lack. Recollection is on the web at<!WA5><a href="http://www.eskimo.com/~recall">http://www.eskimo.com/~recall</a>.<dt><b>Second Story Book Store </b> Wallingford Center 547-4605<dd>Small and pleasant, tucked away upstairs in a big old Arts & Crafts schoolhouse that's been converted into a mini-mall with character. Feminist and new fiction titles, lending library, calendars.<dt><b>Secret Garden Children's Bookshop </b> 6115 15th NW 789.5006<dd>New ownership, new location in Ballard. A review is pending.<dt><b>Shorey's Books </b> 1411 1st Ave 624-0221<dd>A selection of used books that surely someone, somewhere, must find interesting. <dt><b>Standard Books </b> 1028 NE 65th 527-2208<dd>Great bookstore -- open and airy. Current fiction and non-fiction, politics, history, poetry. Small children's section. Free Sunday New York Times Book Review. Friendly, smart staff. Book signings and readings.<dt><b>Tower Books </b> 20 Mercer Street 283.6333<dd>Extensive selection of new mass-market books, magazines, and newspapers. Open until midnight every day. Crowded and usually unpleasant, but cheap.<dt><b>Twice Sold Tales </b> 905 E. John 324.2421<dd>Wonderful selection of used fiction at good prices. Good sci-fi andhorror section, decent general literature section, and the `new arrivals'shelf usually yields a surprise or two -- often, barely used titles fromRoutledge. Open until 3am orso. Great place to hang out and pet one (or more) of the many resident cats, or just wander around and read the annoying little corrective reminders
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