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Monday, December 20, 2010

Halifax - John W. Doull Bookseller

A secondhand bookshop to die for
Welcome to the home of John W. Doull, Bookseller. Please search or browse our inventory of hard-to-find, out-of-print, used, and rare books. At present there are over 39,500 titles listed, with many now having accompanying portraits.
If you can't find what you like please fill out our search form and we will search our off-line inventory (another 100,000 or so books) for you. Gift certificates are also available in any amount you wish and can be mailed to the happy recipient of your choice.
We also offer appraisal services.

The opening paragraphs of the John W Doull Bookseller site.   A tidy, well organized, and laid out site is no preparation for entering his shop in Halifax. 

You walk through a double set of doors separated by a small porch essential for the cold winters in Halifax.  Wait a minute, it was wet and windy as I struggled through the doors furiously trying to fold up my umbrella and take of my soaked raincoat when I burst into a REAL SECONDHAND BOOKSHOP.  The sort of shop you dream about with overfilled bookshelves rising ever upwards, small spaces between them with just enough room walk, extra books taking up what spare floor space and there on my right a long counter piled high with books completely blocking your view.  As I walked further into the shop, breathing in the aroma of books, I spied a break in counter books and saw the shopkeeper busy at a small table.  A table covered in, of course, books.
“Hullo, nice shop” I said.   “Feel free to browse” was my greeting which I did off and on for the next two days.


After getting directions to my areas that interested - the Nautical and the Polar sections - I headed off. 


As luck would have it, they were next to each other.  The Nautical section was at the head of the stairs straight through the while the Polar section was immediately to the right just past the brown door and before the canvas gate.





Now the stairs - two flights separated by a landing.  Piles of books stacked at the outer edges of the stairs and landing leaving a narrow but adequate walkway.

 I reached the Polar books get out my camera and take several pictures needed to describe the area.  The stitched photo below shows the polar section, about 400-500 books (I didn’t count them) including the additional boxes and books on the floor.  Not shown are the large format books that continue across the top of brown door.  




This was 'heaven' for a collector of Antarctic books.  Not only did I find lots of books, but also with running in the rain and moving and sorting through the boxes. I got my daily exercise.

The shop may appear to a non-book collector to be chaotic and a bit of mess and bring forth thoughts like ‘where do I start’ or ‘help, let me get out of here’.  However, the shop, like the database on the web site is organized.  Books are in categories with quirky signs.



Although the books within each section have, some sort of grouping thankfully there is no attempt at sorting by author.  Because of the wonderful discoveries, I made while browsing for books on my want list. My pile of purchases grows only limited by my baggage allowance and the postage costs to New Zealand.



This shop is a must visit if you are in Halifax.  Why not go to Halifax, browse through this shop for yourself, and then take the train across Nova Scotia back to Toronto.  Do this in the autumn and see the colour and when you arrive in Toronto you will find plenty of secondhand and antiquarian bookshops?    

Friday, December 17, 2010

Sidney - Booktown Canada




September 2010
Sidney - Booktown Canada
Vancouver Island, Canada.
After arriving at the airport, beautifully decked out in flowers (the airport that is) grab a taxi and head across to Beacon Avenue .If you travelling by ferry from Vancouver  you can hop of the bus right on Beacon Avenue.


Now on the main street of Sidney you can explore the secondhand bookshops to your heart’s content or until you can't carry anymore books, run out of cash or you reach the sea. For Sidney is not just the Secondhand Book Capital of BC,it is also a seaside holiday spot.

Beacon Books 
First, there is Beacon Books where I picked up several Antarctic books both on this trip and previously in 2008. This is a large general secondhand bookstore, including some rare and antiquarian books, but no military books.

Inside Beacon Books
For these you must go further down the avenue to their second shop called The Book Cellar. Here they specialize in military history and biography, history of war, Naval and maritime, Aviation, railways, maps and military ephemera. However, before we head off, next door is Country Life Books specializing in crafts and hobbies.
The Book Cellar.
On the way down turn into Third Street to find Galleon Books &  Antiques with a very large collection of quality used books, in a well-organized shop, with extremely helpful staff. Here I bought books relating to the Antarctic, WW1 Raiders, raising the scuttled German fleet at Scapa Flow, and a biography on Barnes Wallis. All these books, like most on the shelves had their dust jackets covered. The shop had no problem in organizing posting to New Zealand. Don't be fooled by the picture below the shop is much large than it appears in the photo - a bit Tardis like.
Galleon Books &  Antiques
You come out of this shop and walk right into The Haunted Bookshop the oldest antiquarian bookshop on the Island. And here I was tempted again and purchased a fine copy of John Stewart’s the two volume set ‘Antarctic – An Encyclopedia’. Why I purchase heavy books overseas I do not know, maybe it is it my philanthropic support of Canadian Post?
The Haunted Bookshop
Now back on Beacon Avenue we see Time Enough for Books and next door Paperback Writer. The former describes itself as having ‘gently used books – a small eclectic store specializing in children’s books, health & psychology, audio books'’ while the latter as the name implies specializes in paperbacks.





Sidney is book collectors town, with a good assortment of secondhand book shops,  Tanners and  The Children's Book Shop selling new books and I was told a Book Restorer has just set up operation.


 I spent a full day going through the shops, buying books and the night packing them for postage the next day back to New Zealand. On postage – it is costly and takes a long time. Today, the 17 December, the books I posted and the books posted by the helpful man at Galleon Books & Antiques on 29 September have just arrived on my doorstep.


I assure any book collector, a day or two spent in some or all of the 23 secondhand book shops in Sidney and Victoria will be rewarding.


Now to finish up as you can see from the photo below once you are in Sidney, even the statues go into book hunter mode.



If you wont to know more why not try
www.sidneybooktown.ca
www.booksvancouverisland.ca