Bookish People

Bookish PeopleBookish People
by Susan Coll
Rating: ★★★½
isbn: 9781400234103
Publication Date: August 2, 2022
Pages: 336
Genre: Fiction
Publisher: Harper Muse

A perfect storm of comedic proportions erupts in a DC bookstore over the course of one soggy summer week—narrated by two very different women and punctuated by political turmoil, a celestial event, and a perpetually broken vacuum cleaner.

Independent bookstore owner Sophie Bernstein is burned out on books. Mourning the death of her husband, the loss of her favorite manager, her only child’s lack of aspiration, and the grim state of the world, she fantasizes about going into hiding in the secret back room of her store.

Meanwhile, renowned poet Raymond Chaucer has published a new collection, and rumors that he’s to blame for his wife’s suicide have led to national cancellations of his publicity tour. He intends to set the record straight—with an ultra-fine-point Sharpie—but only one shop still plans to host him: Sophie’s.

Fearful of potential repercussions from angry customers, Sophie asks Clemi—bookstore events coordinator, aspiring novelist, and daughter of a famed literary agent—to cancel Raymond’s appearance. But Clemi suspects Raymond might be her biological father, and she can’t say no to the chance of finding out for sure.

This big-hearted screwball comedy features an intergenerational cast of oblivious authors and over-qualified booksellers—as well as a Russian tortoise named Kurt Vonnegut Jr.—and captures the endearing quirks of some of the best kinds of people: the ones who love good books.


I don’t know what to say about this one; it’s a departure of sorts, while also being right in my wheelhouse.  I liked it, but I’m not sure why I liked it.  I read it digitally, and I feel like my comprehension suffered a bit too, so that maybe I’d have gotten more out of it if I’d read a printed copy.

Bookish People is a snapshot of one very chaotic week in a DC bookstore.  It’s written in 3rd person present tense, which I found a bit jarring at first, and it centers around 2 female characters, the owner of the store, recently widowed, and the events manager, with occasional forays into the head of a Ted Hughes-like poet who is having his own personal crises.  The rest of the staff orbit around these two women and add their own eccentricities to the mix.

It’s billed as comedy, and it’s definitely humorous, but I didn’t find it to be laugh out loud funny.  There are times that the humor feels tinged with a manic sort of panic that dampened any desire on my part to giggle, although there was a scene with a turtle and a Roomba that made me smile broadly.

If you’re looking for a story with a beginning, a middle and an end, this book will frustrate; there’s very little resolution to any of the conflicts and the only HEA is the turtle’s.  But it is a very well-written vignette of a sort, of a crazy week in a bookshop.

2 thoughts on “Bookish People”

  1. You’re more positive about this one than I was — the turtle on the roomba was one of the best things about the book for sure. (although I think my patience had worn out by that point). There was enough to like, but the pieces didn’t gel for me.

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