[note: the descriptions below are a bit more impressionistic than I hoped, but this is mainly because I am not buying as much stuff as I used to. Also, I just decided to update this poor site, so I wasn't really planning to log these stores when I visited. I will fix this in the future. Or maybe I won't. I really don't know.]
Rodney's Bookstore
698 Mass Ave.
Cambridge, MA
(617) 876-6467
www.rodneysbookstore.com
Lame Duck Books
Rare and Used Books, Manuscripts, Art
12 Arrow Street
Cambridge MA 02138
617-868-2022
www.lameduckbooks.com
Cellar Stories
111 Mathewson St.
Providence, RI 02903
(401) 521-2665
www.cellarstories.com
10-6 Mon-Sat
winters, open 12-5 Sunday
This nice large space. I primarily went there to hunt down a few of their signed firsts I saw on the interwebs, but it certainly merits a trip for more general enthusiasts. As I remember, it was not in a basement, in fact, you had to go up a flight of stairs--so don't spend too much time poking around in the cellar. I perused the rare book room and while the signed first of Empire Falls that I went there for turned out to be a bust (either mis-listed on their site or I misread it) and not a first, I ended up glad-handling a Murakami and McEwen thus instilling a craving for those titles that will amount to some future downfall. In the end, I spent $179 on Edward P. Jones and Ha Jin signed firsts, and they were kind enough to media mail them to me in California at no extra charge that I noticed. As for the rest of the store, I wish I had more time that day. I went through the philosophy and political science sections and found some interesting things, but bought nothing there. The store folks were friendly and I will be stopping there again in the future.
Symposium Books
240 Westminster Street
Providence RI 02903
Though I was on the hunt for firsts, the folks at Cellar Stories had recommended we check out Symposium, which is more the kind of store I am usually found drooling in, the academic and scholarly overstock used book store. At first glance, this place looks like an art book store, and art books are indeed a specialty. But there are quite a few overstock academic books in this bright, clean and well-organized store, reminding me of my other area favorite, the Raven. When we revealed our post-retirement dream of opening a shop, an employee with vast experience in the book business was kind enough to chat about the business with us for quite a while. I bought a few scholarly titles for less than $10 each--Nietzsche, Metaphor, Religion, Continental Philosophy of Social Science, and Nietzsche and Embodiment--reflecting several odd writing projects I am on. I thought the literature section was pretty well stocked. I'll definitely go back in the future.