nsaho.blogg.se

The bookshop on the corner review
The bookshop on the corner review









the bookshop on the corner review

She attends a course and determines that she would like to operate a mobile bookstore. She finds a van in Scotland, which she investigates, but the owner isn’t convinced that selling to a tiny woman would be a good thing.

the bookshop on the corner review

For Nina, who is shy to the point of awkwardness, this is obviously not a good thing. But the library in Birmingham where she is working is shutting its doors and only two jobs will be available for multiple applicants. Each day she does the things that she likes best: deal with books and provide others with a book they will love. Nina is very happy with her life as a librarian. That’s how I felt today while I was reading The Bookshop on the Corner by Jenny Colgan. There are days when the weather is perfect and you are on holiday and an exquisite book for such a day happens to fall into your hands.

the bookshop on the corner review

(Sorry to anyone who happened on this post around 7 pm on I was trying to schedule and evidently posted it before it was completed.) Quite enjoyed the book.The Bookshop on the Corner by Jenny Colgan Publication Date: SeptemPublisher: William Morrow (an imprint of HarperCollins) Then there also side stories like another likely lover for the female, and a spiteful ex-wife for the guy. Jenny Colgan’s book followed the tried and true romance trope because we have a heroine who has no clue that she will be falling in love and we have a hero who’s gruff and moody and really doesn’t care two hoots for the female in his backyard.

the bookshop on the corner review

They had mended her heart when it was broken, and encouraged her to hope when she was down.” “Books had been her solace when she was sad, her friends when she was lonely. Books are her comfort, and having a mobile bookshop is her dream job. Nina Redmond is your average slightly ditzy librarian, who loves to read more than she loves to interact with other human beings. This book was a predictable romance, and yet quite lovely and pleasant. Nina also meets Marek a train conductor who helps her smuggle books in and out, and she shares more than a friendship with him. The farmer himself is a gruff man and doesn’t pay Neena any heed, but the rooms are comfortable. She finds a very nice cottage at a sheep farmer’s. She has to find a place to live because she’s had a bit of a disagreement with her roommate Surinder. She find a van and fixes it up as a bookshop and travels around in it. So, when a suggestion of a mobile book shop comes up, Nina takes it as a sign. That is extremely disappointing for her given that Nina is passionate about her work and has the ability to find the perfect book for every reader. Librarian Nina Redmond is being let go from her job.











The bookshop on the corner review