An illustrated guide to New York City tailored for the book-obsessed explorer showcasing the city's best bookshops; libraries; homes and haunts of world-famous writers; and scenes from literary classics with charming drawings by the famed New Yorker cover artist Pierre Le-Tan.
A Booklover's Guide to New York is a love letter to everything literary in New York City. It is a book all about books. The book is an object in itself, designed as the ultimate little tome any book collector would love to acquire, layered with witty Pierre Le-Tan drawings, as well as photographs of some of the most precious bookish locations.
Rediscover New York in the most fashionably literate way: whether you are in need of an exceptionally rare edition of your favorite novel (perhaps to be found in the dark and musty backroom of The Center for Fiction), or the most tranquil place to devour a short story on a wintry day (an empty underground food court in a Midtown skyscraper), or if you are looking to follow in the footsteps of a beloved author or novella character (like Capote's Grady and Clyde in Central Park Zoo), this will be your ultimate companion.
Part guide, part sophisticated scrapbook and part desirable object, A Booklover's Guide to New York is an absolute must for any book-savvy person--the young bookworm or old scholar, the visiting tourist or homegrown New Yorker, the aspiring writer or doting parent.
A Booklover's Guide to New York is a love letter to everything literary in New York City. It is a book all about books. The book is an object in itself, designed as the ultimate little tome any book collector would love to acquire, layered with witty Pierre Le-Tan drawings, as well as photographs of some of the most precious bookish locations.
Rediscover New York in the most fashionably literate way: whether you are in need of an exceptionally rare edition of your favorite novel (perhaps to be found in the dark and musty backroom of The Center for Fiction), or the most tranquil place to devour a short story on a wintry day (an empty underground food court in a Midtown skyscraper), or if you are looking to follow in the footsteps of a beloved author or novella character (like Capote's Grady and Clyde in Central Park Zoo), this will be your ultimate companion.
Part guide, part sophisticated scrapbook and part desirable object, A Booklover's Guide to New York is an absolute must for any book-savvy person--the young bookworm or old scholar, the visiting tourist or homegrown New Yorker, the aspiring writer or doting parent.
"For this guidebook-cum-personal history, writer Cleo Le-Tan collaborated with her father, the late French artist Pierre Le-Tan, to catalog the city s many literary landmarks. It includes 200 destinations, both famous (the New York Public Library) and off the beaten path (the Brooklyn where Truman Capote lived and wrote parts of In Cold Blood), as well as interviews with two dozen New Yorkers about their favorite bookish spots." CURBED NATIONAL
"The illustrated guide takes literary lovers on a neighborhood odyssey through NYC, visiting iconoclastic bookstores, hidden literary landmarks, and booze-soaked writer s haunts while meeting the hotspots' resident authors, librarians, collectors and voracious readers along the way." L'OFFICIEL USA
"As Prufrock measured out his life in coffee spoons, some New Yorkers measure theirs in departed bookstores. I weep most for Crawford Doyle, which in 2017 closed after twenty-one years in stately residence on Madison Avenue at Eighty-first Street. But there have been compensations among the heartaches. In 2014, Albertine opened at the French Embassy, on Fifth Avenue and Seventy-ninth Street. The gorgeous store cheekily asserts on billboards that The best bookstore in France is in New York City. And Rizzoli, which lost its lease in its double-front townhouse on Fifty-seventh Street in 2014, later reopened on Broadway and Twenty-sixth Street, in a space nearly as grand as the original. Cleo Le-Tan s A Booklover s Guide to New York is expressly made for those who view the city s bookstores as integral to its being. Documenting the shops, sellers, libraries, and bibliophiles of the city, the illustrated book is a worthy addition to any personal collection." NEW CRITERION
"In A Booklover s Guide to New York, writer Cleo Le-Tan takes a tour of her favorite literary stop-offs, a mix of branch libraries, author hangouts and even street-corner vendors hawking secondhand volumes. Drawings by Le-Tan s illustrator father, Pierre Le-Tan, add to the analog charm" WALL STREET JOURNAL
"Looking for a romantic escort to stroll the city with this fall? Well, while I don't have anyone to set you up with at the moment, I strongly recommend you get your hands on A Booklover's Guide to New York. A love letter to all things literary, Cleo Le-Tan's new book will walk you through every neighborhood in the city, pointing out the best spots to shop for new, used, and rare titles, the coziest places to settle in for an afternoon of reading, and the landmark stops your favorite authors made before you." GUEST OF A GUEST
"Featuring interviews with notable NYC bibliophiles like Marc Jacobs, Hamish Bowles, Tina Brown and Tavi Gevinson, this illustrated love letter to literary New York showcases the city's best bookshops, libraries and haunts of world-famous writers. Prime coffee-table fare." PUREWOW.COM
"The illustrated guide takes literary lovers on a neighborhood odyssey through NYC, visiting iconoclastic bookstores, hidden literary landmarks, and booze-soaked writer s haunts while meeting the hotspots' resident authors, librarians, collectors and voracious readers along the way." L'OFFICIEL USA
"As Prufrock measured out his life in coffee spoons, some New Yorkers measure theirs in departed bookstores. I weep most for Crawford Doyle, which in 2017 closed after twenty-one years in stately residence on Madison Avenue at Eighty-first Street. But there have been compensations among the heartaches. In 2014, Albertine opened at the French Embassy, on Fifth Avenue and Seventy-ninth Street. The gorgeous store cheekily asserts on billboards that The best bookstore in France is in New York City. And Rizzoli, which lost its lease in its double-front townhouse on Fifty-seventh Street in 2014, later reopened on Broadway and Twenty-sixth Street, in a space nearly as grand as the original. Cleo Le-Tan s A Booklover s Guide to New York is expressly made for those who view the city s bookstores as integral to its being. Documenting the shops, sellers, libraries, and bibliophiles of the city, the illustrated book is a worthy addition to any personal collection." NEW CRITERION
"In A Booklover s Guide to New York, writer Cleo Le-Tan takes a tour of her favorite literary stop-offs, a mix of branch libraries, author hangouts and even street-corner vendors hawking secondhand volumes. Drawings by Le-Tan s illustrator father, Pierre Le-Tan, add to the analog charm" WALL STREET JOURNAL
"Looking for a romantic escort to stroll the city with this fall? Well, while I don't have anyone to set you up with at the moment, I strongly recommend you get your hands on A Booklover's Guide to New York. A love letter to all things literary, Cleo Le-Tan's new book will walk you through every neighborhood in the city, pointing out the best spots to shop for new, used, and rare titles, the coziest places to settle in for an afternoon of reading, and the landmark stops your favorite authors made before you." GUEST OF A GUEST
"Featuring interviews with notable NYC bibliophiles like Marc Jacobs, Hamish Bowles, Tina Brown and Tavi Gevinson, this illustrated love letter to literary New York showcases the city's best bookshops, libraries and haunts of world-famous writers. Prime coffee-table fare." PUREWOW.COM