84 Charing Cross Road

97 pages

English language

Published Feb. 17, 1987 by Avon Books.

ISBN:
978-0-380-00122-4
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It all began with a letter inquiring about second-hand books, written by Helene Hanff in New York, and posted to a bookshop at 84, Charing Cross Road in London. As Helene's sarcastic and witty letters are responded to by the stodgy and proper bookshop employee Frank Doel, a relationship blossoms into a warm and charming long-distance friendship lasting many years.

17 editions

Wholesome and touching

A wonderful view of how beautiful relationships can form remotely, across large distances and times, through common interests and reciprocal kindness. It's a wholesome story with letters from a wide variety of characters, as Helene's simple words and gifts touched so many people, but as the years go on everyone's lives have ups and downs documented within the letters. Helene finds and loses work on the regular, the politics of post-war Britain finds people in various states, health declines and recovers in various points as people deal with life.

Despite being told through an incomplete, scattered collection of letters, with gaps clearly visible in how dates and conversations advance, we get a remarkably clear view of everyone's lives. There are obviously more to these people than can be visible in text on paper, and we are never quite allowed to forget that, but we can also clearly see how …

None

A beautiful little book. It's about nothing. A set of letters exchanged between the author and a bookstore in London.

Transactional letters at first, that over time become more personal, funny, loving, and move beyond the role relationships.

It reminds me about how so many plain moments in our lives are actually poetic, beautiful. Encompassing dimensionalities we can't even fathom when we are living those moments. And it's perspective which brings out the beauty in them, or not.

Review of '84 Charing Cross Road' on 'Goodreads'

Intercambio epistolar entre la autora, una escritora neoyorquina no muy sobrada de dineros, y un establecimiento londinense de libros de segunda mano. De paso, envía algún regalito en forma de huevos y carne para aliviar las penurias de posguerra.

No me extraña que tuviera tanto éxito, transmite buen rollo desde la primera página: cómo la autora se va ganando la confianza de los ingleses, que tratan de mantener la compostura de la corespondencia comercial, el amor por los libros y la humanidad en torno a ellos.

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Subjects

  • Booksellers and bookselling -- Biography

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