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reflective slow-paced

 5h 57m

If you're looking for exciting "secret lives" (as promised by the title), you'll be disappointed. But it was a cozy collection of stories from book people. Some of the narrators were super annoying, as was some of the blatant arse-kissing for James Patterson. 

smmcd's review

5.0
fast-paced
fast-paced

This is a nice collection of accounts from librarians and booksellers about different aspects of their work and the impact they have on those around them. I enjoyed reading it and going through a few of the biographies each day. 
northstar's profile picture

northstar's review

4.25
hopeful inspiring reflective fast-paced

A few dozen librarians and booksellers share their origin stories. I needed a book that was easy to pick up and put down, and this was perfect. I especially enjoyed the stories of librarians who fought censorship in their towns.
windmillofwords's profile picture

windmillofwords's review

3.5

There are some sweat stories here but they get very repetitive after awhile. So many similar stories. 
i_am_niita's profile picture

i_am_niita's review

4.75
emotional hopeful informative inspiring fast-paced

I really enjoyed this book! I would love to be a librarian one day and I’m so glad I got to read the experiences of people in a field that I want to get into!! I recommend for all inspiring booksellers and librarians! ❤️🙏🏾
adventurous emotional hopeful informative inspiring reflective relaxing fast-paced
amypeveto's profile picture

amypeveto's review

3.0

“Libraries level the playing field. They’re free and open to the public. All are welcome. Our doors are open. Come in and learn to become your best self. Follow your dreams and reach your true potential. Let your reach exceed your grasp. Whatever book you want to read, it’s free on the honor system. It’s hard to imagine anywhere else in our society so devoted to the concept of everyone being completely equal.”

Working with books is about more than standing behind a cash register or sitting behind a desk. It means knowing your inventory and your customers so you can put the right book in the right person’s hands at just the right time. It requires being curious, judgment-free, and having a spine of steel. Secret Lives offers a glimpse of this world through the eyes of dozens of people who have made it their business to share and protect the written word.

Being a reader is like going on a lifelong adventure; a bookish guide who can point you toward the best things, things you know you’ll love, is worth their weight in gold. The people who contributed to this book have made it their life’s work to be that guide to as many readers as possible. Librarians in particular are on the front lines, going toe-to-toe with those who would ban books and open discussion of challenging topics. While I enjoyed this book overall, I had a hard time with the formatting: each item is a little nibble when what I want is a huge bite. I liked the themes more than the individual stories. The participants are readers, not writers, so their storytelling and structure feels disjointed. I wonder if listening to an audiobook where each writer read their own story would have made me feel more connected.

Give this a try if you’re interested in “behind the scenes” info about book selling and libraries and need something you can dip into and out of easily.
damian_z_fell's profile picture

damian_z_fell's review


i suffered through numerous harry potter references and james patterson praises, but him platforming someone who carries mein kampf in their store was definitely the last straw

not keeping it in my collection, but i don't think i'll be donating this one either - i don't want anyone to read about how nazi propaganda belongs in bookstores