The Last Bookseller, Gary Goodman
The Last Bookseller, Gary Goodman
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

The Last Bookseller
A Life in the Rare Book Trade

Author: Gary Goodman

Narrator: Tristan Morris

Unabridged: 5 hr 55 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 01/25/2022


Synopsis

When Gary Goodman wandered into a run-down, used-book shop that was going out of business in East St. Paul in 1982, he had no idea the visit would change his life. He walked in as a psychiatric counselor and walked out as the store's new owner. In The Last Bookseller Goodman describes his sometimes desperate, sometimes hilarious career as a used and rare book dealer in Minnesota.

Here we meet the infamous St. Paul Book Bandit, Stephen Blumberg, who stole 24,000 rare books worth more than fifty million dollars; John Jenkins, the Texas rare book dealer who (probably) was murdered while standing in the middle of the Colorado River; and the eccentric Melvin McCosh, who filled his dilapidated mansion with half a million books. In 1990, with a couple of partners, Goodman opened St. Croix Antiquarian Books in Stillwater, one of the Twin Cities region's most venerable bookshops until it closed in 2017.

The internet changed the book business forever, and Goodman details how, after 2000, the internet made stores like his obsolete. In the 1990s, the Twin Cities had nearly fifty secondhand bookshops; today, there are fewer than ten. As both a memoir and a history of booksellers and book scouts, criminals and collectors, The Last Bookseller offers an ultimately poignant account of the used and rare book business during its final Golden Age.

About Gary Goodman

Gary Goodman is a semi-retired rare book dealer in Stillwater, Minnesota. He put six kids through college selling secondhand books, a feat that makes him a Genuine American Hero. He is coauthor of The Stillwater Booktown Times and The Secret History of Golf in Scotland.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Emily

According to this bookselling memoir, the 1990s were a golden age for used bookstores. It's funny that I didn't realize it at the time, but looking back, I guess it's true. That decade, I was in my twenties, and for most of it worked in an office in Manhattan with at least six used bookstores in eas......more

Goodreads review by Randal

I absolutely loved this book! Devoured it in a matter of two sittings. It was always my dream to own a small bookstore. The author proved to me that there's truth to the old saying, "Sometimes God's greatest gifts are unanswered prayers"! The author was a guy, much like me, who wandered into a used b......more

Goodreads review by Bandit

I’m the first person to review this book on GR. What does it say about a memoir on bookselling if that’s the case? Bookselling is a dying art. In fact, bookselling as Gary Goodman came to know it over the decades of being in business, is already dead. Internet murdered it. It became another casualt......more

The Last Bookseller is exactly what it purports to be . . . the story of a life in the rare book trade. I jumped at the opportunity to read this book hoping to grow my TBR list and delve into rare books that my library book taste, combined with commercial purchase opportunities may have denied me in......more