Ratings2
Average rating3.5
The Haunted Bookshop by Christopher Morley is the delightful tale of the bookseller Roger Mifflin, the advertising man Aubrey Gilbert, and the lovely Titania Chapman who comes to work at Mifflin's Brooklyn bookshop.
Reviews with the most likes.
This is a fun continuation of the first book, Parnassus on Wheels. However, it was first written over a hundred years ago, and it does show its age (anti-German sentiment particularly). That aside, this was a more complex adventure than the first book, with some new characters and a mystery to solve. Another fun evening of reading!
This book is so confused. It's something of a sequel to Parnassus on Wheels, which is a pity, because that felt like a clear narrative. Roger Mifflin continues to have a passion for books, eloquently if verbosely expressed. Due to the time of publication (1918/19) now added to the many things he suggests they are a remedy for is the tragedy of war. Again, some incisive anti-war sentiment I can get behind. Alas, there are also some very old ideas about the world buried in here. I would happily have read a work surrounding the plot of a young woman, daughter of an old family friend, being a new employee at Mifflin's now stationary book selling institution, The Haunted Bookshop. Even if Helen is now kind of a background character. Morely decided he needed to add a touch of truly painful romance and a mystery involving an advertising man. I think Aubrey is supposed to be vaguely ridiculous for plot purposes, but he comes off as a moron that gave me a headache.
Worse, he's proved at least partially right in his prejudices when the German-American turns out to be the bad guy. Oh, and the dog dies, violently. WTF Morley?!
Good news: You don't have to spend money on this you're still curious, it's available in digital form free via the Internet Archive.
⚠️ derogatory/out of date language, animal death
Series
2 primary booksParnassus is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 1917 with contributions by Christopher Morley and Christopher Morley.