The world's most brilliant bookstores everyone should visit
Bookshop bucket list

Shakespeare and Company, Paris, France

One of the world's most famous bookstores, Shakespeare and Company has lived through three incarnations since it was first opened by Sylvia Beach in 1919. It was in the store's second location that Beach published James Joyce's Ulysses, and where Joyce used to hang out with Ernest Hemingway, Julio Cortazar and others. The bookstore was closed during the occupation of Paris as Beach refused to sell books to Nazis, and was reopened in its current location in the late 1950s when Beach sold the name to another bookseller.
Livraria Lello, Porto, Portugal

Livraria Lello's undulating staircases, intricate wooden carvings and stained-glass ceilings are just part of the appeal. Opened in 1906, the bookstore in Porto reportedly served as inspiration for Hogwarts in the Harry Potter series. JK Rowling was a frequent customer in the early 1990s when she taught English in the city and it's easy to see how the shop's Neo-Gothic architecture bears a striking resemblance to the school of witchcraft and wizardry.
Waterstones, Bradford, England, UK

Powell's Books, Portland, Oregon, USA

Nicknamed the City of Books – it's reportedly the largest independent bookstore in the world – Powell's occupies a whole city block in Portland. The store is a family affair, founded in 1971 by Walter Powell. In 1979, Walter was joined by son Michael, who had previously been working in his own bookstore in Chicago. The store, which stocks around a million books, is now run by Michael's daughter Miriam.
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Libreria Acqua Alta, Venice, Italy

Another unmissable attraction among the rest of Venice's delights is the peculiar Libreria Acqua Alta. All the books at the quaint bookstore, founded in 2004 by Luigi Frizzo, are kept in bathtubs, rowboats, plastic bins and even a full-sized gondola right in the middle of the shop. It might look strange but it's a necessary precaution to keep the books from getting damaged by Venice's acqua alta (periodic high water).
Livraria Ler Devagar, Lisbon, Portugal

Bart's Books, Ojai, California, USA

El Ateneo Grand Splendid, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Dubbed the bookshop capital of the world, Buenos Aires has more bookstores per capita than any other city – about 25 for every 100,000 people. The most famous is the striking El Ateneo Grand Splendid. It first opened in 1919 as a theatre known for its tango performances and was converted into a cinema 10 years later. In 2000, the building was in danger of demolition but thankfully it was saved by editorial company Grupo Ilhsa who refurbished the theatre, including its ceiling frescoes and original opera boxes, and opened it as a bookstore.
Daunt Books, London, England, UK

A Marylebone institution, this is just one of the six Daunt Books locations across London but it's by far the most spectacular. Herringbone floors, a huge stained-glass window and a greenhouse-like skylight all ensure the Edwardian bookstore is an attraction in its own right. The shop has a particularly well-curated travel selection, with travel-themed fiction, poetry and travelogues sitting alongside guidebooks.
Boekhandel Dominicanen, Maastricht, Netherlands

Carturesti Carusel, Bucharest, Romania

The Last Bookstore, Los Angeles, California, USA

Hatchards, London, England, UK

Cafebreria El Pendulo, Mexico City, Mexico

Les Bouquinistes, Paris, France

Akateeminen Kirjakauppa, Helsinki, Finland

Brattle Book Shop, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Leakey's Bookshop, Inverness, Scotland, UK

Like something out of a fantasy film, Leakey's Bookshop in the Scottish Highlands is every bit as quaint and beautiful as you'd expect. The bookshop has found home in an old Gaelic church and is a treasure trove for used, rare and antique books and prints. With a wood-burning stove, a bookshelf-clad choir area and even fresh local goose eggs for sale, Leakey's has buckets of charm.
House of Books, Saint Petersburg, Russia

Librairie Avant-Garde, Nanjing, China

What do you do when you get your hands on an abandoned underground parking lot? Convert it into a bookshop, of course. Opened in 2004, the Librairie Avant-Garde, which was also previously a bomb shelter, has become a cultural icon of Nanjing and, thanks to its proximity to Nanjing University, has been dubbed its second library. The on-site reading tables and open-plan seating can accommodate around 300 people so has become a popular haunt for the local students who come here to study, socialise and read.
Word on the Water, London, England, UK

You'll find all sorts of peculiar barges traversing London's Regent's Canal but Word on the Water has to be among the most unusual. Moored amid the office-heavy landscape of King's Cross, the vessel houses an assortment of contemporary fiction and non-fiction as well as children's literature. Open for nearly a decade, the 1920s Dutch barge previously had to change location every couple of weeks due to canal regulations but now the boat has been granted a permanent berth thanks to a successful campaign led by its many supporters.
Strand Bookstore, New York City, New York, USA

Located on what used to be New York's Book Row – a collection of 48 bookstores crammed into a five-block stretch of what was then Fourth Avenue – Strand Bookstore was founded by Lithuanian immigrant Benjamin Bass in 1927. Now the only shop still in operation, Strand Bookstore is famous for its 18 miles (29km) of books, comprising an enormous selection of new, used and rare titles. There's also a 'books by the foot' sale and a quiz, invented by Bass, that prospective employees have to ace to even dream of getting a job here.
Zhongshuge Bookstore, Chongqing, China

Known for their mind-bending, spaceship-like interiors, the Zhongshuge Bookstore chain has branches in cities across China. Founded by a former teacher Jin Hao, the shops feature staircase mazes, mirrored ceilings and peculiarly shaped bookshelves that are made to resemble an imaginary world you might find in a work of fiction. Pictured is the outpost in Chongqing.
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