Shelf Awareness
In an essay for Gone, author Tom Downey recounted his visit to the flagship Tokyo store of multimedia chain Tsutaya, which "felt like a testament to the continued power and relevance of the written word --a place where browsing, reading and buying books and magazines was a popular and pleasurable experience...."It's not just that Tsutaya feels more upscale than other bookstores. It's that it celebrates words and books, and the people who read and write them, in a thoughtful, seductive, and ultra-contemporary way.... The longer I spent roaming the stacks, the more I became convinced that this store holds the key to understanding that deeper connection. I also felt like I was falling back in love with the printed word myself, which came as something of a shock --I'm a self-confessed, early-adopting, SIM card-swapping travel geek, currently on my seventh Kindle. This was not a nostalgic, Luddite moment, but a response to five specific principles that became increasingly clear to me as I wandered, browsed, read and reflected."
Downey's five takeaways from his Tsutaya experience:
- Writing and reading are fundamentally physical activities.
- Human beings make pretty powerful information sources, too.
- Print combines words and images in a uniquely powerful way.
- Sometimes, wandering beats being directed.
- Printed books help to make you who you are.
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