Best Bookstores - Best of New York Shopping 2013 -- New York Magazine

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Tome, Sweet Tome

Five new old-fashioned booksellers.


Illustration by Rami Niemi  
  • Coffee-Table Porn

  • Happy Bones Coffee & Publications NYC

    7 Bond St., nr. Lafayette St.; 212-673-3754

    At the back of Bond 07 by Selima sits this bookstore and coffee �speakeasy,� where those who know it exists can sip a flat white (or a long black, or a short macchiato) while browsing art books from downtown luminaries like Leo Fitzpatrick and Aurel �Schmidt.

  • Science Fiction

  • Singularity&Co.

    18 Bridge St., at John St., Ste. 1G, Dumbo; 347-460-7724

    This labor of love from a quartet of sci-fi fans carries early-edition Ray Bradbury hardcovers, Ace Doubles, the �Choose Your Own Adventure� series, a bunch of spy novels, and even some romance. In a bit of an e-book twist, its website�savethescifi.com�digitally publishes one out-of-print science fiction title every month.

  • Used Books

  • Molasses Books

    770 Hart St., nr. Wilson Ave., Bushwick; 631-882-5188

    This eclectically stocked used bookstore is a throwback in every sense�the soundtrack comes from a record player, there is a small bar in the back serving beer and wine, and 28-year-old owner Matt Winn buys books for cash or credit. (And yes, you can trade in old titles for a bar tab.)

  • Gay Lit

  • The Bureau of General Services�Queer Division

    27 Orchard St., nr. Canal St.; 646-457-0859

    Greg Newton and Donnie Jochum founded this shop and makeshift community center in Strange Loop gallery after realizing there was no longer an LGBTQ-exclusive bookstore in Manhattan. They have sections for history, theory, poetry, and fiction.

  • Magazines

  • Artbook @ MoMA PS1

    22-25 Jackson Ave., at 46th Ave., Long Island City; 718-433-1088

    Not to be confused with PS1’s main-squeeze bookshop, this kiosk near the entrance specializes in obscure international titles�a range that includes denim-obsessed Japanese fashion rags, local food zines, and art biannuals like Maurizio Cattelan’s Toilet Paper.

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