With passing trade hit hard by the pandemic, the booksellers on the banks of the Seine are struggling

Usually, Sundays are good days for the bouquinistes. Legions of strollers – tourists, out-of-towners, Parisians – throng the banks of the Seine, and the open-air booksellers whose green boxes have lined the quays for 400-odd years do good business.

One recent Sunday, though, Jérôme Callais made €32. And there was a day that week when he made €4: a single paperback, he can’t even recall which. It has not, Callais said, sheltering from driving rain on an all but deserted Quai de Conti, been easy.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

TikTok was the first app that made me feel old. Now I realise it’s much more than dance and prank videos | James Colley

From the meals I proudly serve to the exercises I struggle through,…

USC vs Notre Dame

notre dame vs usc, usc notre dame

My family has a vaccine refusenik – should we still get together at Christmas? | Ask Annalisa Barbieri

You can’t force him to get vaccinated – but equally, he can’t…

Coronavirus live news: France sets daily record 20,000 cases; Australian state of Victoria reports 14 new infections

Trump plans in-person rally on Monday as next presidential debate cancelled; Europe…