The Last Library

I recently stumbled across an intriguing new exhibition at the St. Petersburg Fine Art Museum in St. Pete Florida. The task of creating thousands of crazy, fake dust jackets and cultural maps must have been Herculean. It’s political, philosophical, and funny .Here is the museum’s blog post about the clever show:

The Last Library IV: Written in Water is an installation by artists Ward Shelley (American, b. 1950) and Douglas Paulson (American, b. 1980). It invites us to think about how we understand truth, evidence, responsibility, and the uncertain state of the world. The installation features dangerously tilted shelves filled with banned books, controversial publications, made-up files, state documents, secret plans, and lost records. This clever fake library honors the written word, a tool that has helped drive many of history’s great advances, such as the rise of representative government and the importance of human rights. At the same time, The Last Library IV examines how the reliability of the written word is fading in a world of alternative facts, censored documents, and language shaped by artificial intelligence.

For more than five thousand years, the written word has helped build fairer societies. As the modern era began, writing became a key part of democracy, creating shared understanding, common laws, and the ideas that support strong institutions. Without writing, words like evidence, authority, and the rule of law lose their meaning, even though written documents shape our beliefs, hopes, and expectations. For centuries, people trusted words to establish facts. But in today’s post-Truth Era, it is harder to tell fact from deception or fiction from fantasy, especially when words appear on both paper and screens. The Last Library IV’s crowded shelves, hidden documents, twisted viewpoints, and slanted floors challenge us to find the truth among many confusing and often controversial sources. In this installation, Shelley and Paulson place political propaganda, misleading ads, fake archives, and corporate interests alongside the Magna Carta and the Declaration of Human Rights.

The Last Library IV is mostly made from plain corrugated cardboard, a material that is strong but doesn’t last, symbolizing how our world can seem solid but is actually fragile. Shelley and Paulson’s detailed mix of fake books, real titles, confusing diagrams, and questionable documents encourages us to think about how much we can trust the written word, and even makes us wonder about the future of democracy.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Would you leave your laptop unattended in a coffee shop here for 10 minutes?

When I was in Japan, I was constantly surprised to see laptops, mobile phones and other electronics, as well as purses and backpacks, left unattended in coffeeshops and cafes. That level of trust in strangers is now nonexistent in the United States. The folks at Vouch Atlas did an unscientific study of fear of your laptop being stolen. The question is “Would you leave your laptop unattended in a coffee shop here for 10 minutes?” and the answers speak for themselves.

Unsurprisingly low-scoring are Philippines, Argentina, Romania, Pakistan, Morocco and South Africa, with Egypt, Italy, and Mexico almost as red-hued on the map. Inhabited places scoring highest for safety include South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, Iceland, Finland, Japan and Switzerland.

The U.S., Britain, France and Brazil and Russia all sit at about 70% risky; Germany, Canada, China and Australia have slightly safer reputations; Spain a slightly worse one.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The Obsolete Man

“You walk into this room at your own risk, because it leads to the future, not a future that will be, but one that might be. This is not a new world, it is simply an extension of what began in the old one. It has patterned itself after every dictator who has ever planted the ripping imprint of a boot on the pages of history since the beginning of time. It has refinements, technological advances, and a more sophisticated approach to the destruction of human freedom. But like every one of the super-states that preceded it, it has one iron rule: logic is an enemy and truth is a menace…”

In a future totalitarian state, Romney Wordsworth is put on trial for being obsolete. His professed occupation as a librarian is punishable by death, as the State has eliminated books. Wikipedia

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Korea’s First Book Village

The Gochang Bookstore Village, Korea’s first “bookstore village,” was created by six independent bookstores. The rural booktown  opened in October 2025, beginning with Lee Yun-ho, a former culture critic who left Seoul in search of a quieter place to open a bookstore.

Lee met Kang Jun-seok and Hwang Kyeong-sun, a couple who run Mangrove bookstore, which is dedicated to nature and environmental books, through a rural nonprofit group. They subsequently offered Lee their unused land in Gochang, leading six like-minded individuals and families to come together in 2023 to begin building a book village.

The bookstore village occupies about five acres and features nine colorful wooden buildings housing bookstores and residences, as well as small gardens. The six stores operate more like a community than competitors. Shop owners said they take turns watching each other’s stores, farm together, and share meals in a communal kitchen.

The village offers more than books. It also runs a cafe that hosts author talks. The village also offers a monthly subscription service that delivers care packages filled with locally grown vegetables and books for a monthly fee of 20,000 won. Three of the bookstores also provide lodging, allowing visitors to read late into the night in shops that remain unlocked.

Gochang County, North Jeolla, is designated a Unesco Biosphere Reserve, the rural county is quietly reinventing itself as a “book stay” destination as well as an ecological preserve.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Prequels

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Peripatetic Bookstore

By now you know that I love a story about a booklover who turned their passion into a bookstore. But what’s even better is a traveling bibliophile who parlayed their interests and zeal into a traveling bookshop. Saint Rita’s Amazing Traveling Bookstore Textual Apothecary is more than Rita Collins’s passion project, it’s her gift to the world.

Rita Collins’s white Ford transit van has more than 100,000 miles on it, earned on drives through all but 10 of the United States.

Parked in front of The Grand Bakery in Dadeville, Ala., on a recent cloudy morning, she watched as a woman walked by, glanced at the van, did a double take, and hesitated.

“It’s a bookstore,” Collins said with her big, characteristic smile. “You can go inside.”

“Oh my Satan!” the woman exclaimed. “I’m a fool for books!”

You can read all about this delightful piece about a bookstore on wheels.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Anachronic

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

A Fake Museum of Real Truth

Located in the Tribeca neighborhood of lower Manhattan, the Donald J. Trump and Jeffrey Epstein Memorial Reading Room is a pop-up exhibit created by the Institute for Primary Facts, a nonprofit that describes itself as “advancing civic literacy through immersive traveling museum exhibits.” The pop-up installation is spread across a two-story gallery space containing all 3.5 million pages of Jeffrey Epstein-related records recently released by the Department of Justice. Organized into more than 3,700 volumes, it took organizers roughly a month to print, bind and arrange the collection.

In addition to the files, the installation features a timeline of Epstein’s relationship with Donald Trump—from their supposed first meeting in Palm Beach back in 1987 to Epstein’s ouster from Mar-a-Lago in 2007—and a tribute to Epstein’s over 1,200 victims: there are a number of candles on the floor representing them all.

The exhibit’s chief organizer, David Garrett, said the goal is to convey the scale of Epstein’s crimes and the impunity with which they were carried out. “The evidence in this room is evidence of one of the most horrific crimes in American history,” he said to the outlet. “When people come through this room, I hope they realize that in America, we have the rule of law, and if they stand up, they can take action and demand accountability for the crimes that were committed.”

Now through May 21, the space is open to all those 16 and up by appointment only. You can schedule your visit here.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Book Machine

Frequent readers of TBTP know that I have a weird interest in vending machines that defies explanation. And, a book vending machine is my nerdy jam. So, Long Story Books, a new indie bookstore slated to open in late summer in Atlanta, Ga.’s historic Inman Park neighborhood, has installed a book vending machine. It is in the nearby popular Krog District, near the main entrance of Krog Market and just a few blocks from the space the bookstore will occupy, at 717 Edgewood Ave., after construction is completed.

The vending machine is currently featuring new fiction releases, favorites of the staff and owner Kate Kiefer Lee. “It’s so easy to change out books, and we’re really looking forward to keeping the selection fresh. There are just too many good books! The vending machine is a great way to showcase options for every type of reader, without any barrier to entry,” she said.

Kiefer Lee added that the vending machine idea was inspired by both the “Penguincubator” and the “Book-O-Mat” trends from the 1930s and ’40s, as well as a reward-token-based machine in her children’s public school. The company behind the latter helped the Long Story Books team create a custom machine.

“The vending machine is novel, and it’s fun to see people react so positively to it. But most importantly, it meets people where they are and creates another opportunity to enjoy a great story,” Kiefer Lee said.

Posted in Books, Bookstore Tourism, USA | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Booksellers of New York

The Booksellers is a fascinating exploration of the world of antiquarian book selling in New York City, it highlights rare finds and the collectors dedicated to preserving history. Dealers discuss the challenges and passions of their trade amidst a changing retail landscape. It’s a full length film, but well worth the watch if you love books.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments