The time is the 1950's, the place London. Bloomsbury Book Shop has been in existence for one hundred years but it is on the cusp of failure these days. It is a male-ruled domain and the men mostly stock male authors and topics and men like to read about. There is Lord Baskin whose family owns the shop and who drops by frequently. Herbert Dutton runs things day to day and has come up with a list of fifty-one rules that govern the shop and its employees. Alec McDonough is a young man who is head of fiction, while Master Mariner Simon Scott rules the second floor which is history. He interprets history as maps and books about wars and battles. The third floor is rare books and the domain of Frank Allen who is also the man who travels to estate sales and is often away from the store. The basement is science and its head is Ashwin Ramaswamy, a recent immigrant from India.
There are three women who are expected to be subservient. Vivian is the assistant in fiction and hopes to be an author herself. Grace is Mr. Dutton's secretary and she handles much of the bookstore's paperwork. Evie is the newest member of staff, a recent Cambridge graduate who takes a job cataloging the rare books after she misses out on a job at the university.
When Mr. Dutton has to go out on sick leave for a month, things change. Alec becomes the acting head and soon realizes he isn't that interested in business. Vivian has tons of ideas for fiction and starts stocking female writers and having literary luncheons which are a huge success and introduces the women to famous women authors such as Daphne du Maurier and rich influential women such as Ellen Doubleday, Sonia Blair the widow of George Orwell, Peggy Guggenheim and Mimi Harrison, an actress. The women dare to dream of a bookstore that is there for everyone and that encourages and supports women authors.
But when Mr. Dutton comes back, he expects everything to return to the old way. Disgruntled, the women employees dream of buying out Lord Baskin's shares and owning the bookstore. But how? Evie has part of the answer. She took her job hoping to find a rare book that she knows Frank bought at an estate sale and that has been lost in history but now there is interest in finding it. Can she find it before someone else?
I loved this book and didn't expect to. It was interesting to see how a bookstore works but even more interesting to see the women develop and bloom in their various strengths. Their support of each other and their entry into a world of women that do the same is fascinating. There are romances but the main theme is female empowerment. This book is recommended for women's and literary fiction readers.





























