A little bookstore across from Vasaparken...
All summer I've been scoping out various new enterprises in Vasastan and Birkastan. One of them is Xoco on Rörstrandsgatan, a luxury dessert café located in Dalpojken's former premises. I tried it out yesterday and enjoyed my caffè latte and dark chocolate brownie. Dunno if I agree with the owner re: France having the world's best chocolate desserts...I have had to-die-for chocolate desserts in Brussels but was very disappointed when I was in Paris. Well, I haven't been everywhere in France so maybe I will have to travel around that country more and try out more desserts (more F & S for you, Kim!) before I give a definitive answer.
The other venue I've spent the entire summer watching is New York Stories, an English-language bookshop on Odengatan, just across from Vasaparken--my neighborhood patch o' green. The bookstore finally opened today, and I dragged Tord there to check it out with me. I was so glad to find it was a real New Yorker who'd opened the store and not one of these trendoid types you often find here in Stockholm--you know the ones I mean: the namedropping, I've-been-to-New-York-twice-and-I-think-I-am-an-expert-on-all-things-American type, the look-at-me-as-I-curse-in-English-because-it's-so-much-cooler-than-cursing-in-Swedish type, the too-perfectly dressed to truly be Bohemian...enough of that rant--there are plenty of these trendoids in Stockholm and they drive me up a wall.
So when I walked into New York Stories and heard the dulcet tones of a New Yorker--my heart leapt with joy. I am not a New Yorker and would never claim to be an expert on the city (hell, I am a transplanted Philadelphian and proud of it) but it's always nice to meet another East Coaster--especially one who loves books just as much as (if not more so than) I do. I found a place where I can buy a cute journal, where I can buy the sort of short story anthologies I rarely find at other bookstores here in Stockholm unless I special order them--and I can walk there, pick up a book (as I did today) and then head to Robert E's further down Odengatan for a cup of hot chocolate, or head to Kharazmi for latte and baklava...mmmm!
Yes, I think I have found my new hangout for the long dark Swedish winter (besides my favorite café, Kharazmi where I'll be writing nearly every day).
Thank you for opening New York Stories--it reminded me so much of the independent bookstore I used to shop in when I lived in Philly!
I shall live on the euphoria of this for a while...
4 comments:
It's nice that you have a New York Bookshop owned by a New Yorker in Stockholm! It sounds lovely.
I've always dreamed of owning a small bookshop in a college town (in New England for some reason), but the superstores in America (Barnes & Noble, Borders) have made it difficult to keep an independent bookstore open. I imagine opening an English-language bookstore in a European city would be a wonderful and challenging experience.
Which bookstore did you frequent in Philadelphia? I've read at Robin's and think it has a great selection of books.
I have had to-die-for chocolate desserts in Brussels but was very disappointed when I was in Paris.
I had wonderful gumbo in Tennessee, but was disappointed every time I ordered it in New Orleans.
When it comes to chocolate, I prefer German and Swiss. (I'm curious to have coffee in France, though. As well as croissants.)
Kim,
I just learned of a new Swedish espersso bar in New York.
You can read more about it at http://www.restaurantgirl.com
I'll have to stop by tomorrow.
Karen
Karen, you have to let me know how it is at that espresso bar. Thanks for the link! I will check it out now.
BTW if you try a Neuhaus praline, you will forget all about German and Swiss chocolate--I swear! ;)
Caroline,
I am also tickled pink that NYS is getting a huge fan-base! I have to go by tomorrow and see if they can order the latest Zoetrope anthology for me...
Can't wait to see what other surprises will pop up in Vasastan!
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