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Bookseller’s Bookshelf

Finding a book that fits your exact reading taste or mood is one of the best feelings for a book lover— second only to finding another book lover who has the same reading taste as you! 

Now if only you could condense that feeling into a monthly book subscription…


One of our strengths at Falmouth Bookseller is how different we all are, and whilst there are titles we all enjoy we each tend to stray into very different niches. The joy of this is that between us we can usually find the right book for almost any reader, but it’s particularly fun when we get to recommend within our wheelhouse and share the books that we are especially excited about.  With all that in mind, we have created Bookseller’s Bookshelf!

What it is:

Bookseller’s Bookshelf is our unique subscription service that allows you to sign up based on a particular bookseller’s ‘shelf’. You have the choice of three titles for the first month (or we’ll pick randomly for you), and then it will be a monthly surprise! Sometimes these titles will be new releases, but often they will be older books that we want to give a chance to shine.. Sometimes these titles will be new releases, but often they will be older books that we want to give a chance to shine. 

Each of us has spent some time considering how to define our individual reading tastes. Our personal categories have been curated to include the themes that we naturally gravitate towards and the stories that stick out as the epitome of our little niche. Hopefully you’ll find a bookish kindred spirit in one of us, and we can share our most-loved reads with you.

We also offer a Top Shelf Only option, which means we’ll randomly choose one of our books for you each month instead of sticking to the same bookseller’s shelf for the duration of your subscription. If you’d like a specific starting book from the options we’ve laid out in each category then just let us know – otherwise we’ll pick that randomly too! 

How it works:

– Take a look at how we have each defined our personal bookshelves
– Choose the bookseller who’s taste most aligns with your reading preferences
– Pick your starting title (or we’ll choose for you)
– Choose your subscription length, payment, and postage options
– Prepare your TBR pile for some fabulous mystery books!


The Booksellers’ Bookshelves

Top Shelf Only: The best of the bunch

Can’t decide? Sign up for our Top Shelf Only subscription – each month, you’ll receive a title randomly selected from one of our bookseller shelf options for an ever-changing supply of fantastic books.

If you’d like to opt for a specific first book from the options we’ve already laid out then let us know, otherwise we’ll choose that for you randomly too! Equally, let us know if there’s a particular title/niche you don’t want to receive.

*NEW!* Megan’s bookshelf: Classically Inspired

The books that I gravitate towards tend to sit along a spectrum: a mixture of classics that have stood the test of time, semi-forgotten gems, and modern reinterpretations of classical mythology. I particularly love retellings which shift the focus of a well-known tale to characters that have previously been sidelined, like Madeline Miller’s beautiful interpretation of the goddess Circe. These are often strong, interesting female characters (some more messy than others!) given a chance to tell their side of the story.

A common thread that ties my reading together is an exploration of dichotomy. Good and evil, vengeance and forgiveness, whatever it may be, I love a novel that grapples with a big moral concept and boldly pushes its characters in all possible directions. That isn’t to say that all I read are big, bulky classics. The joy comes from finding an accessible route in, and the little gems that feel way more modern than you’d expect!

If any of this sounds like your cup of tea or you’re interested in a bit more classically inspired reading, then I’m looking forward to choosing books for you 🙂

Top three:
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
East of Eden by John Steinbeck
Circe by Madeline Miller

Eloise’s bookshelf: Travel The World & Shatter Your Heart

I grew up abroad surrounded by friends from all over the world, and with them came stories and experiences rich in history and culture which took me far beyond my own family’s heritage.  It was a joy, and I now realise a privilege too, to have such a broad exposure to the world.  Since moving back to the UK I continue to seek out stories from anywhere that isn’t here; I love learning about the world and history we aren’t taught in school or in the news.  Often this history is challenging, thought-provoking and comes with big emotions.  

There’s no pretending the books I read are light-hearted or ‘nice’ but they also aren’t bleak, they are honest and searching, dappled with love and life.  If you want a book that really makes you think and feel deeply – that is also likely to rip your heart out and shatter you, then my bookshelf is for you. 

Top three:
Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi
Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
All Quiet On The Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque

Maisie’s bookshelf: Spirited & Immersive Tales

In the immortal words of Jo March: I like good strong words that mean something. I love a novel that masterfully weaves a complex narrative, shifting smoothly from one chapter to the next crafting a world that feels three-dimensional and believable. I like to see multifaceted protagonists with strong motivations who deal with interesting conflicts, make mistakes and grow from them.

There’s definitely a strong fantasy pull with most of the books I adore, but I’m a bit of a genre-hopper. This leads me to enjoying contemporary stories with a twist, fiery reimaginings of historical tales, and vividly crafted universes of magic both free and forbidden.

If magical prose and colourful characters sound like your thing, then come and explore with me!

Top three:

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
A Day of Fallen Night by Samantha Shannon
The Favourites by Layne Fargo

Rebecca’s bookshelf: Reflective Perspectives

It’s difficult to define the books I would put on my ‘favourite’ bookshelf shelfie, but I have found that they all happen to be by women authors and they all happen to be American.  The action tends to revolve around the characters and their relationships to each other.  I like simple stories that have been told well, sometimes short and concise like Elizabeth Strout or sprawling epics like Barbara Kingsolver.  

Family life, comic and/or tragic, is the primary theme.  Since I also have a hankering for a good crime novel, a book with a sudden twist or unexpected turn also grabs me, as well as a tragedy that can sometimes be hard in topic but beautifully written.  The characters can be complicated, and not always admirable but usually one can find something in them that is reflected in ourselves.

Top three:

The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver
My Name Is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout
Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng

Ron’s Bookshelf: Strands Of Truth Through Time

Most of my reading gravitates to non-fiction so it’s no surprise my fiction tastes lean that way too.  I am of the generation to whom World War II doesn’t feel so far in the past and it is a major theme in a lot of the books I enjoy the most, although not solely this part of history. Each book takes a different person, event, or idea and writes the story in a new and interesting way so that no two books are the same. 

Whilst I wouldn’t call my choices quite ‘faction’ I tend to look for books that provide a rich historical backstory and feel like stepping into another time without the text being too esoteric or dense to be enjoyable. A strong historical setting creates a backdrop for a moving story to be told, weaving strands of truth into the fiction.  For a lot of us escapism is what we look for in reading and that’s certainly true for me but I always like them to still remain in the realms of possibility such as Murakami’s fish raining from the sky… this has actually happened!

Haruki Murakami’s work is often described as ‘easily accessible, yet profoundly complex’ and this is a theme that encapsulates the books I read well. 

Top three:
A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles
The Romantic by William Boyd
Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami