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De Botton offers 'book prescriptions'

A group of authors, including Alain de Botton, have helped establish a new-style bookshop offering "book prescriptions" from a range of only 55 titles. The shop, named The School of Life, is based in Marchmont Street in Bloomsbury, central London. It sells books, artwork, courses, holidays and therapuetic ­services.

The shop’s founder and director, Sophie Howarth, said it would stock a rotating range of around 55 titles at any one time, arranged according to themes. "The shop is designed like an apothecary and we think we offer intelligent persons' self-help," she said. “Like books you should read when you have fallen catastrophically in love, for example.”

The shop is about to launch intellectual gift boxes. Retailing for around £50 and featuring five different titles, the boxes feature books selected by De ­Botton and Robert Macfarlane among others, with a short leaflet outlining the reasons behind their choices.

The School of Life also offers a "bibliotherapy" service for customers who don’t know what books they want. The in-house "bibliotherapist" Susan Elderkin offers a five-month programme for £50 whereby a customer can have regular email and phone consultations about their reading choices. The price does not include books.

Alternatively, a customer may buy one prescription for £35 with a gift box containing one book and recommendations for future reading. "More and more books are being published but people are reading fewer and fewer authors," said Elderkin. "What we do here is prescribe people books that they would enjoy but may not have heard of."

The Bookseller would like to make it clear that though De Botton was a founding member of the shop, Sophie Howarth is founder and director of The School of Life. Her blog about the shop can be read here: A chemist for the mind. Author Robert Macfarlane has helped select a gift box for the shop, but is not otherwise involved.

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Comments on this article

By MMI

Brilliant idea from the brilliant mind of Alain de botton - this is the sort of innovation the book trade has been sorely lacking. I wish them success with the venture,

18 Sep 08 06:41

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By imatree

Is it April Fool Day already?

18 Sep 08 08:13

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By Sailtie

'What we do here is prescribe people books that they would enjoy but may not have heard of.' Er, sort of like a book shop then.

18 Sep 08 08:41

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By GeneFlower

I've been past this shop in Bloomsbury and it's actually far more interesting than this article makes out. It's not only a bookshop - it's got a whole raft of courses and events 'for the mind'. It really is some sort of reinvention of the chemist. Fascinating to think this might be the direction that books go to.

18 Sep 08 09:50

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