Website: http://www.book1st.net/
Map: http://www.book1st.net/shops/index.html
Website: http://www.towerrecords.co.jp/
Map: Full list, Shibuya and Shinjuku
Website: http://bookweb.kinokuniya.co.jp/
Map: http://www.kinokuniya.co.jp/04f/d03/tokyo/01.htm
One I know if is the Blue Parrot shop, which used to have a store in Akihabara but I guess business wasn’t quite good enough. Their remaining shop is in Takadanobaba, or “Baba” if you want to sound like you know what you’re talking about, which is a little bit out of the way. They take your old books in return for store credit and the stuff they have on offer is quite varied, though as with all second hand shops, the quality and choice available is usually the luck of the draw. You can, however, pick up fairly cheap raggedy copies of novels here, if you don’t mind them with smoke-stained pages and barely coherent spines.
Website: http://www.blueparrottokyo.com/
Map: http://www.blueparrottokyo.com/location.html
I’m sure there are more second hand bookshop, in fact I know there are, but their names escape me for now. Don’t expect to run into them regularly as they are few and far between. However, if you fancy a day of book shopping I can recommend Tokyo’s equivalent of Charing Cross Road. The Kanda-Jimbocho area is littered with bookshops, from your regular ones, to specialty stores to academic bookshops; there is a lot on offer. The availability of English books is hit and miss, but it’s worth checking out. I know of one store there, all grand bookcases and leather-bound treasures, that had a fair amount of great novels in excellent editions, but for no less grandiose prices. It’s a great place to hang around and browse though. Seeing as it’s around Meiji University ou can expect to find a lot of students there as well as academic types. A good day out for any book lover!Handy list of stores: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/4824/jp-kanda.htm
Then of course there is good old Amazon. Obviously the .jp version offers better deals when it comes to delivery, often totally free in fact, but like its bookstore brethren the English books on offer are somewhat limited. You’ll probably have more luck there than at any bookstore if you are looking for something terribly specific, but don’t be surprised if, in the end, you’re forced to rely on the .com one. Delivery will be a little pricey, around US$10 per package and they always screw you over. “Make the fewest number of packages” for them means it’s perfectly okay to send one book on a Monday and a second of a Tuesday, both with a separate US$10 P&P fee, the scoundrels! But when it comes to choice and ease, well, it doesn’t really get better than Amazon, does it?
So in conclusion: if you plan to move to Tokyo you don’t have to stress about shipping over all your books, there is plenty to be bought over here. If you’re a visiting tourist who did too little research, places like Book1st offer you the range of phrase and guide books you should have bought before coming over. Now the only problem remains: where the Hell are you going to store all your books in that tiny tatami apartment of yours?
Correction: English books aren't that hard to find in Tokyo. Good luck if you are in the sticks.
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