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The Bookseller of Hay

James Hanning

The Life and Times of Richard Booth

Barcode 9781472159786
Hardback

Original price £18.74 - Original price £18.74
Original price
£18.74
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Release Date: 04/09/2025

Genre: Non-Fiction
Sub-Genre: Biography
Label: Corsair
Language: English
Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group

The Life and Times of Richard Booth
A biography of the bookseller and entrepreneur Richard Booth, the 'King of Hay', known for his contribution to the success of Hay-on-Wye and its annual literary festival.

'A breathtakingly hilarious and absorbing portrait of one of the most brilliant, dotty, dippy delirious yet ultimately inspiring eccentrics in British history . A remarkable story of cultural life, friendship, obsession and passion' Stephen Fry

'
Brilliantly evocative, like listening to the gossip of ghosts' Bruce Robinson

'The Bookseller of Hay is the very model of a biography which amazes, occasionally horrifies and entirely engrosses . James Hanning is a writer of sublime insight, style and skill' Horatio Clare

'What you have to understand is that Richard Booth was completely mad' Marianne Faithfull


In 1962, a young man left university without a degree and, for want of anything better to do, bought a small shop in an obscure market town on the edge of the Brecon Beacons. Within fifteen years, largely through force of personality, Richard Booth had created the world's largest second-hand bookshop, attracting thousands of visitors from across the globe to Hay-on-Wye, on the Welsh border.

The Bookseller of Hay tells the tale of an extraordinary, chaotic man, a true British eccentric, who invented the term 'book town', attracted a coterie of exotic and illustrious followers, crowned himself king, declared the town's independence and provided the bookish backdrop which - to his frustration - allowed a rival attraction, the now world-famous Hay Festival, to flourish.

It is a story of the extraordinary singlemindedness of a hard-working, hard-playing and rebellious son of privilege, inspired by a romantic vision and a deep love of the area, of a man better suited to publicity than bean-counting, who launched countless careers but whose business instincts undermined precisely what had brought success. Booth was a deeply divisive figure, but love him or hate him, all agree on one thing. He put Hay on the map.

James Hanning, a frequent visitor to Hay since the 1960s, has interviewed dozens of local people and booksellers and with typical acuity wonderfully captures this bygone era of eccentricity and excess.