English edit

Etymology edit

From bookshop and shopkeeper.

Noun edit

bookshopkeeper (plural bookshopkeepers)

  1. One who operates a bookshop.
    Synonym: bookstorekeeper
    • 1934 June 30, Thelma Browne Ziemer, “Hints for the Summer-Resort Bookshop”, in The Publishers’ Weekly: The American Book Trade Journal, volume CXXV, number 26, Camden, N.J., pages 2331–2332:
      One of the greatest temptations for the resort bookshopkeeper is to stock those miscellaneous articles which come under the heading of “gifts” or “souvenirs.” It is true that summer visitors will pick up some novelty to take home to the family. But they will no longer spend their precious money for those unnecessary gadgets which were such a good racket a few years ago. They want their money’s worth; so unless you have a real gift department and have bought during the year from reputable gift manufacturers, it is unwise to dabble in gifts.
    • 1940 September, W. R. Anderson, “Of This and That”, in The Musical Times, volume LXXXI, London: Novello and Company Limited, [], page 368, column 1:
      One day my luck was an airy basement, in which like magic appeared a bamboo table, a portable gramophone, and a case of records, thoughtfully provided by a neighbouring bookshopkeeper-Warden: the records being taken from his stock-in-trade.
    • 1954 April, Robert Kass, “Film and TV”, in The Catholic World, volume 179, number 1,069, New York, N.Y.: The Paulist Fathers, page 62, column 2:
      The same Miss Taylor is to be seen in Elephant Walk as a London bookshopkeeper who marries a dark and brooding plantation owner, goes out to Ceylon with him, and assumes the mantle of mistress of a fabulous estate.
    • 1959 January 25, Jawaharlal Nehru, “To B.V. Keskar”, in Madhavan K[ezhkepat] Palat, editor, Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru, 2nd series, volume 46 (1 January – 28 February 1959), Teen Murti House, New Delhi: Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund, published 2012, →ISBN, page 536:
      Anyhow, one of the bookshopkeepers in the Science Exhibition grounds displays all kinds of foreign scientific books, but not this book.
    • 1972, Gwendolyn Brooks, Report from Part One, Detroit, Mich.: Broadside Press, →ISBN, page 90:
      In an Indian bookshop. “You look like a Tourist,” says the Indian bookshopkeeper to an Indian shopper in dark glasses and a tall wide floppy black hat.
    • 1977, Andrew Tolson, The Limits of Masculinity, London: Tavistock Publications, →ISBN, page 135:
      One, after five years as a draughtsman, was on the ‘dole’; one, who had left school at fifteen, was a production designer in a large engineering firm; and one was a bookshopkeeper.
    • 1988, C.P.M. Knipscheer, L. Claessens, M.F.H.G. Wimmers, “Time Use and Activities of the Aged in the Netherlands”, in Karen Altergott, editor, Daily Life in Later Life: Comparative Perspectives, Newbury Park, Calif.: SAGE Publications, →ISBN, page 42:
      Mr. D. is 68 years of age and has been a bookshopkeeper in his small town for 40 years, married for 41 years, and has one son.
    • 1988 January 13, Variety’s® Film Reviews[1], volume 20 (1987–1988), New Providence, N.J.: R. R. Bowker, published 1991, →ISBN:
      One of the implicated is Lesley Ann Warren, a chain-smoking, feminist poet and bookshopkeeper who turns out to play a pivotal role in the murder mystery hounding Woods.
    • 2003, “Contributors’ Bios”, in Joanne Richardson, editor, Anarchitexts: A Subsol Anthology, Brooklyn, N.Y.: Autonomedia, →ISBN, page 364:
      Former sex educator, bookshopkeeper and free-lance journalist writing on the subjects of gender, new media and art.