Larissa R.
Yelp
Call me difficult to please, but I've been in Foyles more times than one looking for a book that I cannot find, despite the store's online inventory saying it was available.
Sure, I'm often looking for the most obscure books you can imagine, but if www.foyles.co.uk tells me that the store has Gerald of Wales' _History and Topography of Ireland_ in store, well, I expect to find it in store when I make the special trip. And, no, I don't want Gerald of Wales' _History and Topography of Wales_. I may not be a Brit, but I realize that Wales and Ireland are markedly different countries.
The location itself is spread out over at least six floors, and I enjoy a good browse now and again. The employees aren't generally keen to offer their help to customers, but when specifically approached they will lend a hand as necessary and required. Although, if they can't find the aforementioned rogue book, they sure do give up the search pretty easily.
A little area on one of the uppermost floors contains used and antiquarian books for sale, although the selection isn't that vast.
And I hear the cafe in the store offers free wifi.
I'm a fan of the sheer breadth of topics covered by the in store inventory. From contemporary fiction to academic theory to queer non-fiction, Foyles has something for just about everyone to browse through. Except for books I specifically need. It never has those
So, go, take in the bookie haven that is Foyles. Just don't expect to cash in on many 3-for-2 deals that you might find at Waterstones or Borders. Displays at the front of the store may mislead you into thinking that all Penguin Modern Classics, for example, are on sale, so you excitedly pick out three titles from the shelves only to find out that the only titles available in the sale are the ones on the display itself. LAME.
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