The second-hand bookstore is on the second floor or in the basement, which is about the natural survival law in Taipei, where the land is now inch gold. Hu Si's second-hand bookstore feels very different from the cast iron railings in the stairwell and the wall of books and images. After going upstairs, all sides are full of Chinese and foreign books, the middle of the hall is still full of books, two, three and chest shelves. There are a few small round tables and chairs near the window, and people often sit there reading the "trophy" and drinking a drink. The overall space is spacious and bright, and it is in order. Even if the pile of books in front of the counter has just been recovered and not yet sorted, they all look neat and tidy, which is very different from the messy feeling given by traditional second-hand bookstores.
Hu Si second-hand bookstore, mainly operates old books. The bookstore is not big, there are a lot of books in it, slowly looking for it will find you like it, but Taiwan's books have almost no simplified books, traditional characters sometimes can't understand, see personal preference.
I knew this one before I started doing my homework, but I didn't expect it to be very close to Shilin MRT Station. I came out of the Forbidden City, read a book in the store, and there were chairs to rest.
A bookstore hidden in the downtown area, spacious and bright, with a full book fragrance. The interior is divided into three floors, the third floor has tables, chairs and platforms for readers to rest, and the landscape window can also see the scenery of Taiwan University.
This Husi in Shilin is very convenient next to the MRT station. The store is small and not very eye-catching. The space inside is also good. There are many books, but as a chain of second-hand bookstores, most of them are ordinary readings. You have to carefully search for some gains.
The second-hand bookstore is on the second floor or in the basement, which is about the natural survival law in Taipei, where the land is now inch gold. Hu Si's second-hand bookstore feels very different from the cast iron railings in the stairwell and the wall of books and images. After going upstairs, all sides are full of Chinese and foreign books, the middle of the hall is still full of books, two, three and chest shelves. There are a few small round tables and chairs near the window, and people often sit there reading the "trophy" and drinking a drink. The overall space is spacious and bright, and it is in order. Even if the pile of books in front of the counter has just been recovered and not yet sorted, they all look neat and tidy, which is very different from the messy feeling given by traditional second-hand bookstores.
Hu Si second-hand bookstore, mainly operates old books. The bookstore is not big, there are a lot of books in it, slowly looking for it will find you like it, but Taiwan's books have almost no simplified books, traditional characters sometimes can't understand, see personal preference.
I knew this one before I started doing my homework, but I didn't expect it to be very close to Shilin MRT Station. I came out of the Forbidden City, read a book in the store, and there were chairs to rest.
A bookstore hidden in the downtown area, spacious and bright, with a full book fragrance. The interior is divided into three floors, the third floor has tables, chairs and platforms for readers to rest, and the landscape window can also see the scenery of Taiwan University.
This Husi in Shilin is very convenient next to the MRT station. The store is small and not very eye-catching. The space inside is also good. There are many books, but as a chain of second-hand bookstores, most of them are ordinary readings. You have to carefully search for some gains.