Compendium Books

Compendium Books was an independent bookstore in London specialising in experimental literary and theoretical publications. According to John Williams in The Guardian, 'From its opening in 1968 until its closure in 2001 was Britain's pre-eminent radical bookstore. Whether you wanted books on anarchism, drugs, poststructuralism, feminism or Buddhism, Compendium was the place to go.'[1]

History

It was founded by Diana Gravill and Nicholas Rochford and was located at 234 Camden High Street, London, and opened in August 1968.[2]

Following the closures of Better Books and Indica, Compendium was for many years the main place for "the London literary avant-garde".[3]It was a key venue for the British Poetry Revival[4] and for availability of the texts of post-1968 political and cultural theory.[5] There was a massive music section, with many imported US titles on blues, soul, jazz and rock and roll. Compendium also had sections for left-wing politics, philosophy, the occult and science fiction.

The knowledgeable staff at Compendium included Nick Kimberley, now the opera critic for the London Evening Standard, and the critic and writer Elizabeth Young, whose Guardian obituary described the shop in the late 1970s: 'In the 1970s, she worked in London's finest alternative bookstore, the late-lamented Compendium Books, in Camden Town. More than simply a bookshop, Compendium was also a cultural centre for the punk-rock scene.... The Clash, in particular, were regular visitors, writing The Prisoner about the shop's patriarch Nick Rochford.[6]

In the 1980s, the fiction and poetry department was run by Mike Hart, whose Guardian obituary recalls, 'To walk into Compendium, survey the novels on display and ask Mike's advice was to enter a new world of fiction. The shop became the haunt of an unlikely mixture of more or less literary luminaries, from Nick Cave to Ben Okri, Ivor Cutler to Kathy Acker. Thanks to Mike, and others, Camden Town in the 1980s became a kind of counter-cultural nexus: a place where you could drift from record shop to caff to Compendium and thence to the pub. There you would find Mike at the heart of a group of autodidacts, musicians, writers, lowlifes and drunks whose house band was the Pogues and whose cultural heroes were Jim Thompson, Hank Williams, Tom Raworth and Little Willie John....As the 1980s moved into the 1990s, Camden became a magnet for the world's teenagers and Compendium underwent a facelift. Mike formalised its literary scene by initiating regular readings in the bookshop, something of an innovation at the time. Visiting Americans, from old beat heroes like Lawrence Ferlinghetti to new literary lions like Walter Mosley, read there; so too did the London writers Iain Sinclair, Martin Millar and Derek Raymond. '[1]

By the end of the 1990s, Camden Town was thoroughly commercialised, 'its last remaining outposts of bohemianism swamped by endless leather jacket stores.'[1] Compendium Books closed in October 2000.[5] It is now a Dr Martens shop.

References

  1. 1 2 3 John Williams, Obituary of Mike Hart, The Guardian, 9 December 2002
  2. Miles, Barry (2010). London Calling: A Countercultural History of London Since 1945. Atlantic Books. ISBN 978-1-84354-613-9.
  3. Fountain, Nigel (1988). Underground: The London Alternative Press 1966-74. Routledge. p. 190. ISBN 0-415-00728-3.
  4. Baker, Brian (2007). Iain Sinclair (Contemporary British Novelists). Manchester University Press. p. 2. ISBN 0-7190-6905-X.
  5. 1 2 Derbyshire, Philip (2001). "Obituaries/Profiles: Compendium Bookshop, 1968-2000". Radical Philosophy. Retrieved 2010-06-27.
  6. John Williams, Obituary of Elizabeth Young, The Guardian, 23 March 2001.

Coordinates: 51°32′28″N 0°8′40″W / 51.54111°N 0.14444°W / 51.54111; -0.14444

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