This book was pretty good--spoiler alert, one would not necessarily when picking up this book, know that one would become more knowledgeable about the marijuana growing industry after having read it, but oh how one does.Some of the characters were well-loved, but not many developed as much as I would liked them to have been besides the dual protagonists, Lewis and Emily. I liked the town of Eureka, California, and thought it could be an idyllic place to settle down and own a bookstore, if indeed that bookstore could survive without some under-the-counter dealings. A comical plot line. This book was not at all what I expected. Had I known it was really a story about legalizing pot rather than the last bookstore in America, I wouldn't even have started it. I kept hoping the book would turn around, but it kept getting farther and farther into the issue. Aside from being terribly mis-advertised, there were many grammar issues and typos in each chapter. It is not the style or standard of writing as her first book, From the Ground Up, was. Very disappointed.
Do You like book The Last Book Store In America (2000)?
None of the characters engaged me, and the plot never got as interesting as I hoped when it started.
—bella
Interesting concept. But please do not make it come true. I need my tangible books!
—KristaaRosee