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2007 07 24
Bookstore Reviews: Steven Temple Books
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Steven Temple Books (489 Queen Street West, second floor) specializes in scarce and rare titles and Canadian literature, but the rarest item on offer may be the bookstore itself. Operating for more than thirty-two years in Toronto, bookseller Steven Temple has seen the independent used book trade around him burgeon and then almost disappear. Once one of a dozen used bookshops along Queen Street West, Temple says, "I'm the only one left" and adds, "I suggest people come see a bookstore while they still can."

Steven Temple Books is the archetypal antiquarian bookstore. Floor-to-ceiling shelves of rare volumes frame a gorgeous bay window filtering muted sunlight onto a window seat also piled with books. You can traverse the creaky floorboards for hours, following a librarian's labyrinth of editions, all the while breathing in a rich vapour of leather, oil, dust, and old paper. It's a book addict's space, and it's nearly impossible to visit without buying at least one book you've never heard of before but suddenly cannot live without. Like The Natural History of the Toronto Region ($40), a rare 1913 first edition (complete with maps) describing Toronto's geology and its flora and fauna. Or a profusely illustrated 1930s first edition copy of Toronto: An Illustrated Tour through its Highways and Byways (ed. Rodnewy Bowden-Smart and Frank J. Beech; about $75). Or James Edmund Jones' intriguing Pioneer Crimes and Punishments in Toronto and the Home District (1924; about $20). Or O Toronto (1973), a collection of artist William Kurelek's beautiful contemporary paintings of Toronto (about $15). Or, if your book budget is much larger than mine, for about $950 you can bring home a scarce and sought-after 1877 copy of James Timperlake's Illustrated Toronto: Past and Present, a richly illustrated volume including numerous plates and lithographs showing Toronto's factories, schools, residences, businesses, and other noted buildings of the era.

With regret I left these books behind, because I had just spent the week's grocery budget on two rare Toronto novels: Annie Savigny's A Romance of Toronto (1888; reprinted 1973), and Anna Durie's John Dangerfield's Strange Reappearance (1933), and a beautiful first edition copy of Gwendolyn MacEwen's Noman (the Toronto poet's first book of stories set in Toronto and published by Oberon in 1972). But don't worry: there are still plenty of important Toronto titles left, including a rare first edition of Morley Callaghan's Strange Fugitive (1928), described as "Canada's first urban novel." and two copies of Callaghan's The Varsity Story (1948; a novel set at the University of Toronto), plus rare copies of Toronto works by Hugh Garner, Gwendolyn MacEwen, Russell Smith, Raymond Souster, and many other novelists, poets, and storytellers who've made Toronto a fixture in their work.

Steven Temple Books specializes in anitiquarian, rare and scarce titles, Canadian literature and Canadiana, and also stocks rare and beautiful works on the world's regions, military, aviation and nautical history and interest, travel and exploration, science and medicine, children's books, modern literature, and a variety of other categories. Readers and collectors of genre fiction will be happy to discover that Steven Temple Books also specializes in rare first, limited edition and signed copies of science fiction / fantasy as well as fine volumes of crime and suspense literature.

You can visit Steven Temple Books in person Monday to Friday from noon until six o'clock, and it's very much worth the visit. The store is located on the second floor at 489 Queen Street, on the south side about a block west of Spadina. You can also browse and order online through the store's website.

[In conjunction with the Imagining Toronto project, Amy Lavender Harris writes about Toronto literature and the imaginative qualities of cities. Bookstore Reviews is an occasional series.]

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[email this story] Posted by Amy Lavender Harris on 07/24 at 07:02 AM
  1. I have had the privilege of experiencing Steven
    Temple’s book store for over two decades and
    it is a wonder.

    Best yet, though, Steven Temple is a dealer who
    knows his business and his customers. He is a
    fine professional with which to build a collection.
    Posted by  on  07/24  at  01:22 PM
  2. I had the rare pleasure of working for Steve in the early 90s, both at his present location and the previous cubbyhole across the alley. His love and knowledge of books continues to inspire me as I now work for an Australian publisher. I have many fond memories of quiet Sunday afternoons amongst the stacks of books, as well as having the privilege of getting to know the characters of the antiquarian book trade over the years. It saddens me to hear that Steve is the only one of that mob left on Queen St West…don’t let him slip away.

    Posted by Wendy Mansell  on  07/24  at  06:27 PM
  3. Steven has been a colleague for years. I have visited his bookshop and it is a wonderful experience. It is an old fashioned bookshop stocked with great treasures. Steven has a wealth of knowledge which he is willing to share. He has also worked hard for the booksellers of the world as he was for 4 years the secretary of the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers.

    Posted by Paul Feain  on  07/24  at  09:07 PM
  4. Steven is one of the hardest working booksellers in Canada and looks after his customers needs.

    Posted by  on  07/25  at  06:46 PM
  5. Steven Temple has fulfilled some of my most outrageous rare book cravings over the years. He is a great “bookman” and his store is a wonderful escape from a world currently suffocating in ipods & cellphones. If only more young people would get hooked on books and reading, as I have, Toronto streets would be much safer and people in general would be happier…Nothing beats a good book.

    Posted by  on  07/27  at  06:05 PM
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