There is a place in every decent-sized city where all the world's problems could be solved, if we would pay attention.
I'm talking about bookstores (or, maybe even better, libraries). Their treasures of knowledge may be why, all of a sudden, there are so many books set in stores.
For a book lover, the only thing better than a great book is a great book that's about books. And, whether it's Louise Erdrich's "The Sentence" (set in a store modeled on her own Birchbark Books), "Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore," "The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry" or "Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore," they all incorporate the idea that books are magical objects that contain the wisdom of the ages, secrets to getting along with others and a heck of a lot of fun.
(Oh, and, carnage, too. Trying to remember the title of "Bright Ideas," I searched for "murder" and "bookstore" and found more than a dozen murder mysteries set in bookstores.)
We've probably had bookstore books as long as publishing has existed, but the current flurry, including at least a dozen this year, probably has something to do with the enduring popularity of Nina George's 2015 "The Little Paris Bookshop," which has been translated into 28 languages, and Penelope Fitzgerald's 1978 "The Bookshop" (which became a gorgeous movie in 2017, starring Emily Mortimer as the proprietor).
Both bestsellers highlight one popular feature of bookshop books. Well, two: It sounds quainter to refer to it as a "bookshop" than a "store." And it's wise to set it in a picturesque locale (Paris, coastal England), so local culture can factor in.
That's also the case with "Fikry," set near Cape Cod, and "Penumbra," in San Francisco. And it's true of the new "Midnight at the Christmas Bookshop," set in Edinburgh, Scotland, and upcoming "Welcome to the Hyunam-Dong Bookshop," in Seoul, South Korea. (The book will be in stores — sorry, shops — in February.)
An enticing setting is practically the whole reason for this year's "Days at the Morisaki Bookshop," which could have bibliophiles racing to schedule trips to Tokyo. Satoshi Yagisawa's overseas blockbuster (translated by Eric Ozawa) takes place in the real-life Jimbōchō Book Town, a neighborhood composed almost entirely of bookstores (more than a hundred of 'em). It's like Harry Potter's Diagon Alley, except with Toni Morrison and Haruki Murakami volumes instead of magic wands.