Taranaki Daily News

Welcome to NZ’s quietest bookshop

- Catherine Groenestei­n

Patrick McKenna doesn’t get a lot of customers at his book shop and that’s just the way he likes it.

The Book Bank is located in a former bank in the small South Taranaki town of Waverley.

With just under 800 residents there’s not much foot traffic and McKenna gets plenty of time to read his own products.

‘‘This place doesn’t make a lot of money, it’s more of a hobby, but I’m a pensioner so that doesn’t matter. It pays its own way,’’ he said.

‘‘I’m at the age you don’t have to be anybody. Ambition is dead, you are who you’re going to be, so enjoy it. If you haven’t made it by now, you’re never going to.’’

Prior to moving to Waverley McKenna was an antiques dealer and ran a bookshop in the Wairarapa. He’s also a musician.

He moved north with his wife Raewyn after seeing the centuryold former bank for sale online in 2016.

‘‘We liked the idea of a place we could live and work from,’’ he said.

They live above the shop and can see the sea from the garden behind the building. There are musical instrument­s in the strong room, and there’s no road noise, thanks to the 10mm glass in the windows from the banking days.

McKenna gathers stock from book fairs, op shops and people clearing out a house or downsizing.

‘‘People our age don’t like to throw away books, so they bring them here. I got eight banana boxes of war books recently, and they’re good ones, from the 1950s. I’ve sold some already.’’

Inside the sunny shop, rows of classics including Steinbeck, Austen, Dickens, Shakespear­e and Hemingway face shelves of philosophe­rs and tomes on language and linguistic­s.

A Taranaki section has books about shipwrecks, pioneers and traders, monuments and the mountain.

In a room to one side books on art, architectu­re and artists line the shelves around an oak table – McKenna’s reading spot.

He likes the stories hidden within the stories. ‘‘Quite often there are little things tucked into the pages of a book you never expect to find – art union tickets, war tokens, photos and flowers.’’

He worries about falling literacy rates, and the lack of reading among younger people.

‘‘You pick up a book and suddenly you drop into that world. We’re losing that.’’

 ??  ?? Bookseller Patrick McKenna gets plenty of time to read his own products. Below: The Book Bank in Waverley.
Bookseller Patrick McKenna gets plenty of time to read his own products. Below: The Book Bank in Waverley.
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