:ON-WYE, WALES - In Wales the signs are bilingual, with the
peculiar Welsh spellings atop the familiar English. So while
traversing the B4350 interstate and you spot a road marker that
says "Y Gelli, tref y llyfrau" it may take a second glance to
realize that you have arrived at the town-limits of Hay-On-Wye,
town of books.
With hedge rows as tall as bookcases encasing the highway that
cuts through the Black Mountains, a sky as big as Montana, and
the promise of a Twelfth Century castle less than a kilometer
away, you may also feel as if the three-hour journey from London
has landed you in a storybook world. In a sense, it has. For
nowhere else on earth are books - used and rare - the currency of
the realm as they are in Hay-On-Wye. And nowhere else are bookish
people - dealers, collectors, students, readers - courted with so
much enthusiasm.
Hay-On-Wye has 3,200 residents and more than 30 bookshops. It
also has a healthy number of antique shops specializing in
everything from gaudy Welsh pottery to Gustavian painted
furniture. Though it has never been touted as such, Hay-On-Wye,
for all its charm, may have been the first planned collecting
community.
A "deportment race" by the Librarians, a performance group,
makes it way through the streets of Hay-On-Wye.
An ancient agricultural town over which wars were fought, Hay
lies on the border of England, near Hereford, en route to Ireland.
Until the middle of the Twentieth Century it was a bustling town
with an agriculturally based economy. When its usefulness was
usurped by big commercial growers and retailers, town fathers were
at a loss as how to profitably harness the aftershocks of
modernity. Though there was magic of many types deep in the Black
Mountains, as hippies and rock stars knew, Hay's one legitimate
calling card was the River Wye. The nearby salmon encrusted waters
attracted fisherman, but not free spending, pleasure seeking
tourists and collectors.
Enter Richard Booth, an enterprising local lad educated at Oxford
and carrying the antiquing bug, who passionately wanted to avoid
the stress of apprenticing as an accountant in London. Around
1962, Booth was offered the old Fire Station for £700 (nearly
$1,300 at the current exchange rate.) On impulse, he bought it
and filled it with antiques to supplement the income from his
first love, second-hand books. A week passed before someone
pointed out that the wooden port barrel in the window was new,
and on sale at the local pub.
Booth was better at spotting value in books. He ran an ad in the
newspapers and began buying private and church libraries,
bringing lorry loads of volumes back to the sheep filled streets
of Hay. He soaked up tea and pints of ale with legendary
booksellers while he soaked up the knowledge they imparted.
Ultimately, Booth fueled his fever the ways most dealers do: by
discovery and error. From the UK to America, wherever libraries
were being deaccessioned to make way for new volumes, Booth was
on the scene.
Hearing of his success, other dealers were attracted to Hay.
After The Western Mail ran an article under the banner
"Welsh Mecca for Celtic Studies," the book buyers came in droves.

Don't let the Welsh alphabet throw you. Everyone says it is
very easy to master. If you're insecure, everything is
translated into English.
Eventually booksellers took over almost every building in
town, including the local Cinema (which is now the world famous
Cinema Bookstore) and an old agricultural hall (now home to Booth
Books), and built row upon row of stacks. Listing structures with
colorful shutters and doorways did not hurt the ambiance. Not even
the local castle, which Booth purchased, was exempt from use as a
bookshop. On its grounds the Honesty Bookstore invites perusal and
sale. Within, specialists in American Indians, Film, Photography,
Transport, Humor, Crafts, Art and Architecture are paving the way
for the next phase of Hay's incarnation.
In a recent interview, Booth said, "We would now like so see many
small specialist bookshops in Hay, with the proprietor as the
expert on the subject in which he deals."
In addition to the books, Hay has also attracted a wide range of
antiquarians. The Goosy Gander, for instance, specializes in
Continental chandeliers and mirrors. Bullring Antiques is a trove
of gaudy Welsh pottery, Welsh dressers, Regency to Edwardian
glassware, silver and Victorian cranberry glass. The Old
Curiosity Shoppe specializes in antique linens and vintage
clothes as well as blue and white china and smalls. A few doors
down, Lion Antiques carries oak coffers, ceramics and a selection
of Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century pieces. The Hay Antique
Market houses 17 dealers selling jasperware, stained glass, brass
porcelain and an oak pew or two.

This outpost of the Honesty Book Shop is just one of several
stalls that run on the honesty principle.
With more so many international booksellers and an unknown
quantity of books, Hay is home to the annual Guardian Hay Festival
- a literary event from which festivalgoers pick events to attend
much as film festival people pick their movies. The Guardian Hay
Festival runs from the May Bank Holiday weekend - our Memorial Day
weekend - through the first weekend in June. The event, unlike the
town of Hay, is about new books and their authors.
It takes place in a well-honed tent city in a converted sheep
meadow that is within walking distance of the castle and attracts
around 90,000 people from many countries, of every age, who would
as gladly hear Simon Schama, Margaret Atwood, Alan Alda or
Sebastian Jungner speak about their new offerings as catch a
discussion by Al Gore, or shout out their own opinions in a
debate with Graydon Carter, Christopher Hitchens and Gary Younge,
the Guradian's US correspondent, on the burning issues of
the day. Even during this year's event, when rain and
unexpectedly nippy temperatures made life less than comfortable,
most of the sessions sold out.
Hay is not a starched-and-pressed Barnes & Noble experience.
Within the shops, which are carefully categorized and well run
despite their aura of controlled chaos, bookshelves sag and
floors are littered with overflow. Visitors, however, do not seem
to mind. In fact, the clutter is somehow oddly comforting. People
browse, sit and read, and pour over the offerings from such
popular categories as gardening, anthropology, the classics,
militaria, royalty, government, theology, Presidents, history,
antiques, art, music, farming, fishing, hunting, George III,
Napoleon, Princess Diana and - well, you name it and there is
probably more than one bookshelf in Hay with volumes on the
minutiae of the subject matter.

Richard Booth, still active after a stroke, points out the
medal bestowed on him by Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, which
honors his contributions to the British Empire.
If you cannot find what you want, a question put to the
proprietors or staff of Marijana Dworski Books, the Addyman books,
Lion Street Bookshop, Forwood's or Castle Street Books will point
you in the right direction, depending on whether you are buying in
volume to fill your own specialty shop or want just one.
The bookstores and antique shops keep regular business hours.
Other than during festival weeks store traffic is manageable. The
one surprise you might anticipate is that of finding the town's
three ATMs out of cash over a long bank holiday weekend. Payment,
however, is not a problem. The stores take credit cards and, if
you have a European bank account, checks as well.
Prices vary with availability and rarity. At the Honesty
Bookstore, for example, you can put a few pence into the drop box
at the castle's door. At other shops, a British pound will serve
you well. And 50 British pounds could fill the boot of your
rental car. (Fortunately, the bookshops ship and the local Royal
Mail center is used to handling heavy packages.)
If you are in search of first editions and rare bindings, you may
have to ask for assistance before reaching into the locked
bookcases and recycled breakfronts.
When interviewed on a shuttle bus crowded with festivalgoers
about the difference between rare and used books, Booth boomed
for all to hear, "Sell one book for £10,000 and you improve the
economy of one man. Sell 10,000 books for a pound and you can
improve a whole community's economy." He added jocularly, "We may
soon have to turn to barter [for the books].I can see an economy
based on the Bootho. A suitable substitute for the Euro, wouldn't
you say?" No stranger to publicity, Booth learned early in his
career how to manipulate the press. While Wales is separatist by
inclination, Hay-on-Wye is separatist by design. Booth's design.
Hence the title "King of Hay."
After wrestling the bureaucracy of the Welsh Tourist Board that
was more for currying favor with large corporate retailers than
promoting indigenous rural crafts and talents, Booth laid down
the gauntlet with a spur-of-the-moment statement made to a
journalist from The Sunday Mirror. He declared, "Hay is
going independent."
After ascertaining that Booth had the support of the Welsh people
(he claims to have minted the concept moments before) the writer
said he would send in the photographers.

Mary-Rose Brooks, a 20-year employee of Booth's Books, and John
Richard, a relative newcomer of eight years, serve customers as
a younger Richard Booth peers out from the cover of his
autobiography, My Kingdom of Books.
On the appointed day Booth and 12 "revolutionaries" stood
before the castle in a roaring snowstorm brandishing a homemade
flag, and a movement was born. The subsequent article gave it legs.
An appropriate cabinet was chosen one evening in a local pub.
(Notably, the Prime Minister was an influential antique dealer
whose own "kingdom" was located in a nearby manor house.)
On April 1, 1977, three TV stations and eight international
newspapers covered Booth's coronation. The King of Hay had made
his point: if the Welsh Development Board continued to protect
the interest of big business, they would find themselves a
laughing stock.
Today Booth, who is the largest employer in Hay-On-Wye, is still
fiercely intent on helping rural communities reboot their
flagging economies by becoming tourist attractions with
specialties that lie well this side of theme parks and outlet
malls. Among other book towns he has fostered is Le Redu Lebin in
Belgium and Montolieu, in southern France. (There are two book
towns in the United States as well. In Stillwater, Wis., one of
Booth's original employees, Tom Loom, specializes in theological
books. Nevada City-Grass Valley, Calif., holds an official
charter from the King of Hay.)
The concept of capitalizing on used books to turn around an
economy has been so successful that Booth has been recognized for
his contributions to society by the British Empire. He boasted
recently, pointing to a paper badge above his jacket pocket,
"[The Guardian Festival promoters] made me a VIP in the town I
created." Grinning, he continued. "I like this one better," he
roared, and pointed to the medal near his right lapel. "Prince
Charlie gave it to me."

Caught early in the morning before the streets were flooded
with people, this Twelfth Century castle appears comfortable in
its repose. Signs indicate activity to come.
The Member of the British Empire medallion was indeed a lot
more substantial looking and it certainly seemed fitting. Richard
Booth, rare book dealer, visionary and PR expert, is still the King
of Hay. And his kingdom of books is a remarkable and fascinating
place.
The shops of Hay-On-Wye are open all year round. If you do not
like crowds, the best time to visit is whenever your schedule
permits. If you go during The Guardian Hay Festival be prepared
to feast on ideas and multicultural points of view. Other times
of the year, the venue is much quieter.
Travel to and from Hay-On-Wye is easy. You can rent a car and
drive or take the British Rail alternative. Trains leave from
Paddington Station to Hereford on a regular basis, with a change
in Newport. From Hereford, you have the option of a taxi or bus a
that drops you off in the center of Hay-On-Wye, just steps from
the castle and several hotels or B&Bs.
Among the hotels in Hay-On-Wye, The Swan and Kilverts are among
the best known. For more information on accommodations, B&Bs
and self-cater apartments, book stores, antique shops and The Hay
Festival, visit www.hay-on-wye.co.uk.