So I just started reading The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James, and was really enjoying the creepy atmosphere, when this passage took me out of it:
>It wasn't that impressive a place; Google Earth had told me that much. Downtown was a grid of cafes, laundromats, junky antique stores, apartment rental buildings, and used-book stores, nestled reverently around a grocery store and a CVS.
Used book stores? Most small towns in middle of nowhere America don't even have one book store, let alone several. What she is describing is a college town. Or a hippie/hipster town that's probably within driving distance of a college. Not your average shitty little upstate locale.
The last time I saw the author get a setting wrong like that was The Woman In the Window, and I just gave up on the book. With this one, I'm not so sure, because otherwise I really do like the author's writing style. How do you get past a dumb detail like that and regain confidence in the author and the story?
(NO SPOILERS PLEASE, I'M STILL VERY EARLY ON)
Samael13 t1_iya5sya wrote
Upstate New York and most of New England are positively *littered* with used book stores and antique shops. If Fell, NY is big enough to have apartment rental buildings, it would absolutely have some used book stores. I go camping in upstate NY pretty regularly, and one of our favorite things to do after a camping trip is stop in at random used book stores.
I don't know exactly which part of upstate NY Fell is supposed to be located in, but a quick search for "upstate NY used books" shows dozens of used bookstores throughout.
Hobart, NY, population under 400, is infamous for it's bookstores; it has six independent bookstores despite the village being less than a square mile in area.