Cover of 84, Charing Cross Road

Book Highlights

84, Charing Cross Road

by Helene Hanff

What it's about

This collection of letters chronicles a twenty-year correspondence between an outspoken New York writer and a reserved London bookseller. It captures the intimacy of shared reading and the profound connection that forms through a mutual love for literature and history.

Key ideas

  • The life of a book: Used volumes are living artifacts that carry the history, marginalia, and spirit of their previous owners.
  • The intimacy of correspondence: Letters can build a bridge between strangers that feels more authentic and enduring than many face-to-face relationships.
  • The curation of a library: A personal collection should be a living tool rather than a static display, meaning bad books should be discarded without sentimentality.
  • The search for home: Literature acts as a portal to foreign places, allowing readers to inhabit the spirit of a country even before they ever step foot on its soil.

You'll love this book if...

  • You enjoy quiet, character-driven stories that celebrate the simple pleasure of reading and collecting books.
  • You're looking for a warm, witty, and nostalgic look at how intellectual curiosity can turn a professional transaction into a lifelong friendship.

Best for

Bibliophiles who believe that books are meant to be handled, marked up, and lived in rather than preserved behind glass.

Books with the same vibe

  • The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows
  • The Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennett
  • Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan

60 popular highlights from this book

Key Insights & Memorable Quotes

The most popular highlights from 84, Charing Cross Road, saved by readers on Screvi.

I do love secondhand books that open to the page some previous owner read oftenest. The day Hazlitt came he opened to "I hate to read new books," and I hollered "Comrade!" to whoever owned it before me.
I love inscriptions on flyleaves and notes in margins, I like the comradely sense of turning pages someone else turned, and reading passages someone long gone has called my attention to.
If you happen to pass by 84 Charing Cross Road, kiss it for me? I owe it so much.
Why is it that people who wouldn't dream of stealing anything else think it's perfectly all right to steal books?
But I don't know, maybe it's just as well I never got there. I dreamed about it for so many years. I used to go to English movies just to look at the streets. I remember years ago a guy I knew told me that people going to England find exactly what they go looking for. I said I'd go looking for the England of English Literature, and he nodded and said: "It's there.
It looks too new and pristine ever to have been read by anyone else, but it has been: it keeps falling open at the most delightful places as the ghost of its former owner points me to things I've never read before.
It's against my principles to buy a book I haven't read, it's like buying a dress you haven't tried on.
I don't browse in bookshops, I browse in libraries, where you can take a book home and read it, and if you like it you go to a bookshop and buy it.
I personally can't think of anything less sacrosanct than a bad book or even a mediocre book.
i am going to bed. i will have nightmares involving huge monsters in academic robes carrying long bloody butcher knives labeled Excerpt, Selection, Passage, and Abridged.
Did I tell you I finally found the perfect page-cutter? It's a pearl-handled fruit knife. My mother left me a dozen of them, I keep one in the pencil cup on my desk. Maybe I go with the wrong kind of people but i'm just not likely to have twelve guests all sitting around simultaneously eating fruit.
I have these guilts about never having read Chaucer but I was talked out of learning Early Anglo-Saxon / Middle English by a friend who had to take it for her Ph.D. They told her to write an essay in Early Anglo-Saxon on any-subject-of-her-own-choosing. “Which is all very well,” she said bitterly, “but the only essay subject you can find enough Early Anglo-Saxon words for is ‘How to Slaughter a Thousand Men in a Mead Hall’.
I wish you hadn't been so over-courteous about putting the inscription on a card instead of on the flyleaf. It's the bookseller coming out in you all, you were afraid you'd decrease its value. You would have increased it for the present owner. (And possibly for the future owner. I love inscriptions on flyleaves and notes in margins, I like the comradely sense of turning pages someone else turned, and reading passages someone long gone has called my attention to.)
I'll have mine [The Book-Lovers' Anthology] till the day I die - and die happy in the knowledge that I'm leaving it behind for someone else to love. I shall sprinkle pale pencil marks through it pointing out the best passages to some book-lover yet unborn.
I remember years ago a guy I knew told me that people going to England find exactly what they go looking for. I said I'd go looking for the England of English Literature, and he nodded and said: 'It's there.'Maybe it is, and maybe it isn't. Looking around the rug one thing's for sure: it's here.
Have you got De Tocqueville's Journey to America? Somebody borrowed mine and never gave it back. Why is it that people who wouldn't dream of stealing anything else think it's perfectly all right to steal books?
I liked reading about the nun who ate so dainty with her fingers she never dripped any grease on herself. I've never been able to make that claim and I use a fork.
i enclose two limp singles, i will make do with this thing till you find me a real Pepys. THEN i will rip up this ersatz book, page be page, AND WRAP THINGS IN IT.
I houseclean my books every spring and throw out those I’m never going to read again likeI throw out clothes I’m never going to wear again. It shocks everybody. My friends are peculiar about books. They read all the best sellers, they get through them as fast as possible,I think they skip a lot. And they NEVER read anything a second time so they don’t remember a word of it a year later. But they are profoundly shocked to see me drop a book in the wastebasket or give it away. The way they look at it, you buy a book, you read it, you put it on the shelf, you never open it again for the rest of your life but YOU DON’T THROW IT OUT! NOT IF IT HAS A HARD COVER ON IT! Why not?I personally can’t think of anything less sacrosanct than a bad book or even a mediocre book.
All my scripts have artistic backgrounds -- ballet, concert hall, opera -- and all the suspects and corpses are cultured, maybe I'll do one about the rare book business in your honor, do you want to be the murderer or the corpse?
I houseclean my books every spring and throw out those I'm never going to read again like I throw out clothes I'm never going to wear again.
I remember years ago a guy I knew told me that people going to England find exactly what they go looking for.
I fail to see why you did not understand that groceryman, he did not call it 'ground ground nuts,' he called it ground ground-nuts which is the only really SENSible thing to call it. Peanuts grow in the GROUND and are therefore GROUND-nuts, and after you take them out of the ground you grind them up and you have ground ground-nuts, which is a much more accurate name than peanut butter, you just don't understand English.
Buying a book you've never read is like buying a dress you've never tried on
I shall sprinkle pale pencil marks through it pointing out the best passages to some booklover yet unborn.
I tell you, life is extraordinary. A few years ago, I couldn't write anything or sell anything, I'd passed the age where you know all the returns are in, I'd had my chance and done my best and failed. And how was I to know the miracle waiting to happen around the corner in middle age? 84, Charing Cross Road was no best-seller, you understand; it didn't make me rich or famous. It just got me hundreds of letters and phone calls from people I never knew existed; it got me wonderful reviews; it restored a self-confidence and self-esteem I'd lost somewhere along the way, God knows how many years ago. It brought me to England. It changed my life.
A newspaper man I know, who was stationed in London during the war, says tourists go to England with preconceived notions, so they always find exactly what they go looking for. I told him I’d go looking for the England of English literature, and he said: “Then it’s there.
Why should I run all the way down to 17th St. to buy dirty, badly made books whenI can buy clean, beautiful onesfrom you without leaving the typewriter? From whereI sit,London’s a lot closer than 17th Street.
I shall be obliged if you will send Nora and the girls to church every Sunday for the next month to pray for the continued health and strength of the messrs. gilliam, reese, snider, campanella, robinson, hodges, furillo, podres, necombe and labine, collectively known as the The Brooklyn Dodgers. If they lose this World Series I shall Do Myself In and then where will you be?
Anything he liked, I’ll like. Except if it’s fiction. I never can get interested in things that didn’t happen to people who never lived.

Find Another Book

Search by title or author to explore highlights from other books.

Try it with your highlights

Create your account, add your highlights and see how Screvi can change the way you read.

Try It With Your Highlights14-day free trial. No credit card required.