A Tale of Two Cities: Reading in High Gear
In a reflective essay published on April 17, 2026, author Anandi Mishra argues that Gothenburg may indeed be a reader’s paradise, especially when contrasted with the dwindling bookstore landscape of Delhi. Mishra notes a dramatic shift in her personal habits: while she struggled to finish 20 books a year in India’s capital, she devoured over 75 titles in 2025 after moving to Sweden’s southwest coast. This surge isn’t just personal; it reflects a broader national trend. University of Gothenburg research from April 2025 confirmed that record numbers of Swedes are currently engaging with books, either through physical copies or digital formats.
The Ecosystem of the “Spoiled” Reader
Mishra identifies several key factors that make the Gothenburg reader’s paradise so effective for bibliophiles:
The “Commute Culture”: Unlike the high-stress, call-heavy commutes in Delhi, Gothenburg’s public transport is a sanctuary for reading. Mishra describes the life-changing moment of realizing fellow commuters were reading ebooks horizontally on their phones, shifting her own perspective on digital reading.
Public Libraries: The Stadsbiblioteket at Götaplatsen is highlighted as a pivotal resource, offering vast holdings in both Swedish and English, alongside a café praised for the city’s best croissants.
Neighborhood Treasures: Neighborhoods like Majorna are home to specialized gems like Mariaplans Antikvariat, which offers an eclectic mix of everything from existentialism to the Bhagavad Gita. Other mentions include Läs is More, which caters to genre-specific tastes like romantasy and sci-fi.
Overcoming the “Disconnect”
The essay touches on the heartbreak of losing beloved Indian spaces like Café Turtle and Kunzum Vasant Vihar, which have struggled to “hold space for looking and lingering.” In Gothenburg, Mishra found a cure for the “disconnect” she felt in India, where bookstores often prioritized social media bestsellers over indie European or British titles. In Sweden, she discovered a fresh affinity for Scandinavian literary fiction—specifically the works of Helle Helle, Olga Ravn, and Karl Ove Knausgård—which she finds refreshingly honest and far removed from the “buzz of trends.”
Final Verdict: The Power of Serendipity
While Mishra misses the sight of Hindi typeface on her morning commute, she concludes that the Gothenburg reader’s paradise thrives on serendipity. Whether it’s spotting a teenager reading Kierkegaard on a tram or ambling through a library aisle to find a hardback on female desire, the city fosters a “private pleasure” that felt impossible in the 12-hour-workday culture of Delhi. For Mishra, Gothenburg isn’t just a place to live; it’s a place to finally, deeply read.
Read more; The Locked Diary: How a Fuzzy Capybara is Rewriting Literacy at the Book Fair
READER’S MAP OF GOTHENBURG:
Must-Visit Library: Stadsbiblioteket (Götaplatsen)
Hipster Haven: Mariaplans Antikvariat (Majorna)
Genre Spot: Läs is More (City Centre)
Essential Experience: Reading on the tram during a cold, sunny Saturday.
