Book Off, second-hand books ブックオフ
- Veröffentlicht am : 05/11/2018
- Von : S.R.
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La culture à petit prix
L'enseigne jaune deBook Off trône dans les rues de très nombreuses villes au Japon,devenant avec le temps aussi iconique que des chaînes derestauration comme Mos Burger ou le roi du discount Don Quijote.Ouvrez la porte d'un de ces magasins et passez entre les lycéens entrain de lire debout leur manga favori pour découvrir les multiplespossibilités de Book Off.
The all-round cultural store
Book Off is a chain of stores selling second-hand cultural products, like the network of French bookshops Gibert Joseph.
Founded in Japan in 1991, it sells manga, books, CDs, other DVDs, video games, and game consoles. It is one of the rare economic successes of the archipelago during the "lost decade," which followed the bursting of the Japanese speculative bubble in the early 90s.
Read also: Cheap shopping in Japan.
A quality offer
The Book Off store offer is distinguished by the quality of the products, which are clean, perfectly preserved, and display little difference from new products. In addition, the prices defy all competition.
Many mangas are sold at around 300 yen ($2.50/2€), while some titles are even offered at about 100 yen (less than $1/1€). Manga is also sold in packs of 20~25, further reducing costs. Classic books are sold between 30 and 50% less than their new price.
A substantial settlement
In 2018, Book Off had 807 stores at the archipelago level. It is not uncommon to find several chain establishments within the same city. Even beyond the example of Tokyo, where there are more than sixty stores, there are about ten Book Offs in Osaka, and a city the size of Kanazawa also has several.
Note that there is also 13 Book Off stores abroad, including two in Paris. One of them is located a few minutes' walk from the Japan Experience Tokyo office!
Read also: Book Off of Sanjô Keihan Station.
Readers' meeting
Book Off owes its special cachet in Japanese culture to its vast rows of mangas in front of which stand customers who, stretching out their hands, look for then open their favorite work and thus remain for a long time to devour entire volumes. It can be young college or high school students and salarymen who come to stroll through the large bays of the store and reopen a manga to dig into it a little dilettante pleasure.
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