Anne Holman, Co-Owner
The King's English Bookshop, 1511 S 1500 E Salt Lake City, UT 84105
@kingsenglishbookshop
What kind of reader were you as a child? What was the first book that made a strong impression on you?
Typically read everything in sight including the cereal box kid. I don't remember the name of the book but it was about dinosaurs and it was more the magic of the words coming together than the storyline. It was the first time I realized, "I can read!".
What do you love about being able to work around books every day?My family moved around ALOT when I was growing up so the local library and books were my constant friends. Being able to have that still, as an adult, is a very special calling. After a quarter century of bookselling, I feel like the luckiest person in the world. We've been in business since 1977 and are working with our fourth generation of families; it's humbling and fantastic at the same time.
A great thing about living in my city is…It might surprise people to know that Salt Lake City has at least a dozen indie bookstores and even more in the surrounding counties. We're all friendly and work together to uplift literacy in town. We also have terrific city and county libraries and they are great partners to us as well.
What makes you happy? What are you grateful for?
My three granddaughters make me happy these days, especially when they are enjoying books. I was at my local library yesterday with Rosie who is 16 months old and she just kept walking around pulling books off the shelves and plopping in my lap to read them. I'm grateful for books and the power they have to open young people's minds. It will save us in the long run.
Tell us about some of your favorite books and writers of all time.
I read Outlander in 1998 when I was going through a divorce and it really took me out of my unhappy reality. Billy Collins poetry, Robert Macfarlane's nature writing, Julian Barnes' The Sense of an Ending for the shocking twist at the end. No better feeling than that. Claire Keegan, Small Things Like These; how brave can one man be? It's a long and ever-changing list.
As you reflect on your year of reading, what books have you recently enjoyed? And what books are you looking forward to in 2025?
I'm reading memoir for our regional trade association's Reading the West contest and some stand-outs for me are Whiskey Tender by Deborah Jackson Taffa, We Were Illegal by Jessica Goudeau, Docile by Hyeseung Song and Loose of Earth by Kathleen Dorothy Blackburn. And I must mention Things I Didn't Do by Karin Anderson (coming from Torrey House Press in August, 2025. Her previous novel, What Falls Away, is one of my all-time favorites about living in Utah and this new novel is a follow up to it. Can't wait!
Interviewed by Mia Funk