Amazon, which launched as an online bookseller in 1995 but which now sells everything from designer clothes to groceries, bided its time before venturing into the US cultural capital. It launched brick and mortar bookstores in six other cities first, starting in its hometown Seattle in 2015.
"You don't run a marathon before you run a 5K," said Jennifer Cast, vice president of Amazon Books. "We wanted some time to learn and we also really wanted the right spot."
The offerings are limited to just 3,000 titles, none of which have received fewer than four out of five stars by Amazon's online customers, who are invited to post their own reviews on the website.
There is also a "Page Turners" section dedicated to books that -- according to Amazon data -- customers have devoured in three days or less, and another to preferences of customers in the New York area.
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"It's just really exciting... That's so unusual," says freelance writer and mom of two Jennifer Rok.
"I always buy books online, so I don't know how frequently I will buy here as opposed to on the internet, but I missed just browsing," she said.
For Jannicke Remme, a researcher and tourist from Norway, it was a chance to browse a brick and mortar Amazon store not yet available in Europe. But she was less enthusiastic about the selection.
Amazon plans to open 13 more brick and mortar bookstores in the United States before the end of the year, including a second one in New York, due to open this summer.