Showing posts with label Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Street. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2011

Backstreet Boys tickets sell online Saturday

The U.S. male pop band Backstreet Boys will perform in Vietnam in March, following their tour to Latin America. The American band said on its website that it expected a total of 55,000 concert attendees in HCMC on March 24 and 26 in Hanoi.

According to the organizer, Water Buffalo Productions, the show is the same as the one performed on other stops during the band’s worldwide This Is Us Tour. The four members of the group, Nick Carter, Howie Dorough, Brian Littrell and A. J. McLean, will perform at Military Zone 7 Stadium in HCMC on March 24 and My Dinh National Stadium in Hanoi on March 26.

The company says the tickets will sell online from Saturday via the site www.bsb.com.vn.

For online bookings, bring ID card or passport to pay and get tickets. The tickets will be available in Hanoi at: MegaStar VinCom City Towers, Floor 6 VinCom City Towers, 191 Ba Trieu, Hai Ba Trung Street; 11B Tran Quoc Toan Street; 20 Phan Dinh Phung; VIT Building, 519 Kim Ma Street; My Dinh National Stadium, Tu Liem District; and in HCMC at: 75 Pasteur, District 1; Galaxy Nguyen Du Cineplex, 116 Nguyen Du, District 1; Galaxy Tan Binh, 246 Nguyen Hong Dao Street, Tan Binh District; MegaStar Hung Vuong, 126 Hung Vuong Street, District 5. In addition, tickets will be available at MegaStar Cineplexes in Hai Phong and Bien Hoa. 

Tickets range from VND500,000 to VND2 million each.

Backstreet Boys will have two meet-and-greet sessions with fans. The “Fan Meet and greet” will take place on March 23 and the “VIP Party” will be March 25.

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Saturday, January 29, 2011

HCM City displays Tet culture

Signature tradition: Artists at work at the calligraphy market in front of the Youth Cultural House on Pham Ngoc Thach Street in HCM City's District 1. — VNS File Photo

Signature tradition: Artists at work at the calligraphy market in front of the Youth Cultural House on Pham Ngoc Thach Street in HCM City's District 1. — VNS File Photo

HCM CITY — HCM City is preparing for traditional Tet (Lunar New Year) with music shows, charity activities, art exhibitions and calligraphy markets.

The Youth Cultural House has launched a Tet Festival for city residents, especially for students who cannot return to their hometowns during Lunar New Year festivities.

Famous singers including Phuong Thanh, Hien Thuc and Quang Linh will perform at a music show at the cultural house today.

At the Aám Tinh Mua Xuan (Warm Spring) concert, an auction of Viet Nam's largest paper crane, made of 18,000 cranes, will be held to raise funds for gifts for 15,000 poor children and people.

The city's teenagers will have a chance to learn how to make the southern Viet Nam's traditional cylindrical glutinous race cake, banh tet, at the Banh Tet Festival, held next Monday.

All cakes which are made at the event will be given to needy children.

The cultural house will also organise dozens of cultural, entertainment and sports activities until February 7.

The city's Information and Communications Department, for the first time, will host a book exhibition on Mac Thi Buoi Street, a section from Dong Khoi Street to Nguyen Hue Street, from January 31 to February 6.

The Uoc Mo (Wish) exhibition will display more than 1,000 titles of children books and thousands of other titles from eight publishers and distributors, including the HCM City Book Distribution Corporation (FAHASA), Dai Truong Phat Company, Vinabook, Sai Gon Media, the General Science Library, and Cuu Duc, Nhan Van and Thanh Nghia bookstores.

Visitors can read books on-site, borrow them, or bring their own books and exchange for others at the exhibition.

Calligraphy

As one of Vietnamese traditions, before Tet, people visit calligraphers (ong do) asking for New Year greetings that wish people happiness, healthy, wealth or longevity.

Nearly 100 young and old calligraphers wearing the traditional Vietnamese costume ao dai (traditional long dress) gathered on the city's main streets last Saturday to compose the greetings in black and yellow ink on red paper.

As usual, a red covering is on the front of the Labourer's Cultural House on Nguyen Thi Minh Khai Street in District 3.

The annual calligraphy market features 35 stalls, including members of the cultural house's Vietnamese Calligraphy Club and students from city universities.

Thanh Loc, a tour guide of Viettravel, said he took part in the event when it was first launched four years ago.

"However, it took me 10 years to practise calligraphy to have confidence in selling calligraphy to people," he said.

Another calligraphy market in front of the city's Youth Cultural House on Pham Ngoc Thach Street features more than 30 artists from the cultural house's calligraphy club and neighbouring provinces.

Apart from calligraphy, ink and wash paintings, oil paintings and embroidered paintings with calligraphy are also displayed at the market.

The calligraphy works and paintings sell for VND50,000 – 1,000,000 (US$2.5 – 50), depending on the craftsmanship, size, and materials.

Both markets will remain open until February 2 (Lunar New Year's Eve). — VNS

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

HCM City to hold Lunar New Year festival

Party time: The 3D design of the gate on Nguyen Hue Flower Street is set to help kick off the Tet Tan Mao (New Year of the Cat) Festival in HCM City's centre. — File Photo

Party time: The 3D design of the gate on Nguyen Hue Flower Street is set to help kick off the Tet Tan Mao (New Year of the Cat) Festival in HCM City's centre. — File Photo

HCM CITY — The HCM City People's Committee has assigned local tour company Saigontourist Holding Company and other administrative agencies to organise the Tet Tan Mao (Lunar New Year of the Cat) Festival in the city's downtown.

Since the first time it was held in 2004, Tet Giap Than (Lunar New Year of the Monkey), the Nguyen Hue Flower Street and the related Banh Tet (cylindrical glutinous rice cake) Festival has been a hit with residents and tourists in HCM City.

The event has become one of the city's unique cultural offerings, and is welcomed by both local and overseas Vietnamese.

It also offers a great sightseeing opportunities for tourists coming to HCM City during the Tet holiday.

Tet Tan Mao holiday is going to be bigger and better than ever with lots of interesting activities: Nguyen Hue Flower Street and Banh Tet Festival, fireworks, special lighting, snapshots of New Year, The Face of Tet decoration contest and door shows.

The eighth Nguyen Hue Flower Street will be held from January 31 until February 6 (December 28 – January 4 on the lunar calendar) and will be hosted in the area along Nguyen Hue Boulevard from City Hall to the Sai Gon River.

It will be closed to traffic for the holiday week.

In addition, the nearby Le Loi Street from Quach Thi Trang Square to the Municipal Theatre will be open for pedestrians from 6-11pm on February 6.
This year's Flower Street is titled New Heights as the city strives for higher achievements in economy, politics and society.

The street will be divided into several smaller parts decorated in different spring themes: Hon Viet (Viet Nam's Soul), Tet Phuong Nam (Southern Tet), Noi Vong Tay Lon (Circle of Unity), Tam Cao Moi (New Height), and Xuan An Vui (Happy and Peaceful Spring).

The entire street will be especially colourful, illuminated by a myriad colour.

Attractions will include flower arrangements, a wishing pond to collect money for charity, coffee stalls, folk music and games.

The Banh Tet Festival from January 26 to 31 is jointly organised by all the city's 24 districts.

Activities will include a banh tet cooking contest and a 10,000 banh tet gift programme for disadvantaged children and alms houses in the city, organised by Saigontourist in co-operation with the HCM City Department of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs, and Dam Sen Cultural Park.

The fireworks displays on Lunar New Year's Eve (February 2) will take place at eight places around the city while Le Loi and Dong Khoi streets will be decorated with hundreds of lights from January 26 to February 14.
Saigontourist will also hold the The Face of Tet decoration contest and door shows, and a series of performances including lion dances, folk music, and drumming at the Caravelle, Rex, Majestic, Grand, Continental, Kim Do, Oscar, Bong Sen and Palace hotels from January 31 to February 6. — VNS

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Monday, January 17, 2011

Tamarind Street And Its Landmarks

Nguyen Du Street in HCM City’s District 1 has been named unofficially as “the street of tamarind leaves”

The tropical tamarind is among the trees popular on the streets of Saigon. So, it will take one some time to make a full list of streets in HCM City whose sidewalks are lined with rows of tamarind trees—Pham Ngoc Thach, Ly Tu Trong, Hai Ba Trung, Vo Van Tan, Le Thanh Ton and Le Quy Don, to name just a few. Among these names, one stands out: Nguyen Du Street in District 1.

Archives show that the tamarind was first introduced into Saigon by the French authorities about 150 years ago. Saigon Stories does not know for sure how old are the tamarinds on Nguyen Du are. But some are old enough to provide pedestrians with shadowy walkways beneath. The tamarind-lined street has been sources of inspiration for generations of Vietnamese poets and poetesses who praised romantic love. Imagine walking hand in hand with your sweetheart on the sidewalk of the street while tiny tamarind leaves are blowing in the wind. Now it’s time for you to say, “Spring is here, and romance is in the air.”

Historically, Nguyen Du was an old street first built by the French authorities during the time Vietnam was under French domination. It then consisted of two different streets. The first, name Lucien Mossard, ran from Nguyen Binh Khiem Street to what is now Hai Ba Trung Street. The second, Taberd Street, was the rest of the current street. In 1955, the Saigon regime joined the two and renamed it Nguyen Du.

The present 2-km-long street starts from Nguyen Binh Khiem in District 1, and stops at Cach Mang Thang Tam, also in the same district. However, the section of Nguyen Du from Ton Duc Thang Boulevard to Nguyen Binh Khiem Street has been blocked from public access.

By chance, the street lends its romanticism to its own name. Nguyen Du (1765-1820) is one of Vietnam’s greatest poets. The 3,254-line Truyn Kiu (The Tale of Kieu), the poet’s immortal work, is a sad romance in verse, which has moved generations of Vietnamese in love. Excerpts of Truyn Kiu are classic examples of Vietnamese poetic beauty, which have found their ways to official textbooks in the country.

Perhaps the most romantic section of the street extends from the intersection of Nguyen Du and Dong Khoi streets to its end on Cach Mang Thang Tam. The wide sidewalk, particularly the section on the side of the Reunification Palace—the Presidential Palace of the former Saigon regime, is an ideal place for joggers.
In addition to the Reunification Palace, Nguyen Du has other landmarks, too. Walk up the street from the palace toward Hai Ba Trung Street and you’ll pass the Saigon Notre Dame Cathedral before reaching the HCM City Central Post Office. Then cross Hai Ba Trung Street and you’ll arrive at the InterContinental Asiana Saigon, one of the biggest hotels in town.

If you walk down the palace toward Cach Mang Thang Tam Street, you’ll pass the HCM City Conservatory on the right. It is on the opposite side of the South Korean Consulate General. Take just a few steps further you’ll arrive at the gate of Tao Dan Park, arguably Saigon’s most famous park.

Some nostalgic Saigonese who must live away from their hometown have referred to their city as “the city of flying tamarind leaves.” You would agree with them if you visit Nguyen Du Street.

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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

New taste of seafood at nydc

The nydc (New York dessert café) a favorite rendezvous for youth has launched its new seafood menu featuring salmon, shrimp and squid accompanied with special sauces.

The new menu has three dishes including a fresh salmon steak sandwich with beetroot sauce, a special sauce that neutralizes the fishy smell and stimulates the appetite for VND149,000; “Surf and turf”, a new combination of shrimp and beef for VND299,000 and assorted seafood fritters with crispy potatoes and tartar sauce for VND129,000. A highlight of the menu is the “Surf and turf” featuring delicious grilled shrimps served with thermidor sauce and grilled Australian beef.

Spend some time this weekend to try the new taste of seafood with friends and families in a fresh friendly environment at nydc.

nydc is at the Metropolitan, 235 Dong Khoi Street, District 1; the Vincom Center at 72 Le Thanh Ton Street, District 1; the NowZone at 235 Nguyen Van Cu Street District 5 ; the Crescent at 107 Ton Dat Tien Street, District 7; and the Parkson Flemington at 184 Le Dai Hanh Street, District 1.

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New taste of seafood at nydc

The nydc (New York dessert café) a favorite rendezvous for youth has launched its new seafood menu featuring salmon, shrimp and squid accompanied with special sauces.

The new menu has three dishes including a fresh salmon steak sandwich with beetroot sauce, a special sauce that neutralizes the fishy smell and stimulates the appetite for VND149,000; “Surf and turf”, a new combination of shrimp and beef for VND299,000 and assorted seafood fritters with crispy potatoes and tartar sauce for VND129,000. A highlight of the menu is the “Surf and turf” featuring delicious grilled shrimps served with thermidor sauce and grilled Australian beef.

Spend some time this weekend to try the new taste of seafood with friends and families in a fresh friendly environment at nydc.

nydc is at the Metropolitan, 235 Dong Khoi Street, District 1; the Vincom Center at 72 Le Thanh Ton Street, District 1; the NowZone at 235 Nguyen Van Cu Street District 5 ; the Crescent at 107 Ton Dat Tien Street, District 7; and the Parkson Flemington at 184 Le Dai Hanh Street, District 1.

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Monday, September 27, 2010

HCMC street ushers in fine dining options

They say that British colonizers left their former ‘assets’ with railways, while the French left bread and coffee. The quip is intended to be derisive, pointing to superior British planning and nation-building. But Ho Chi Minh City’s foodies may well disagree.

This city of seven or so million is thankful for the culinary tradition the French left. Along with the one million or so Chinese immigrants, the southern spicier take on Vietnamese food and the multitude of cuisines that have sprung up around the city over the last decade of rampant economic growth, Ho Chi Minh City has become a Mecca for lovers of fine food.

Among the most popular streets for food lovers in the southern melting pot are the small, narrow and quiet streets of Ngo Van Nam, Le Thanh Ton, Suong Nguyet Anh in District 1 and Nguyen Thi Dieu, Le Ngo Cat and Le Quy Don in District 3.

The secret of their success could well lie in the three features they share, Sai Gon Tiep Thi (Sai Gon Marketing) newspaper reported.

They are all located near downtown but with less traffic and a wide variety of local and international dishes available at countless roadside restaurants, bars and coffee shops.

Le Quy Don is among the latest destinations to enter the list of popular food streets in the southern hub.

Within the last 12 months, countless restaurants, bars and café have been sprung up on the quiet street, luring customers from across the country to the small area for a change of scenery and new dinning experiences.

Opened in 1992, Cay Tre (Bamboo) Restaurant charms customers as a throwback Vietnamese garden villa.

The humble eatery which can serve up to 100 guests a time offers a wide range of traditional Vietnamese food ranging from simple, inexpensive daily treats to fancier dishes like chicken cooked in clay pots and hot pot made from seafood and flowers.

Seafood lovers can also head for Ngoc Suong Restaurant for some of its renowned specialties of fish salad, seafood spring rolls and raw oysters.

“Le Quy Don was a quiet street with little light and few people passing by,” Ngoc Cuong, marketing director of the restaurant, said when recalling when Ngoc Suong first opened its doors in 1996.

Pricey Au Manoir De Khai also found a place in an old villa at the corner of Le Quy Don and Dien Bien Phu Street and serves up well-to-do locals with a premium French dining experience.

Residents living on the street soon found their homes surrounded with a bevy of dinning options, from the most luxurious dishes to bizarre delicacies of ethnic minorities.

More menu options at the street’s eateries also mean new clientele.

A few years ago, most restaurants only attracted businessmen and expats but the venues nowadays are packed with office workers and young, hip locals.

The high concentration eateries and coffee shops on the small streets has also motivated the business owners to look for more menu options, services, new targeted customers and improve the venues’ designs to compete with their next-door rivals.

Nha Toi (My House) Restaurant takes pride in its barbecue dishes while Red Tile Restaurant lures diners with its collection of rare delicacies from rural areas of Cambodia such as mouse and dried fish and catfish from Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia.

The increasing number of food streets like Le Quy Don is, after all, a part of HCMC’s booming food industry where people are know for their love of food and their willingness to spend to prove it.
 

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Saturday, September 25, 2010

HCMC street ushers in fine dining options

They say that British colonizers left their former ‘assets’ with railways, while the French left bread and coffee. The quip is intended to be derisive, pointing to superior British planning and nation-building. But Ho Chi Minh City’s foodies may well disagree.

This city of seven or so million is thankful for the culinary tradition the French left. Along with the one million or so Chinese immigrants, the southern spicier take on Vietnamese food and the multitude of cuisines that have sprung up around the city over the last decade of rampant economic growth, Ho Chi Minh City has become a Mecca for lovers of fine food.

Among the most popular streets for food lovers in the southern melting pot are the small, narrow and quiet streets of Ngo Van Nam, Le Thanh Ton, Suong Nguyet Anh in District 1 and Nguyen Thi Dieu, Le Ngo Cat and Le Quy Don in District 3.

The secret of their success could well lie in the three features they share, Sai Gon Tiep Thi (Sai Gon Marketing) newspaper reported.

They are all located near downtown but with less traffic and a wide variety of local and international dishes available at countless roadside restaurants, bars and coffee shops.

Le Quy Don is among the latest destinations to enter the list of popular food streets in the southern hub.

Within the last 12 months, countless restaurants, bars and café have been sprung up on the quiet street, luring customers from across the country to the small area for a change of scenery and new dinning experiences.

Opened in 1992, Cay Tre (Bamboo) Restaurant charms customers as a throwback Vietnamese garden villa.

The humble eatery which can serve up to 100 guests a time offers a wide range of traditional Vietnamese food ranging from simple, inexpensive daily treats to fancier dishes like chicken cooked in clay pots and hot pot made from seafood and flowers.

Seafood lovers can also head for Ngoc Suong Restaurant for some of its renowned specialties of fish salad, seafood spring rolls and raw oysters.

“Le Quy Don was a quiet street with little light and few people passing by,” Ngoc Cuong, marketing director of the restaurant, said when recalling when Ngoc Suong first opened its doors in 1996.

Pricey Au Manoir De Khai also found a place in an old villa at the corner of Le Quy Don and Dien Bien Phu Street and serves up well-to-do locals with a premium French dining experience.

Residents living on the street soon found their homes surrounded with a bevy of dinning options, from the most luxurious dishes to bizarre delicacies of ethnic minorities.

More menu options at the street’s eateries also mean new clientele.

A few years ago, most restaurants only attracted businessmen and expats but the venues nowadays are packed with office workers and young, hip locals.

The high concentration eateries and coffee shops on the small streets has also motivated the business owners to look for more menu options, services, new targeted customers and improve the venues’ designs to compete with their next-door rivals.

Nha Toi (My House) Restaurant takes pride in its barbecue dishes while Red Tile Restaurant lures diners with its collection of rare delicacies from rural areas of Cambodia such as mouse and dried fish and catfish from Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia.

The increasing number of food streets like Le Quy Don is, after all, a part of HCMC’s booming food industry where people are know for their love of food and their willingness to spend to prove it.
 

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Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Hanoi indulges in reading habit

pho sach Dinh Le
Private bookstores on Ha Noi's Dinh Le Street offer a variety of publications at reasonable price for people of all ages

I met Pham Kim Ngan, a 20-year-old student, on a summer afternoon in a bookstore in Dinh Le Street.

"The reading culture is not dying," Ngan said. "Not in Hanoi anyway."

I had to agree with her. There were no parking spaces on the footpath and the bookstore was packed with people.

Dinh Le lies in the bustling Old Quarter, where the city's signature dry-zone mahogany trees spread their canopies to shield the street from the scorching sun. You can find people of all ages circling Dinh Le Street at any hour to find a literary treat for the week.

"It's just another weekend here," said Nguyen Van Trung, a 23-year-old shop attendant.

Walking into one of the 20-something bookstores in Dinh Le Street, I was surprised by the sheer variety of books on display. On both sides as well as in the middle of the cramped room were three gigantic shelves with what seemed to be every genre of books there is, from the great love stories of Wuthering Heights and Gone with the Wind to the valuable business lessons from Rich Dad, Poor Dad or What They Don't Teach You in Harvard Business School.

Ngan lives far from the area, but still comes to her favourite store. She bought her first book there eight years ago and became a regular.

"The shop sells genuine publications at prices 20-30 per cent lower than elsewhere. Shopping for literature in such a cultural hotspot feels great," she said.

Despite 52 years difference in age, Ngan and Pham Quoc Huy, a 73 year-old retired teacher, are on the same page when it comes to store choices. Huy has been shopping for books in Dinh Le Street for ages. As soon as he walks into the shop, the sales girl warmly welcomes him and introduces new titles he might be interested in.

"I always shop here because of the variety of titles and the discount," Huy said.

The street faces Hoan Kiem Post Office while on the other side, in Trang Tien Street, there is the Books and Publishing Corporation.

A few decades ago, there used to be three nationally famous bookstores in the area: Quoc Van (National Language), Ngoai Van (Foreign Language) and Nhan Dan (People). Today, more than 20 stores, providing tens of thousands of book titles, have taken over the street.

A regular customer, Phan Viet Nga, 29, said whenever he felt low, he'd wander around Dinh Le Street. I don't look for any books in particular, but if I'm lucky, I will find one that speaks to me."

Like Nga, some people go to the area without intending to buy anything.

"Looking at the thousands of colourful books and no-less-colourful titles is very cheering," Nga said.

In the corner of the bookstore came a child's laughter. Seconds later, Phan Quang Huy, 6, went running to his mother holding a colourful comic book.

"Mum please buy me this," Huy pleaded.

His mother, La Thanh Truc, was checking out the translated version of Alone in Berlin.
"Too many comic books might be bad for the kids, but how can you say no to those puppy eyes?" Truc said.

"I bring my son here every Sunday afternoon, and every time I secretly hope that he will come running to me with any kind of book other than a comic," she said, "but it is fine, as long as he still loves reading."

As the city heads inexorably towards modernisation, it's nice to know that in the Old Quarter's jungle of buzzing bars and restaurants there are busy shops in Dinh Le Street in which one can indulge in an age-old pasttime: reading.

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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Ha Noi indulges in reading habit

by Nguyen Le Hung

Bibliophile's dream: Private bookstores on Ha Noi's Dinh Le Street offer a variety of publications at reasonable price for people of all ages. — VNS Photo Truong Vi

Bibliophile's dream: Private bookstores on Ha Noi's Dinh Le Street offer a variety of publications at reasonable price for people of all ages. — VNS Photo Truong Vi

HA NOI — I met Pham Kim Ngan, a 20-year-old student, on a summer afternoon in a bookstore in Dinh Le Street.

"The reading culture is not dying," Ngan said. "Not in Ha Noi anyway."

I had to agree with her. There were no parking spaces on the footpath and the bookstore was packed with people

Dinh Le lies in the bustling Old Quarter, where the city's signature dry-zone mahogany trees spread their canopies to shield the street from the scorching sun. You can find people of all ages circling Dinh Le Street at any hour to find a literary treat for the week.

"It's just another weekend here," said Nguyen Van Trung, a 23-year-old shop attendant.

Walking into one of the 20-something bookstores in Dinh Le Street, I was surprised by the sheer variety of books on display. On both sides as well as in the middle of the cramped room were three gigantic shelves with what seemed to be every genre of books there is, from the great love stories of Wuthering Heights and Gone with the Wind to the valuable business lessons from Rich Dad, Poor Dad or What They Don't Teach You in Harvard Business School.

Ngan lives far from the area, but still comes to her favourite store. She bought her first book there eight years ago and became a regular.

"The shop sells genuine publications at prices 20-30 per cent lower than elsewhere. Shopping for literature in such a cultural hotspot feels great," she said.

Despite 52 years difference in age, Ngan and Pham Quoc Huy, a 73 year-old retired teacher, are on the same page when it comes to store choices. Huy has been shopping for books in Dinh Le Street for ages. As soon as he walks into the shop, the sales girl warmly welcomes him and introduces new titles he might be interested in.

"I always shop here because of the variety of titles and the discount," Huy said.

The street faces Hoan Kiem Post Office while on the other side, in Trang Tien Street, there is the Books and Publishing Corporation.

A few decades ago, there used to be three nationally famous bookstores in the area: Quoc Van (National Language), Ngoai Van (Foreign Language) and Nhan Dan (People). Today, more than 20 stores, providing tens of thousands of book titles, have taken over the street.

A regular customer, Phan Viet Nga, 29, said whenever he felt low, he'd wander around Dinh Le Street. I don't look for any books in particular, but if I'm lucky, I will find one that speaks to me."

Like Nga, some people go to the area without intending to buy anything.

"Looking at the thousands of colourful books and no-less-colourful titles is very cheering," Nga said.

In the corner of the bookstore came a child's laughter. Seconds later, Phan Quang Huy, 6, went running to his mother holding a colourful comic book.

"Mum please buy me this," Huy pleaded.

His mother, La Thanh Truc, was checking out the translated version of Alone in Berlin.

"Too many comic books might be bad for the kids, but how can you say no to those puppy eyes?" Truc said.

"I bring my son here every Sunday afternoon, and every time I secretly hope that he will come running to me with any kind of book other than a comic," she said, "but it is fine, as long as he still loves reading."

As the city heads inexorably towards modernisation, it's nice to know that in the Old Quarter's jungle of buzzing bars and restaurants there are busy shops in Dinh Le Street in which one can indulge in an age-old pasttime: reading. — VNS

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