0:00:09.205,0:00:13.916 I'm Craig and with a group[br]of beautiful friends that I love, 0:00:13.916,0:00:18.627 and at this moment miss very much,[br]I run a small bookshop 0:00:18.627,0:00:23.338 in the town of Oia, on the island[br]of Santorini in the south of Greece. 0:00:23.338,0:00:31.383 And we do philosophy books,[br]and we do some Greek history 0:00:31.383,0:00:35.336 and general non fiction,[br]we do travel logs and journals. 0:00:35.336,0:00:42.505 We print our own books once in a while and[br]we celebrate tzatziki at every opportunity, 0:00:42.505,0:00:47.736 and we feed it to people[br]on our terrace until they explode. 0:00:47.736,0:00:51.029 We have readings[br]in the evenings in the shop 0:00:51.029,0:00:55.306 and we make bonfires[br]on the terrace at night. 0:00:56.353,0:01:03.339 But mostly we specialize in fiction. 0:01:03.339,0:01:04.710 When the rare occasion does come, 0:01:04.710,0:01:08.451 that someone offers to give me money[br]in exchange for a book and I perk up, 0:01:08.451,0:01:13.455 they're generally putting a story[br]on the table and saying "I'd like this" 0:01:13.455,0:01:19.178 and then more often than not,[br]they'll ask "What are you doing here?", 0:01:19.178,0:01:23.393 "Who are you?" and sometimes[br]they'll ask "Do you take dollars?" 0:01:23.393,0:01:26.227 or "Where are your copies[br]of 'Fifty shades of grey'?" 0:01:26.243,0:01:27.535 (Laughter) 0:01:27.535,0:01:29.512 (Greek): Bullshit 0:01:29.512,0:01:37.411 (Laughter)[br](Applause) 0:01:37.411,0:01:40.512 And if I am in the mood[br]and if I've had a glass of wine 0:01:40.512,0:01:48.429 or I'll offer a glass of wine[br]to the customer and we'll sit down and, 0:01:48.429,0:01:51.459 I'll tell them a little bit of stories. 0:01:51.459,0:01:56.966 And over the years we've had a thousand[br]tellings of the story over and over. 0:01:56.966,0:01:59.472 And people come[br]and ask for our nativity story 0:01:59.472,0:02:04.025 and we have a thousand alternations of it,[br]and to keep us awake and alert, 0:02:04.025,0:02:07.965 and keep our muscle taught,[br]sometimes, we'll, just for fun, 0:02:07.965,0:02:12.281 throw in little twists on the truth,[br]to see what we can slip by a customer 0:02:12.281,0:02:14.904 that we're probably[br]never gonna see again. 0:02:14.904,0:02:17.698 So I'll tell them that I was born[br]in Mississippi instead of Tennessee, 0:02:17.698,0:02:21.259 or I'll tell them that I got to college[br]on a basketball scholarship 0:02:21.259,0:02:28.327 or I'll tell them that I was one of the[br]founders of Facebook and watch them shake. 0:02:30.051,0:02:33.585 And I mean, this is what we do, 0:02:33.585,0:02:39.451 our stock and trade, honestly 75%[br]and more of our day is spent 0:02:39.451,0:02:44.193 selling and telling[br]stories at the bookshop. 0:02:44.502,0:02:49.120 And so, when I was invited here,[br]I had actually to spin and tell our story. 0:02:49.120,0:02:51.877 I had to actually think for a minute,[br]because I wanted to make sure 0:02:51.877,0:02:56.451 that I didn't mess up,[br]get the facts wrong. 0:02:57.051,0:02:59.346 After a while, you start to dissociate yourself 0:02:59.346,0:03:03.474 and the story becomes something[br]that you weren't even there. 0:03:03.474,0:03:06.295 You remember it more[br]as a story that you've told, 0:03:06.295,0:03:07.915 than a story that you've actually lived. 0:03:07.915,0:03:12.830 So I came back to this instant[br]and then I thought OK, 0:03:12.830,0:03:17.263 I should probably tell something[br]much more proximate to the truth here. 0:03:17.263,0:03:20.090 But then I realized,[br]probably the quickest way 0:03:20.090,0:03:22.917 to quickly tell that would be to base it 0:03:22.917,0:03:25.746 on the most important lies[br]that we encountered, 0:03:25.746,0:03:30.285 and that we told ourselves[br]to make this bookshop happen. 0:03:30.285,0:03:32.825 So indulge me for a couple of minutes, 0:03:32.825,0:03:40.200 and I'll give you the quick story of how[br]we did this or are doing this so far. 0:03:41.370,0:03:43.335 The way that I'll set it up, so yeah, 0:03:43.335,0:03:46.101 we start printing these books[br]in the back room of the shop, 0:03:46.101,0:03:51.513 just on our own as a little money maker[br]on the side to make ends meet, 0:03:51.513,0:03:53.165 because we've always wanted to do it. 0:03:53.165,0:03:55.927 And so we were looking at old titles[br]in the public domain 0:03:55.927,0:04:00.859 of favourite authors of ours,[br]and one of the fellows in our crew, 0:04:00.859,0:04:06.084 Chris Bloomfield, that's Bloomfield[br]with two O's he wanted me to mention, 0:04:06.084,0:04:10.453 Chris Bloomfield came across this[br]old essay that this very handsome man, 0:04:10.453,0:04:15.680 Mark Twain, wrote for a speech competition[br]in Connecticut back in the 1880s I believe. 0:04:15.680,0:04:19.984 He did not win the prize,[br]but it's a beautiful little essay. 0:04:19.984,0:04:22.827 And there is this one little part of it[br]that I'll just launch off of it 0:04:22.827,0:04:24.395 and if you want to read along with me,[br]it says, 0:04:24.395,0:04:26.587 "Lying is universal. We all do it." 0:04:26.587,0:04:29.518 And we can argue that later, but I think[br]everyone, we're on the same team here. 0:04:29.518,0:04:32.328 "Therefore, the wise thing is for us[br]to diligently train ourselves 0:04:32.328,0:04:35.148 to lie thoughtfully, juduciously;[br]to lie with a good object, 0:04:35.148,0:04:39.045 and not an evil one; to lie[br]for others' advantage, and not our own; 0:04:39.045,0:04:43.526 to lie healingly, charitably, humanely,[br]not cruelly, hurtfully, maliciously; 0:04:43.526,0:04:47.604 to lie gracefully and graciously,[br]not awkwardly and clumsily… 0:04:47.604,0:04:51.105 Then shall we be rid of the rank[br]pestilent truth that is rotting the land; 0:04:51.105,0:04:54.761 then shall we be great[br]and good and beautiful." 0:04:54.761,0:04:58.540 And so we looked at each other[br]and we said "Yeah, we're doing this, yeah." 0:04:58.540,0:05:02.151 (Laughter) 0:05:02.151,0:05:06.581 So let me tell you a little[br]about the best lies of all, 0:05:06.581,0:05:11.110 and give you a sense of how[br]we came to be here from far away. 0:05:11.011,0:05:13.640 I first came to Santorini[br]by chance, by coincidence, 0:05:13.640,0:05:16.269 got on the first boat out of Pireaus, 0:05:16.269,0:05:18.900 when I was on holiday[br]with my friend Oliver. 0:05:18.900,0:05:24.256 This was back in 2002,[br]we came to this island, we sat down, 0:05:24.256,0:05:28.483 we poured ourselves a glass of wine,[br]poured some olive oil over some tomatoes, 0:05:28.483,0:05:31.532 and basically sat on our terrace[br]and stared out 0:05:31.532,0:05:34.581 with our mouths slightly gape[br]for several days 0:05:34.581,0:05:37.630 and then on about the fourth[br]or the fifth day we were there, 0:05:37.630,0:05:43.330 we ran out of books to read[br]and there was no bookshop. 0:05:43.330,0:05:49.429 So, we did some drinking instead. 0:05:49.429,0:05:51.823 And we were stumbling back[br]from a restaurant one night 0:05:51.823,0:05:53.478 and I just looked over at Oliver and said, 0:05:53.478,0:05:56.966 "Oliver, we gotta open a bookshop,[br]so that nobody else has to do this", 0:05:56.966,0:05:59.869 and he said "That's a great idea,[br]we'll call it Atlantis books", 0:05:59.869,0:06:03.925 and I said "That's not a very good name,[br]but we'll worry about that tomorrow." 0:06:03.925,0:06:06.103 And we woke up the next morning[br]and I said "Bookshop!", 0:06:06.103,0:06:09.219 and he said, "We're sober now",[br]and I said, "No, no, no, bookshop." 0:06:09.219,0:06:11.441 And so we went back to Athens, 0:06:11.441,0:06:14.970 we went to the commercial services[br]office at the Embassy, 0:06:14.970,0:06:17.450 and we met this lady, Eleni, 0:06:17.450,0:06:19.846 (Laughter) 0:06:19.846,0:06:25.139 and we said, "Can a couple of Americans[br]open a bookshop in Greece?" 0:06:25.139,0:06:30.655 and she looked at me and she said[br](Greek): "It will be easy". 0:06:30.655,0:06:32.600 (Laughter) 0:06:32.600,0:06:35.784 It will be easy. 0:06:35.784,0:06:39.600 You know, you go to the tax office[br]and they give you a paper with the stamp 0:06:39.600,0:06:41.508 and then you go[br]to the cash machine store 0:06:41.508,0:06:44.170 and you buy a cash machine[br]and you put it on your desk. 0:06:44.170,0:06:45.338 And (Greek) here you go,[br]you are a bookstore. 0:06:45.338,0:06:49.646 and so we said "Great, great"[br]and it was such a good answer 0:06:49.646,0:06:53.544 and we ran with it so fast that we didn't[br]even think to ask her a second opinion, 0:06:53.544,0:06:55.906 because when you get an answer[br]that's that good, 0:06:55.906,0:06:58.268 you're just going to run with it. 0:06:58.268,0:07:00.630 So we went back and we went about[br]the business of graduating from university 0:07:00.630,0:07:03.582 and got together[br]the best people that we knew, 0:07:03.582,0:07:08.552 the most incredible group of friends[br]and convinced them to come along with us 0:07:08.552,0:07:13.583 and one girl that during that time[br]I happen to fall in love with, 0:07:13.583,0:07:16.544 and told her that I was going to build her[br]a bookshop at an island 0:07:16.544,0:07:19.505 in the south of Greece. 0:07:19.505,0:07:21.154 And she said, "OK, if you do it, I'll come 0:07:21.154,0:07:22.803 and I'll make orange juice[br]for you in the mornings", 0:07:22.803,0:07:24.454 and I said, "Great, great." 0:07:24.454,0:07:27.575 So we got this crew together,[br]we took a van 0:07:27.575,0:07:30.696 from Cambridge, England, Christmas 2003 0:07:30.696,0:07:33.819 and we packed up the van[br]and drove it across the continent 0:07:33.819,0:07:38.642 and across the Alps and down to Greece[br]and we got to the tax office. 0:07:38.642,0:07:44.512 And they said (Greek):[br]"It's not going to be easy". 0:07:44.512,0:07:48.136 (Laughter)[br](Applause) 0:07:48.136,0:07:53.364 So that's another long and much more[br]horrifying TED talk to give you, 0:07:53.364,0:07:58.235 all the details on that.[br]We're on the same team here clearly. 0:07:58.235,0:08:00.610 (Laughter) 0:08:00.980,0:08:02.643 So we gridded our teeth,[br]and I sort of slouched 0:08:02.643,0:08:06.708 like in that picture[br]for several months going through 0:08:06.708,0:08:10.307 and, you know, in the meantime[br]we met the locals and the community. 0:08:10.307,0:08:12.075 We introduced ourselves to them, 0:08:12.075,0:08:14.306 and we said, "We are going to open[br]a bookstore" and they believed us, 0:08:14.306,0:08:16.276 and they start treating us[br]like booksellers. 0:08:16.276,0:08:20.205 And so we found[br]this hallucination of a building, 0:08:20.205,0:08:24.288 beneath the castle at the edge of town,[br]this old Venetian castle. 0:08:24.288,0:08:27.140 And we went to the landlord[br]and we said, "We want this building", 0:08:27.140,0:08:30.035 and he said "I will rent it to you,[br]but I will charge you way too much, 0:08:30.035,0:08:32.444 and then at the end of the year,[br]I will kick you out 0:08:32.444,0:08:34.853 so that I can build presidential suites", 0:08:34.853,0:08:37.264 and we said, "OK, fine, we'll take it,[br]it's too good to pass out." 0:08:37.264,0:08:39.617 And we're going do such a great job[br]the first year 0:08:39.617,0:08:41.970 that we're going to melt his heart 0:08:41.970,0:08:44.324 and it's a wonderful life all over again[br]and we'll be fine. 0:08:44.324,0:08:47.123 And even if it doesn't work,[br]if we're going to do it just once off, 0:08:47.123,0:08:49.556 and it's going to die anyhow, this is[br]the perfect place to have the experiment. 0:08:49.556,0:08:53.500 So, we got this building,[br]we adopted a dog and a cat, 0:08:53.500,0:08:57.444 we started putting up some shelves,[br]we started building some tables, 0:08:57.444,0:09:00.896 we got an old fisherman's boat[br]and put it on the terrace. 0:09:00.896,0:09:04.966 And our friends started coming, because[br]they heard that we actually had a place. 0:09:04.966,0:09:07.324 And I started writing[br]their names on the wall 0:09:07.324,0:09:10.205 just so we can keep track[br]of who is passing through. 0:09:10.205,0:09:14.632 If you can see there, that's just the very[br]inception of that back in the years. 0:09:14.632,0:09:16.627 And we got things going,[br]and we were ready to go. 0:09:16.627,0:09:19.918 And by Easter time more and more[br]of them where coming. 0:09:19.918,0:09:26.894 We had Easter Eve, we were ready to go[br]and our shop was very nearly there. 0:09:26.894,0:09:29.486 And we were laughing about how[br]this was really gonna happen 0:09:29.486,0:09:31.631 and that some day we were going[br]to have beautiful kids, like these, 0:09:31.631,0:09:34.670 and they were going[br]to run the shop for us. 0:09:34.670,0:09:39.345 And that first summer was glorious[br]and people came and we had a blast 0:09:39.345,0:09:41.096 and we sold good books. 0:09:41.096,0:09:46.078 And an old drinking buddy of mine[br]from Paris, this fellow Jeremy Mercer, 0:09:46.078,0:09:48.860 was asked to write an article[br]for the Guardian 0:09:48.860,0:09:51.642 about his ten favorite bookshops, 0:09:51.642,0:09:54.425 and on a lark he put us as his favourite. 0:09:54.425,0:09:59.418 And it turns out that journalists like[br]to copy what they read on the internet, 0:09:59.418,0:10:01.638 because soon we saw[br]ourselves popping up 0:10:01.638,0:10:05.212 on all these other lists[br]of the ten best bookshops in the world. 0:10:05.212,0:10:08.081 That's the only reason,[br]because I had this one friend, 0:10:08.081,0:10:09.580 who wrote something in the Guardian,[br]it comes up 0:10:09.580,0:10:14.802 and that's why everyone believes it.[br]Turns out we were just lucky.[br] 0:10:14.802,0:10:19.059 (Laughter)[br](Applause) 0:10:19.059,0:10:21.519 So, notice that there was[br]no beautiful girl there, 0:10:21.519,0:10:25.302 because in the time that it took[br]to raise that money and motivation 0:10:25.302,0:10:29.085 to actually get it going, she had fallen[br]in love with someone else, 0:10:29.085,0:10:32.446 and got off and I didn't know what to end. 0:10:32.446,0:10:35.807 We were getting close[br]to the end of the year, 0:10:35.807,0:10:39.169 we could hear the footsteps[br]of the landlord, coming closer and closer. 0:10:39.169,0:10:42.720 And we were going to go home,[br]and then another beautiful girl walked in 0:10:42.072,0:10:44.975 and I just completely forgot about[br]anybody else who I had ever seen. 0:10:44.975,0:10:47.880 And I said we were going to fight,[br]we're going to come back. 0:10:47.880,0:10:49.485 We were going to find,[br]we were going to built another one. 0:10:49.485,0:10:51.900 I'm going to build it for her. 0:10:51.090,0:10:52.696 She is the one that[br]I was going to build it for all along. 0:10:52.696,0:10:55.928 (Audience): Bravo![br](Applause) 0:10:55.928,0:10:58.621 And then the landlord[br]came and kicked us out. 0:10:58.621,0:11:02.391 (Laughter) 0:11:03.438,0:11:06.425 And the next winter, so over the winter[br]we found another place, 0:11:06.425,0:11:09.123 that we haven't even noticed[br]the year before, this little dingy place. 0:11:09.123,0:11:14.529 And we rented that and we started[br]painting and bashing down walls, 0:11:14.529,0:11:17.264 and deliberating where we're going[br]to put the new shelves. 0:11:17.264,0:11:19.460 and bashing down more rocks. 0:11:19.460,0:11:22.211 You have to be ambitious to do[br]this kind of thing once by hand, 0:11:22.211,0:11:25.107 but you go a little bit crazy[br]the second time it turns out 0:11:25.107,0:11:30.650 and by Easter year two we had a new shop,[br]and the books were better, 0:11:30.650,0:11:35.913 and they were more of them[br]and we sit upon our terrace, 0:11:35.913,0:11:39.929 and we began to cruise,[br]and we sold our books. 0:11:39.929,0:11:44.392 And we got a new cat[br]and we put the cat to work and we... 0:11:44.392,0:11:50.520 (Laughter)[br](Applause) 0:11:50.520,0:11:55.512 We got a crew to start coming back, 0:11:55.512,0:11:58.257 and Chris was holding court[br]in the back room, there he is. 0:11:58.257,0:12:00.573 And we served up some[br]more tzatziki, as we do. 0:12:00.573,0:12:03.814 And we have more readings[br]and Chris played his cello. 0:12:03.814,0:12:07.374 And we had bonfires in the evening[br]and we met new friends. 0:12:07.374,0:12:11.195 And we danced among the bookshelves[br]in the evenings until the sun came up. 0:12:11.195,0:12:17.187 And we laughed and we argued about[br]which was the most beautiful bookjacket. 0:12:17.187,0:12:24.163 And we pontificated and we watched[br]as things got a bit hairier on 2008-2009. 0:12:24.163,0:12:26.636 Since then it's been a series[br]of us trying to do 0:12:26.636,0:12:29.109 whatever we could creatively[br]to stay alive, 0:12:29.109,0:12:31.584 as I'm sure many of you can relate. 0:12:31.584,0:12:34.286 And somehow every year we have[br]this conversation "Is this the end?" 0:12:34.286,0:12:38.006 And we say "Maybe it is" and the we say[br]"Well, what can we do?" and we wait. 0:12:38.006,0:12:42.024 I think it's since 2002 when we first[br]came up with this idea. 0:12:42.024,0:12:46.308 We said "We're just going to run with this[br]until there is a wall that we bash into", 0:12:46.308,0:12:49.674 and we haven't bashed into it yet. 0:12:49.674,0:12:52.416 We started printing our own books[br]in the back room of the shop like I said 0:12:52.416,0:12:56.698 and that's gone larger and[br]that's helped to supplement where, 0:12:56.698,0:13:00.210 we are figuring any sort of ways[br]that we can, to streamline our operation, 0:13:00.210,0:13:05.815 to find new and better and more beautiful[br]and rarer books and it keeps us busy. 0:13:05.815,0:13:12.071 And we're still laughing about maybe[br]our kids will run it some day. 0:13:16.992,0:13:23.092 So, I would say, that in these days,[br]if you find yourselves in the situation 0:13:23.092,0:13:26.169 that we're in, it's now[br]the end of the tourist season 0:13:26.169,0:13:28.282 and I'm looking at the books[br]and I'm going to go back to Santorini 0:13:28.282,0:13:30.395 in a couple of days, 0:13:30.395,0:13:32.509 and take a look at where[br]we are at the end of the year, 0:13:32.509,0:13:33.894 and I'm gonna hold my breath, 0:13:33.894,0:13:36.464 and hope that we can pay the rent[br]to get through to next spring. 0:13:36.464,0:13:41.727 And, I believe, I'm gonna tell myself[br]that we're going to do it. 0:13:41.727,0:13:46.421 We're going to keep lying[br]gracefully to ourselves, 0:13:46.421,0:13:49.684 and we're going to run[br]with these graceful lies 0:13:49.684,0:13:52.780 that women like Eleni[br]are going to keep telling us, 0:13:52.780,0:13:57.799 because if she hadn't lied[br]to us to our face, 0:13:57.799,0:14:02.818 this would never have happened. 0:14:02.818,0:14:07.839 So I would say that. Let us lie[br]gracefully a little bit more 0:14:07.839,0:14:12.262 and watch the people that come[br]and start to believe your story, 0:14:12.262,0:14:17.885 because that spiral over the years grows[br]and continues to grow. 0:14:17.885,0:14:26.504 And we had this spiral[br]that's on the roof of the building, 0:14:26.504,0:14:28.676 and we don't know how we're going[br]to keep everything underneath, 0:14:28.676,0:14:31.127 but there is fellow Henry David Thoreau,[br]another handsome man, 0:14:31.127,0:14:35.704 who said "If you build castles in the air,[br]your work need not be lost; 0:14:35.704,0:14:38.991 that is where they should be.[br]Now build foundations under them." 0:14:38.991,0:14:43.631 And that's what we're doing and if you[br]happen to find yourself 0:14:43.631,0:14:50.415 in a magical place, on a magical land,[br]in some strange and difficult times, 0:14:50.415,0:14:52.136 maybe it's time to believe[br]a few of those lies, 0:14:52.136,0:14:56.381 maybe it's time to look at those castles[br]in the air and keep them there, 0:14:56.381,0:14:58.289 and keep building the foundation[br]under them. 0:14:58.289,0:15:04.474 Because you remember that fellow Oliver,[br]that came on that first trip with me, 0:15:04.474,0:15:09.319 he actually left out the first year. 0:15:09.319,0:15:14.164 He met a girl the first year[br]and he took her home. 0:15:14.164,0:15:19.010 And they went back and they got married[br]and on the 4th of January 2012, this year, 0:15:19.010,0:15:27.391 eight years to the day, after[br]we first landed on the island of Santorini... 0:15:28.838,0:15:35.174 There is Oliver and there[br]is Annie Palmawise, they had a baby. 0:15:35.174,0:15:40.330 So if we can hold on for 18 more years,[br]she can run the show for us. 0:15:40.330,0:15:42.757 I hope we stick around,[br]I hope to see you soon. 0:15:42.757,0:15:49.006 (Applause)