From there, the image of the empty bookstore deepens the mood. A bookstore is already a place of inwardness, but when it is empty, it becomes even more personal, almost like a private mind made visible. Shelves can be browsed without hurry, and silence allows books to feel less like products and more like companions waiting to be discovered.
Similarly, the quiet coffee shop extends this atmosphere into everyday urban life. Such places offer a public form of solitude: one can be among others without being interrupted by them. As sociologist Ray Oldenburg’s The Great Good Place (1989) suggests, informal spaces can nurture reflection as much as community. Brainard’s preference highlights the version of these spaces that shelters thought rather than noise. [...]