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On a quiet street in Coyoacán, a historic borough of Mexico's capital, lies the Las Tres Cruces bookshop, where an unassuming single-level entrance opens into a warehouse-type facility.
![Main cover](http://images.ctfassets.net/8otutru2e44g/2rTgibuzKZZZmVjsqUIWEk/e36d06aea3d0598f9af6da51e92e3cc6/Las_Tres_Cruces_1x1_Inset_2.jpg?w=1600&h=1600&fl=progressive&q=80&fm=jpg)
Lined floor to ceiling with books, from literature to science and nature, ‘there's all kinds of finds’, says Angela Suarez, the photographer of these images.
![Main cover](http://images.ctfassets.net/8otutru2e44g/4CrhkD077xN2enUDVUDosG/7fbbbe0607e8d5bd9a85a082cba2ce31/Las_Tres_Cruces_1x1_Inset_3.jpg?w=1600&h=1600&fl=progressive&q=80&fm=jpg)
‘Customers love it because it's very cheap. It's so beautiful and the variety of books makes it unique.’
![Main cover](http://images.ctfassets.net/8otutru2e44g/23CRIDbDKMqVuyqpDahpiD/27c222afb158ba762e466830795c264c/Las_Tres_Cruces_1x1_Inset_4.jpg?w=1600&h=1600&fl=progressive&q=80&fm=jpg)