
Literary Tourism: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Rio de Janeiro is the kind of place that you can only think of like a dream. With a slow guitar playing Bossa Nova at the same time that the sun sets behind the waves painting the green tropical mountains red. Rio is a city that definitely doesn’t lack beauty, and many writers, poets, and musicians can back me up. Having been the capital of the Brazilian empire and the republic up until the late 1950s, Rio de Janeiro is full of history, more importantly, bookish history. So get your sunscreen, bathing suit, and reading glasses, because this city has much more to offer than just looks, drinks, and parties.
As writer and 15 year Rio resident Elizabeth Bishop put it, “Mexico City and Miami combined is about the closest I can come to it, and men in bathing trunks kicking footballs all over the place. They begin on the beach at 7 every morning—and keep it up apparently at their places of business all over town, all day long. It is enervating, completely relaxed (in spite of the terrific coffee), corrupt.”
Sit back on your lounge chair with a tasty cocktail or a cup of coffee (or cafézinho if you want to blend in with the locals) and let me show you the best literary/bookish sites in Rio de Janeiro.
This luscious library was first created by a group of Portuguese immigrants in 1837. It was built to emulate the format of salons called Reading Cabinets, popularized in France and Portuguese private libraries that were open to select members. The Cabinet would function both as a meeting place for intellectuals and a private library in which one could pay a fee to rent books. However, it wasn’t long after the Monarchy in Brazil had fallen that the Cabinet got its royal seal. In 1906 that the Portuguese King Don Carlos I, a relative of the former Brazilian Emperor, gave the Cabinet a royal seal and crest, making it part of the Portuguese royal house. To this day, the Cabinet holds several books owned by both the Brazilian and Portuguese royal houses, including several books and paintings owned by the monarchs.
Today the Cabinet functions as a private library that is subsidized by the government. Unfortunately, you can’t touch or take out any of the books. The library system itself is only open to a few researchers and paying members who have been pre-approved by the current associates’ assembly. Even then, you can only take home a few books, as most of them are too valuable and old to leave the librarian’s supervision. Nonetheless, the Cabinet is open to visitors from Monday–Friday from 9 am to 6 pm. So go get yourself some bookshelf inspiration and bask in the beauty that this library holds.
Along Rio’s main shoreline in the South Zone, you will find several writers and famous musicians just casually sitting and waiting for you to take a picture. These are famous brass and metal statues of famous Rio residents such as writer Clarice Lispector and poet Carlos Drummond de Andrade. They not only have defined what it means to live in this beautiful city through their writing, but also have literally become part of the city themselves.
First founded in 1894, this jaw-dropping pastry shop and café is one of the most traditional and famous establishments in the city. With over a century of history, Colombo has hosted several prominent figures, from presidents, writers, and foreign royals. It is said that Colombo was also a meeting point for many meetups organized by writers and artists, from the royalists to the modernists. However, don’t be daunted by the lines Colombo generally has, full of locals and tourists. It is worth the wait to sit and drink an amazing cup of coffee and taste all the Brazilian pastries you want. Just let the beautiful floor-to-ceiling mirrors and porcelain sets transport you to the Brazilian Belle Époque, while you read a book and sip on a cafézinho.
The Royal Cabinet of Reading

Statues on the Beach

Livraria da Travessa—Ipanema
This chain of independent bookstores in Rio started in 1975 as a ‘resistance bookshop’ dedicated to furthering underground books and censored writers. Outspoken against the Military Dictatorship that ruled Brazil at the time, Livraria da Travessa has now expanded as far as Europe. Still, its heart will always belong to Rio. Although the bookshop has several locations spread across the city, I recommend you check out the one in Ipanema (yes, where that girl from the only Brazilian song everyone knows is from). There you can find a fantastic collection of titles, friendly booksellers, an impressive vinyl collection, and the excellent Bazaar Café on the second floor.Confeitaria Colombo
