People use them for all sorts of things, from mini libraries to shower cubicles.
And not unimportantly, the muggle entrance to the Ministry of Magic.
Are the Harry Potter book/movies available in Russia,
@Zhnyaka ?
No, we do not want to sponsor Joanne Rowling with her stance on gender inclusivity but with your professional background I'm sure you can obtain them without it benefiting the author.
For me, the red English phone booths are a bit magic too.
When I was 15 or 16, I was a huge Bob Dylan fan, and I was just reading a Dylan biography by Robert Shelton when I visited London with my mum for a couple of days. The book mentioned the author living in Brighton, not that far away from London, and the address of the publishing agency was in the book. So I wrote to the agency, asking if I could meet with Shelton. They promptly replied with a message to the hotel, telling me to expect a phonecall in a specific phone booth close to the hotel.
This had my mum and I completely puzzled, in the Netherlands you can't call a phone booth, you can only call from it, so I didn't really believe it but I was still in the red phonebooth at the stated time, feeling ridiculous for expecting something to happen.
But behold, the phone rang!
And the next day I took the train to a Brighton suburb, to meet with a lovely old man who cooked me a lunch in a home completely cluttered with books and typewriters.
I don't think we even talked about Bob Dylan much, it was just a lovely afternoon spent between a very young and a very old person who found lots to talk about.
Unexpected connections are magic.
I'm just back from an amazing family weekend, was going to tell you about it but then this memory popped up and I felt it was more interesting.
