The history of the Marks & Co. bookstore is briefly outlined on their website. It states: "Benjamin Marks and Mark Cohen began bookselling in 1904, when they were both employed by the firm of Henry Sotheran, Ltd., an old established bookseller. Sotheran's are generally acknowledged as being the 'training school' for many of the leading booksellers of the twentieth century. When they decided to go into business together, Mark Cohen reluctantly agreed to his partner's suggestion that the firm be called Marks & Co., rather than Marks and Cohen, and the pair set up shop on Old Compton Street before moving first to No. 108 and then 106 Charing Cross Road. The façade of 108 Charing Cross Road has changed a great deal since the 1920s, but some things remain the same. '108' is still a book shop. The move to the shop next door came about, when Marks & Co. acquired the business of George W. Davis, who traded from No. 106. Davis was an acknowledged expert on the works of Charles Dickens, and with the purchase of this firm, Marks & Co. found themselves with possibly the best stock of Dickensia in London. In 1928, probably as part of the takeover deal, Marks & Co. published a short bibliography of the The Pickwick Papers written by Davis. The shop now had two areas of specialization the other being that of Freemasonry and the Occult, and indeed a whole floor would be devoted to these subjects when the business moved to No. 84. In addition, Marks & Co. held a good stock of general books, plus bound sets of popular authors, topography, natural history, and modern first editions."