Showing posts with label Bookstore of the Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bookstore of the Month. Show all posts

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Bookstore of the Month: R. J. Julia Booksellers in Madison, Connecticut


R. J. Julia Booksellers
768 Boston Post Rd.
Madison, CT 06443
(203) 245-3959
R. J. Julia on Facebook
R. J. Julia on Twitter
R. J. Julia on Pinterest


Billing itself as "A Great Place to Meet Books," R. J. Julia Booksellers has been introducing readers to books since 1990, operating out of a charming brick building along the Connecticut shoreline (the store is a former bar and grill).  When Roxanne Coady and her husband Kevin opened the bookstore, she was in her last trimester of pregnancy.  As she wrote in a 2012 email to her customers:
Twenty-two years ago, 8 months pregnant with Edward, I gave birth to R. J. Julia Booksellers and one month later, my son Edward. These have been extraordinary years--filled with the joy of raising a child; the delight of developing a bookstore, the pleasure of working with hundreds of dedicated staff; with the honor of introducing thousands of writers to readers and the thrill of helping customers find just the right book. But ultimately, the most satisfying work has been to create a place that has become the center of our community and an environment that nourishes all that the joy of reading can bring to our lives.
The occasion for the email was the announcement that Coady was looking for someone to buy the bookstore after two decades in the bookselling business.  To date, that hasn't happened--at least Coady is still at the bookstore, as you can see by this photo where she and staff celebrate winning an award from Neil Gaiman for the indie bookstore that sold the most hardcover copies of his novel The Ocean at the End of the Lane.


In her 2012 email, Coady wrote:
When we opened in 1990 independent booksellers were finishing a decade of prosperity and vibrancy. The next decade brought the onslaught of the chains opening hundreds of stores and the 800 pound gorilla, Amazon, began its ascent. Thousands of independent bookstores closed yet we remained vibrant and committed to our purpose. We were able to do this because of the staff who worked here over these years, because of the support of publishers and authors, and most of all because of all of you who have been loyal in your support of us and passionately committed to our existence. I believe words will continue to matter; reading, in whatever form, will remain vital; and our desire to connect will endure. These qualities have been and will continue to be the ingredients of R. J. Julia's future success.

For more on Coady's entry into the business at age 39, leaving behind a successful career at a New York accounting firm, you should read "Facing Forty and Embracing Risk."


R. J. Julia has certainly been a quick and certain success in the often-uncertain bookselling business.  Over the years, it has racked up numerous awards, including the Publishers Weekly Bookseller of the Year Award, the Lucy Pannell award for bookselling excellence, Connecticut Magazine Best Bookstore, Connecticut Retailers Award for Community commitment, Advocate’s Best Bookstore and the New Haven Business Small Business Award.

The bookstore is one of the most reader-centric I've seen, placing customer service and community service on the same shelf.  In 1998, Coady founded Read to Grow, a Connecticut statewide nonprofit organization that reaches out to new parents while their still in the hospital to help them understand the importance of literacy from the time their children are born.  R. J. Julia facilitates book donations from customers through the store and the website.  Coady's own passion about the transformative power of books is evidenced in the one she herself co-authored, The Book That Changed My Life, in which 71 writers relate how a specific book impacted them.  The proceeds from the book go to Read to Grow.

Coady--ever fearless, ever tireless, ever innovative--also started a program called Just the Right Book, a book recommendation program which uses "a secret sauce from our network of book experts."  After filling out a "preference form," subscribers receive hand-picked books each month chosen by a literary expert based on the customer's personal reading tastes and individual preferences.  Customers can update and change their profile at any time to reflect their mood or interests.  They can even request specific titles by email or phone.  If they don't agree that a book is just right for them, R. J. Julia will send them a postage-paid return label.  It's quite a clever idea, don't you agree?


As the website notes, the store's "mission was, and is, to be a place where words matter, where writer meets reader, where the ambiance and selection and merchandising of books creates an atmosphere that is welcoming and presents the opportunity for discovery.  Ultimately we are fiercely committed to putting the right book in the right hand."


R. J. Julia is the featured bookstore all this month at The Quivering Pen.  By clicking on the links to books mentioned in this month's blog posts, you'll be taken to the store's website where you can purchase the book (or, better yet, several books).  The Quivering Pen is dedicated to supporting independent bookstores.


Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Bookstore of the Month: Bookworks in Albuquerque, New Mexico


Bookworks
4022 Rio Grande Blvd NW
Albuquerque, NM
(505) 344-8139
Bookworks on Facebook
Bookworks on Twitter
Bookworks on Instagram

In 1984, Apple introduced the first MacIntosh PC, Michael Jackson's hair caught on fire while filming a Pepsi commercial, the Soviets boycotted the Summer Olympics, stonewashed jeans went on the market, and thousands of people went to their local bookstore to pick up a copy of George Orwell's forward-looking novel.

One of those bookstores might have been the newborn Bookworks in Albuquerque, New Mexico.  Now celebrating its 30th anniversary, Bookworks has always been, as its motto proclaims, local and independent.  They are also dog-friendly, as Marketing and Events manager Amanda Sutton noted in her Bookstore of the Month questionnaire: “Bring in your pooch and get a complimentary doggie biscuit.”


Bookworks is friendly to all types of beasts--from owls (found on the store's logo) to the two-legged species.  Even those, Sutton said, who come in and ask the booksellers to order something for their Kindle.

“We are a neighborhood-rooted ‘third place’ and love our long-time, loyal regular customers and all the new customers we attract to the store selling books in our community and at the 400 events we host each year,” Sutton said.  “Matching a customer with his or her perfect read is the most rewarding thing about being a bookseller.”


The store's website emphasizes the importance of partnering with local organizations, which is perhaps the secret sauce of its recipe for longevity:
Our recent event partners include ABC Library, the Albuquerque Public Library Foundation, the University of New Mexico English department, UNM's Women's Resource Center, Albuquerque Academy, the National Museum of Nuclear Science and History, Slate Street Cafe, Tractor Brewing Company, Flying Star, the Center for Spiritual Living, Planned Parenthood, and the Rio Grande Nature Center. Bookworks has been a literary meeting place in Albuquerque since 1984, from its original home in Albuquerque's Rio Grande Valley in the Dietz Farm Plaza where it was founded by Nancy Rutland, up to its present location owned by Danielle Foster and Wyatt Wegrzyn next to Flying Star Cafe in the Shops on Rio Grande. As a locally-owned small business, Bookworks pays taxes that support our community, pays wages and provides benefits to its Albuquerque employees, donates gift certificates and books to local nonprofit organizations, supports local libraries, and gives back to our community however we can, whenever we can.
Some of the store's bestselling titles include: Bless Me Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya, Great Tales and Poems by Edgar Allan Poe, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain and The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie.


Bookworks' main webpage is dominated by staff picks, like The Snow Queen by Michael Cunningham, recommended by Pat: “Cunningham is a master of digging deeply into the may layers of creative angst.  In all four of these characters, he shows us the delight, despair, illusion and clarity of the creative process.  Whether it is dealing with art, fashion, or dying, his writing is profound, thoughtful and beautiful.”  Or, this one recommended by Emma, age 12: “Anton and Cecil: Cats at Sea by Lisa and Valerie Martin is about two cat brothers lost at sea.  As they try to find each other a prophecy becomes their only hope.  A hair-raising adventure, this is a great book for animal lovers and people who love adventures alike!”

So, the next time you're in Albuquerque, whether it's for the annual hot air balloon festival or just to sample some chili verde, be sure to stop in Bookworks and find an adventure of your own.  In the meantime, please visit the store's website and do your book shopping there instead of Amazon.  Bookworks can even help you figure out how to get the best stonewash for your jeans.


Bookworks is the featured bookstore all this month at The Quivering Pen.  By clicking on the links to books mentioned in this month's blog posts, you'll be taken to the store's website where you can purchase the book (or, better yet, several books).  The Quivering Pen is dedicated to supporting independent bookstores.


Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Bookstore of the Month: From My Shelf in Wellsboro, PA


From My Shelf Books & Gifts
25 Main St
Wellsboro, PA
(570) 724-5793
from_my_shelf@yahoo.com
From My Shelf on Facebook
From My Shelf on Twitter


This time it's personal.

Of all the Bookstores of the Month I've featured at The Quivering, From My Shelf Books & Gifts in Wellsboro, Pennsylvania hits closest to my heart.  I was born in Bloomsburg, 100 miles southeast of the bookstore, and spent many of my childhood summers at my grandparents' farm just outside of Wellsboro.  My grandfather, Gordon E. Abrams, was pastor of the First Baptist Church in Wellsboro from 1960 to 1965, but--as a Google search of The Wellsboro Gazette reveals--even after he retired, he was still officiating at funerals and weddings.  I don't remember the church side of my grandfather's personality, only the gentleman-farmer aspect.  Though he could be a short-tempered man, I think Granddad Abrams found comfort in his rural semi-retirement growing corn, gathering eggs from the chicken coop, tending to a small brood of quail, and taking walks with his beagle Snoopy (he was a fan of Charles M. Schultz).

My (Grandfather's) Little Pony
I remember spending many summer weeks at the Wellsboro farm, playing hide-and-seek from my brother in the cornfield (mostly hide), climbing the ladder in the barn to bury myself in hay just for the fresh-cut green smell, and attempting to ride my grandparents' black pony Queenie (a beast with a temper as ill and short as my grandfather's).

But I also remember taking trips into Wellsboro and, one summer, begging my grandmother to apply for a library card so I could check out something to read during my summer vacation.  For whatever reason, she hadn't bothered to get a library card--she was too busy baking and cleaning and farming and saw no need for something as frivolous as a library card.  Couldn't I just enjoy their extensive library of Reader's Digest Condensed Books in the parlor instead?  No, I needed something uncondensed and undigested, thanks.  Eventually,  I twisted my grandmother's arm to the snapping point, and she relented--fussily driving me all the way into Wellsboro herself for a library card she swore would only get this one-time use.  Three hours later, I came skipping back to the farm with an armload of books--including My Darling, My Hamburger by Paul Zindel, which I promptly tucked into the waistband of my pants, then climbed to the hayloft and scooped out a chair for myself in the piles of straw.  I remained hidden, lost in a book, for the rest of the afternoon.  So what if My Darling, My Hamburger was a 1969 “young adult” novel about teen romance, pregnancy, and abortion?  How old was I then?  8, 9, 10?  It didn't matter.  I was lost and didn't want to be found.

From My Shelf Books & Gifts didn't come along until four decades later, but it's a sure bet that if they'd been around during my youth, I would have broken my grandmother's arm in order to go shop there.  Owner Kevin Coolidge would have seen to it that I was properly matched with a summer's-worth of reading material.

At last count, Wellsboro is a town of about 3,300 people.  It's a tight-knit community founded on a shipping and trade industry.  As Wikipedia notes, at the turn of the twentieth century, Wellsboro “had fruit evaporators, flour and woolen mills, a milk-condensing plant, marble works, saw mills, foundry and machine shops, and manufactories of cut glass, chemicals, rugs, bolts, cigars, carriages, and furniture.”  And, in 2006, it gained another bookstore--the kind that caters to readers “in search of a good book.”

“We know most of our regulars by name, even those that only visit a couple times of year,” Kevin wrote in response to the Bookstore of the Month questionnaire I sent him.  “We are from here and we’ve strived to build the type of bookstore we wish were here when we were growing up.  We did that, but we didn’t do it alone.  We did it with a community that wanted a bookstore, a community involved with keeping their downtown strong.”

It's the kind of small-town business section that hosts an annual wine and art tour, a classic car “cruise-in,” and a Dickens-themed Christmas stroll.  Wellsboro is also the gateway to the Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania (which, incidentally, is the subject of a short story I wrote for Esquire in September 1998).

From My Shelf aims to keep its community bound tight through a love of reading.  “You know that feeling you get when you finish a great book and you want to share that feeling?  We get to do that,” Kevin told me.  “We love matching the right book with the right person and sharing that passion of books.”

Kevin and his staff have even started a YouTube series about the bookstore: “From My Shelf Books Vs. The Evil Empire.”  Is it a little cheesy?  Sure, but it's also great fun to watch.  As Kevin notes, “If you love bookstores, cats, or ever had a case of writer’s block, you’ll appreciate it.”

Here are some other highlights from Kevin's questionnaire responses:

Store mascot:  Our original bookstore passed away this winter.  He was the most famous cat in Wellsboro.  He even had his own book, Hobo Finds a Home, a memoir with meow.  (Hobo also made Mental Floss' list of Favorite Bookstore Cats.)  We currently have two brothers, Huck & Finn.  They are rescue cats from the local animal sanctuary.

Current staff picks of favorite books:  It’s huge as we are all voracious readers.  Kevin loves science fiction and loves the tales of the Ketty Jay by Chris Wooding, the first of which is Retribution Falls.  Wooding is a British author and even with all the books that the store has in stock, Kevin had to get it from England before it was available in the states.  Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss is a favorite with all the staff.  It’s actually the only book that we sell with a money-back guarantee.  The staff loves young adult and we really also enjoy the Demon Trapper’s Daughter series by Jana Oliver.  So much so that it inspired the “Bibliofiend” that we introduced in our web series.

Bestselling titles:  Young adult is a strong seller, and we all handsell it, as all of us read at least some YA: The Fault in Our Stars by John Green; Splintered by A. G. Howard, which is one of our staff picks; Game of Thrones which we loved before it was a HBO show; Wynken, Blyken and Nod by Eugene Field (our town has a statue of this on the Green); Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn; and Name of the Wind, because we honestly believe it’s the best fantasy book in the last 10 years.

Oddest/funniest request from a customer:  “Do you have Machiavelli’s Little Prince?”

Someday, maybe in the not-too-distant future, they may have a balding, slightly-paunchy customer come in looking to recapture a scrap of his youth.  So if that certain someone asks for a copy of My Darling, My Hamburger, I hope they'll be kind to him.

P. S.  One other personal connection came in a later email from the bookstore after I mentioned my grandparents' farm.  Kevin wrote: “Very cool.  My family is from here, and my grandparents had a farm in Coolidge Hollow, which is about six miles south of Wellsboro.  The dairy farm is still in the family, fifth generation now, and my wife's grandfather used to be the preacher at the Presbyterian church here in Wellsboro.”

From My Shelf is the featured bookstore all this month at The Quivering Pen.  By clicking on the links to books mentioned in this month's blog posts, you'll be taken to the store's website where you can purchase the book (or, better yet, several books).  The Quivering Pen is dedicated to supporting independent bookstores.


Friday, August 1, 2014

Bookstore of the Month: Annie Bloom's Books


Annie Bloom's Books
7834 SW Capitol Highway
Portland, OR 97219
(503) 246-0053
books@annieblooms.com
Annie Bloom's on Facebook
Annie Bloom's on Twitter

Quick quiz: Would you rather shop at a bookstore named "A Lucid Interval," or one called "Annie Bloom's Books"?  If you said the latter, then you're in luck the next time you visit the Multnomah Village neighborhood of Portland, Oregon; but if you prefer your bookstore more lucid and full of intervals...well, then you might want to get in your WayBack Machine and travel through time to convince Annie Bloom's owner Bobby Tichenor to stick with her original idea for a store name.  Personally, I'm glad she went with the warm-and-cozy "Annie Bloom's Books."


Annie Bloom's first came to my attention through the tireless efforts of its part-time bookseller Jeffrey Shaffer, who writes the occasional column for the Northwest Book Lovers blog.  As Jeff makes clear in his blog posts, Annie Bloom's is the type of bookstore that's focused on good old-fashioned customer service.  By all accounts, the staff is always willing to go above and beyond mere bookselling to help those who come through the front door--even if all those customers want is to borrow a phonebook or for someone to tie their shoes.

The store first opened in 1978 and has been going strong ever since (with the inevitable peaks and valleys of modern bookselling, of course).  "After 34 years in business, we have customers who were raised on kids books at Annie Bloom’s and now bring in their children," Michael Keefe, publicity manager for the store, told me.  "It’s great to see multiple generations of booklovers!"


The bookstore is centrally located in the historic Multnomah Village, surrounded by pubs, salons, a shoe store and a candy shop.  With an event calendar full of author appearances and book club meetings, Annie Bloom's seems like the perfect place to stop in and hang out for a while as you digest your meal.  "The residents of Multnomah Village understand the importance of supporting independent businesses," Michael told me.  "We love being part of a neighborhood that feels like its own small town."

And yes, in case you were wondering, Annie Bloom's does come equipped with the standard store cat mascot.  But not just any cat, mind you!  Meet Molly....

Please note that Molly's staff pick is I Could Pee on This
"Molly Bloom is a six-year-old female American Bombay we adopted five years ago from Cat Adoption Team," Michael said.  "She’s an incredibly sweet and mellow cat.  All the neighborhood kids love to come in and pet her."  Also, the occasional visiting writer....

Dave Eggers & Molly
Here are some other highlights from Michael's responses to the Bookstore of the Month questionnaire I sent:

Current staff picks of favorite books: All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr, The Empathy Exams by Leslie Jamison, The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri, TransAtlantic by Colum McCann, The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion, Behind the Beautiful Forevers by Katherine Boo, and The Plover by Brian Doyle.

Bestselling titles: Back in the Garden with Dulcy by Ted Mahar, Wild by Cheryl Strayed, The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt, The Orchardist by Amanda Coplin, Where’d You Go Bernadette? by Maria Semple, Ask Me: 100 Essential Poems by William Stafford.

Oddest/funniest request from a customer:  “Do you have that memoir by Seabiscuit?”

And finally, for an in-depth look at Annie Bloom's basement ("some sort of feng shui nightmare"), I recommend this piece by Liz Prato for the Tin House blog.

Annie Bloom's Books is the featured bookstore all this month at The Quivering Pen.  By clicking on the links to books mentioned in this month's blog posts, you'll be taken to the store's website where you can purchase the book (or, better yet, several books).  The Quivering Pen is dedicated to supporting independent bookstores.


Sunday, June 1, 2014

Bookstore of the Month: Iconoclast Books Redux


There is joy in Sun Valley this month.  Not only has news reached central Idaho that Hailey's hometown hero Bowe Berghdal has been released after being held prisoner by the Taliban for nearly five years, but it looks like another community icon will be rescued.  The IndieGoGo campaign to help keep Iconoclast Books afloat looks like it will indeed be a "go."  (Crossing my fingers and knocking on wood so as not to jinx the bookstore before it meets its $85,000 goal.)

(UPDATE, 6/3/2014: Iconoclast Books lives!  The campaign met--and exceeded--its goal 48 hours before the deadline.  The store could still use your support, so keep the contributions coming.)


I've supported the fundraiser both as a monetary contributor, as a person who has ordered books online from the store in $100 batches, and as a cheerleader/ pleader/persuader on social media, but I always wanted to do more.  The Bookstore of the Month provides a wonderful opportunity for me to try and do just a little more for the bookstore in Ketchum, Idaho (pop. 2,689).  This is not the first time I've featured Iconoclast as the Bookstore of the Month--you can go here to read more about the history of the store and the dynamic bookseller who glows at its heart, Sarah Hedrick.  At the time I wrote that blog post seven months ago, Iconoclast Books was still trying to recover from a summer of forest fires which devastated the economy of the town.  Sun Valley depends in large part on tourism and when book buyers coming into the store slowed to a trickle, things got pretty dire.  Little did I know the low summer sales were just the latest in a string of hard times for the independent bookstore.  I'll let Sarah explain the difficulties; here's what she writes on the IndieGoGo page:
Like all good tales, we've had our share of dragons, especially in the six years since the loss of my husband and business partner, Gary Hunt. We've suffered from the impact of the recession, the seizing of our locally owned bank, and the rise of online competition. Last summer we all experienced the most difficult summer we've had when the Beaver Creek fires caused the evacuation of our valley during the most profitable time of year. Additionally, the impact of Amazon and its egregious attempts to put bricks and mortar stores out of business, is possibly the biggest dragon to slay.
Sarah has been given a June 6 deadline to "get current on the rent or vacate the store."  She goes on to explain how the campaign's $85,000 will be used:
*  Approximately $55,000 to back rent and late fees.
*  $30,000 to local vendors, authors and publishers.
*  If we exceed this goal we will continue to pay down bills to publishers and outstanding loans.
*  Additional funds to pay down balances owed to publishers, outstanding loans and debts. Among these: The SBA disaster relief loan (2007 Castle Rock fires), back taxes, line of credit and revolving accounts. Approximately $250,000. We are in good standing with these debts, but they are preventing us from moving forward.

At the time of Gary's death I made the decision to accept Letters of Testamentary which made me solely responsible for his actions. Possibly an unwise decision, but one I made because I didn't want to lose him AND the bookstore. The burden of the store's debt was far greater than I imagined, yet all of these years later, with some of it paid off, I feel even more strongly about keeping up the fight. We've had wonderful support from our landlord, a record-breaking year in sales during the height of the recession, and I've been able to pay off many of our creditors while not incurring any new debt. Our community has been quite vocal this week about the importance of keeping our doors open. We've determined that Iconoclast Books is an undeniable asset to this community, but for continued growth and sustainability, we need to pay off the debt I inherited.
For this reason, and many others, I am happy to make Iconoclast Books the Bookstore of the Month for June at The Quivering Pen.  Whether the fundraising campaign succeeds or not (fingers still crossed), I'm proud to link all book titles mentioned in this month's blog posts to the Iconoclast website where, if you are so moved, you can purchase them.  To paraphrase an old saying, Put your money where your click is!

Is Iconoclast the only independent bookstore to be backed up against the hard wall of financial struggle?  Of course not.  Every day I open the Shelf Awareness email, I'm saddened to learn of yet another wonderful store forced to lock its doors forever.  Do I want to save those stores, too?  Of course I do.  But I can only eat the elephant one bite at a time.  Iconoclast today, another bookshop tomorrow.

That's why I started the Bookstore of the Month feature last year: to remind blog readers of the value--financially and spiritually--independent bookstores add to their communities.  In the nearly two years since I've been on the road promoting Fobbit, I've visited dozens of bookstores and I can honestly say that every time I open the front door and walk inside, there is a palpable bump inside my chest, my heart playing the xylophone of my ribs in a rapid, excited trill.  Nothing compares to standing in front of a pyramidal display of books selected by staff members, or browsing specialized sections thoughtfully curated by people who can see the intellectual webs strung between books, or reading "staff-pick shelf talkers" taped on the shelves throughout the store ("Jason recommends Moby Dick: 'A man, a whale, a masterpiece.  Call me Fanboy.'").  Being a regular patron of an independent bookstore is like going to your favorite hair salon: after a few visits, they'll know exactly what kind of scissors to use on your hair.  How many times have you walked into your hometown bookstore and the person at the counter says, "Hey, have you read [insert title here]?  I think you'll really like it."  A good bookseller is your friend, your priest, your doctor.

Nowhere is that more evident than at Iconoclast.  I've only visited once (and all too briefly at that), but I could immediately feel Sarah's passion and love for books when I walked in the front door (ba-dump-bump! goes the heart).  But don't just take my word for it; here are a few of Iconoclast's friends to lend their words of support:

"Iconoclast uniquely provides what chain booksellers and online outlets can’t: Sarah and her staff know their community and customers personally and hand curate a selection of books based on this familiarity.  Sarah and her staff don’t just offer books from the big publishing houses, and they certainly don’t get paid to tell you what to read.  At Iconoclast, it's not only books, but intellectual curiosity that is encouraged and flourishes with room for artists, authors, poets, musicians, and actors to share their talents in an intimate setting.  One of my friends was saying just the other day, "The idea of not having Iconoclast with its diverse collection of books, the café, author events, poetry slams, open mics, and plays is something I can’t even imagine."  I remember meeting someone in the store last year whom I hadn’t seen for years.  As we sat down for tea and decaf cappuccino, I burst out, 'This doesn’t happen on Amazon!'  People meet at a bookstore, and unexpected things happen—including, I’m told, some romances that began at Iconoclast."
Carole King

"When I go to Ketchum, as I often do to fly fish and other non book related things, my anchor, the heart of the town is Iconoclast Books.  This is true for my wife and daughter also.  From the first time we went to Ketchum, now many years ago, Iconoclast was for us its center.  The bookstore is the cultural core of the city, an essential place, more important than a concert hall or museum.  It is a place where writers and readers meet, not literally but metaphorically, the home of all the ideas and emotions that are held in books.  An independent book store is a personal thing.  It expresses the tastes of its owner and Sarah Hedrick has made it such an interesting place.  Though I live in Manhattan which is supposed to be the center of everything, it is in Ketchum, Idaho that I find books I had not known about, sometimes ideas I never before thought about.  What a sad place Ketchum would be without Iconoclast, wonderful Ketchum just another town in the mountains."
Mark Kurlansky

"I met Peter Matthiessen at Iconoclast Books.  I met Ryszard KapuÅ›ciÅ„ski there.  I met Virginia Woolf there, too, and Marguerite Duras, and William Faulkner.  All these writers, and dozens more, were waiting for me, sometimes on the front shelves, sometimes deep in the warrens of used books, and I might never have encountered them if not for this amazing shop, in that gorgeous valley, drenched in sunlight, populated by people who care about literature.  You go into Iconoclast thinking you want a certain book; you leave with five.  Any of them can change your life."
Anthony Doerr

"If not for independent bookstores we would be at the mercy of corporate carton openers who are not invested in the books but in the profits from them.  To go into an independent bookstore and be able to ask for help or discuss books is one of my favorite ways to spend an afternoon.  To browse and touch and then talk about books and the ideas within them is a disappearing resource and treasure.  Iconoclast has been that for our community and I hope all will support them in staying put and continuing their wonderful literary advocacy, knowledge and conversation."
Jamie Lee Curtis

Iconoclast Books is the featured bookstore all this month at The Quivering Pen.  By clicking on the links to books mentioned in this month's blog posts, you'll be taken to the store's website where you can purchase the book (or, better yet, several books).  The Quivering Pen is dedicated to supporting independent bookstores.


Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Bookstore of the Month: Avid Bookshop


Avid Bookshop
493 Prince Ave.
Athens, GA  30601
(706) 352-2060
avid.athens@gmail.com
Avid Bookshop on Facebook
Avid Bookshop on Twitter
Avid Bookshop on Instagram

The first thing you should know about Avid Bookshop is that its booksellers like to talk about you behind your back.

“I have a confession to make,” owner Janet Geddis told me in an email.  “More often than not, when a customer leaves the store we say something about him or her the moment he/she has left.  You know what it is we say?  ‘I love her.’  ‘I love him.’  ‘I love them.’  ‘That kid is the best.’  I wholeheartedly believe our customers are the best in all the land, and I sure do hope that other bookstore owners feel the exact same way.”


Avid is relatively young in Bookstore Years (they opened in 2011), but that kind of customer-oriented attitude will carry them far in the business.  The store is located in Athens, Georgia, a picturesque town founded on the banks of the Oconee River.  Cotton was once king in this part of the state and Athens was called the “Manchester of the South” after the city in England known for its mills.  Today, it’s primarily known for manufacturing great rock bands like R.E.M. and the B-52’s.

“Athens, Georgia is a magical little town,” Geddis said.  “Nearly every person you encounter is an artist or creator of some kind.  You can’t throw a pebble without hitting a musician, and usually that musician is also a poet or a visual artist.  Folks are very supportive of one another’s creative ventures, and that extends to independent-spirited local businesses like Avid Bookshop.”

The Avid Bookshop credo goes something like this: “We are a customer-oriented shop that excels at having a well-curated selection and an excellent events series.  We love playing matchmaker and helping every customer find that perfect book.”  Geddis went on to say: “In short, we adore our customers and do our best to let them know how much we enjoy talking with them about books, about their lives, about their classes, about their vacations, you name it.  Our customers are really enthusiastic, smart, and utterly lovable.  I sound over the top here, but I assure you I am being 100% genuine.”

Likewise, the customers have responded, er, avidly to the care and feeding they get from Geddis and her staff.  The bookstore was recently voted Athens’ Favorite Local Business for the second year in a row in the Flagpole Favorites vote-based competition in the city’s alt-weekly publication.  “They like us,” Geddis said.  “They really like us.”


The most rewarding thing about being a bookseller?  “Having the amazing opportunity to connect to readers of all ages, being able to meet authors (they’re our personal rock stars), and getting to talk about books all day, every day.  In talking about books, you get the chance to know authors and readers in this incredibly intimate and really meaningful way.  That’s such a gift.”

Frank
The unofficial store mascot is Frank, the Fabulous Fiction Fan.   He was designed in 2012 by a then-12-year-old artist named Jeremy Kiran Fernandes, and now Frank’s image is all around the store and on every can of Avid Blend Coffee (a special java created by Athens coffee company Jittery Joe’s).

For those bookstore browsers who would like to see more of a fur-based mascot, rest assured there is an official store cat--he just doesn’t hang out in the stacks, that’s all, Geddis said.  “I work from my home office quite a lot, and my cat Satchel is the official Home Office Kitty.  He even has his own Instagram hashtag and special fans.  People have asked us to turn him into a bookstore cat, but we want to be sensitive to booksellers’ and customers’ allergies (plus we don’t want the cat to run into the street--he’s wily), so no store cat for us.  #SatchelCat shall remain a home office kitty.”

Here are more of Geddis’ responses to the questionnaire I sent to her:

Current staff picks:  Men We Reaped by Jesmyn Ward; Seven Stories Up by Laurel Snyder; The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson; The Scar Boys by Len Vlahos; Dept. of Speculation by Jenny Offill; Shotgun Lovesongs by Nickolas Butler; Plato at the Googleplex: Why Philosophy Won’t Go Away by Rebecca Goldstein; Red Doc> by Anne Carson; and anything by David Levithan or Rainbow Rowell.

Bestselling titles:  Our #1 bestseller by far is Top Chef’s Hugh Acheson’s A New Turn in the South.  Lately, we’ve been selling lots of Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, anything by Jennifer Holm, and Sparky! by Jenny Offill and Chris Appelhans.

Oddest/funniest request from a customer:  Perhaps the classic bookshop question from a customer: I am trying to find a book about _____.  I don’t know the title or author.  All I know is the cover is and I found out about it from _____.  Rather than being frustrated by the vagueness of these requests, we view them as missions and have a blast tracking down the clues until we find that exact right book.  The look on a customer’s face when we direct him to the precise book he’s looking for after only having received the sketchiest of clues is just priceless.

Rainbow Rowell and David Levithan read to a packed house
The best (or most memorable) author event at our store:
 The Rainbow Rowell and David Levithan YA Party was incredible.  The response from our customers and those who drove hours and hours to see Rainbow and David was overwhelming.  We’d pitched events for both with their respective publishers, but the authors weren’t touring in Georgia, so we figured all was lost.  After some Avid booksellers befriended David Levithan at the Decatur Book Festival, however, David took the helm, gave Rainbow a call, and they made a special trip to Athens.  It was a raucous and funny and tear-jerking and completely memorable evening.  Click here to see photos for this event at Facebook.



Avid Bookshop is the featured bookstore all this month at The Quivering Pen.  By clicking on the links to books mentioned in this month's blog posts, you'll be taken to the store's website where you can purchase the book (or, better yet, several books).  The Quivering Pen is dedicated to supporting independent bookstores.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Bookstore of the Month: Politics and Prose


Politics and Prose
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, DC  20008
202-364-1919 or 800-722-0790
books@politics-prose.com
Politics and Prose on Facebook
Politics and Prose on Twitter

I'm often tempted to think of Politics and Prose as "the nation's bookstore."  Like everything else in the Capitol City, even the smallest business--whether it's a tapas restaurant on 7th Street or a brake repair shop in Adams Morgan--takes on larger-than-life significance simply from its proximity to the White House and ground-zero policy-making.  And Politics and Prose itself (whose stacks I often haunted during the two years I worked at the Pentagon) is large and full of life--but not so "full of itself" that you don't feel the human touch the minute you walk in the door.


Established in 1984, Politics and Prose was almost handicapped by its very name at the start.  People coming into the store thought they'd only find Washington memoirs or wonk-head guides to the city.  "Where are the cookbooks?  Do you have a children's section?  I'm looking for a biography of Olivia Newton-John--can you help?"....that sort of thing.  But owners Carla Cohen and Barbara Meade stuck with their vision and P&P soon became one of Washington DC's literary pillars.  Today, the store has a staff of more than 50 employees and occupies more than 8,000 square feet of sales space.  And they're always happy to help you find that Olivia Newton-John bio (or order it if it's out of stock).

Carla Cohen and Barbara Meade back in the store's early days
The store continues to hold fast to Cohen and Meade's original mission statement: “The bookstore will offer superior service and unusual book choices; it will serve as a gathering place for people interested in reading and discussing books.”

After Carla Cohen passed away in October 2010, Politics and Prose went through a period of transition when its future looked a little shaky.  Meade and Cohen had tried unsuccessfully to sell the store in the mid-2000s, but when Cohen became seriously ill, they decided to put up a For Sale sign once more.  The emotional reaction to this news was a testament to the loyalty of P&P friends and fans. Novelist and journalist Jim Lehrer said that "putting Politics and Prose up for sale is like putting the Washington Monument up for sale."  The monumental suspense ended in June 2011 when Bradley Graham and Lissa Muscatine purchased the store.  Graham was a longtime journalist with The Washington Post and his wife, Lissa, also worked as a Post journalist for a number of years, then served as a speechwriter to Hillary Clinton at both the White House and the State Department.  In their letter to customers, the new owners wrote:
A bookstore is a precious thing, ever more precious in this age of the Internet, when the space for healthy discourse and debate too often gives way to high-volume hyperbole. But it is our belief that Politics and Prose will become an even more essential part of our Washington landscape, building on its foundation not simply as a bookstore but as a community forum and marketplace of ideas....Our business is not just selling books but building community. A book can be bought anywhere; community can’t be.
In their response to the Bookstore of the Month questionnaire I sent to them, the P&P staff wrote about their special relationship with their loyal customers:
Like the children of Lake Wobegon, all of our customers are above average. The store's location on the border between Washington and Maryland presents us a very large circle from which to draw customers. We selected the neighborhood for its unusual demographic characteristics, and the store and customers are a perfect fit with one another. Our customers love our booksellers’ fierce intelligence and ability to identify a particular book they're searching for, sometimes going on as little information as “I heard about it on NPR sometime in the last two years.” We pride ourselves in going beyond the algorithm and calling on experiences and reading tastes from many years. Washington, DC is a very transitory city with people coming and going every few years, often without having the time or inclination to put down roots. But our customers do become rooted. We have customers who were the original charter members from nearly 30 years ago and others who still take the time to shop with us online if they’ve since moved out of state.
When I asked if the store had a mascot (secretly hoping they'd say they had an elephant and a donkey tied up in back), they gave this response: "One of our owner’s birthday is on Halloween, so although we don’t have a store mascot, several staff dress up in extravagant costumes for Halloween."  Like this fellow--who, I imagine, went around all day telling customers, "I have a splitting headache."


Every bookstore has its share of odd customer requests, but I think Politics and Prose takes the cake for the quirkiest: "One customer asked for a second bag when buying books.  This was odd because DC taxes bag usage in retail stores so many customers avoid plastic bags like the plague.  But this customer told us, 'I just love your bags.  I even buried my cat in one.'"  Ohhh-kayyy....

As you might imagine, celebrity sightings are common at P&P and the store has a robust author event schedule, hosting readings and/or signings every night and multiple times on the weekends.  In their questionnaire response, staff members cited last year's appearance by First Lady Michelle Obama as a memorable one.  "We also have quite a bit of luck.  We hosted George Saunders right after The New York Times heralded his book as the best of 2013.  The event, held last January, was standing room only–there were 400 people in the store."

A packed house for George Saunders
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
In an emotional moment, Rep. John Lewis reaches out to another participant
of the 1963 March on Washington during his book signing last September
Upcoming events this month include visits by authors Roddy Doyle, Carolyn Forche, B. J. Novak, Laura Lippman, Jerome Charyn, and Marissa Meyer.  The store will also host a Winter Beer Tasting, cleverly paired with the book Prohibition in Washington, DC: How Dry We Weren't by Garrett Peck.


Politics and Prose is the featured bookstore all this month at The Quivering Pen.  By clicking on the links to books mentioned in this month's blog posts, you'll be taken to the store's website where you can purchase the book (or, better yet, several books).  The Quivering Pen is dedicated to supporting independent bookstores.


Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Bookstore of the Month: Iconoclast Books


Iconoclast Books
671 Sun Valley Road
Ketchum, ID  83340
(202) 726-1564
Iconoclast Books on Facebook
Iconoclast Books on Twitter


For your health's sake...for complete relaxation and enjoyment...visit Sun Valley this winter.  It's a delightful, easy-to-take tonic...skiing, skating, warm-water, outdoor swimming and joyous evening hours.  Nature's big, white blanket soon will be spread.  Plan now to see this land of sun and fun in Idaho's Sawtooth Mountains.  A robust, western welcome awaits you!
--from an ad for Sun Valley ski resort in the Milwaukee Sentinel, Dec. 7, 1952

Drive up Idaho Highway 75, past the quaint towns of Bellevue and Hailey, along the Big Wood River (one of Ernest Hemingway's beloved trout streams), and into the shadows of Old Baldy and Dollar Mountain.  There, just when you think the forests, mountains and streams couldn't possibly be equalled in beauty, you'll discover they were just the prelude to Ketchum, Idaho, a jewel of a town set in the Sun Valley crown.

Ketchum is home to about 2,700 residents.  Make that 3,700 because Sarah Hedrick has the dynamic energy of 1,000 souls.  She is at the heart of Iconoclast Books--the Hope Diamond of Ketchum's crown jewels--and she is one of the most dedicated and tireless booksellers I've ever met.  On the June day I drove into Ketchum, it was raining in Sun Valley (Irony Alert!) and clouds had pulled a dark blanket over the town, but all the lights were on in the bookstore and Iconoclast fairly glowed on its corner of Ketchum's main street.  Somewhere inside the shop, I'm sure that electricity was caused by Sarah swirling and humming through the bookshelves, helping a customer find the best biography of Hemingway, recommending the latest staff pick (like Alexander Maksik's A Marker to Measure Drift), or frothing milk for a latte at the store's small cafe.  Though she has a great and equally-dedicated staff of booksellers (some of whom "came for the skiing and stayed for the books"), there's no getting around the fact that Sarah Hedrick is Iconoclast Books.

Sarah Hedrick and her daughter Penelope welcome Papa Hemingway to the store
I first met Sarah at the Humanities Montana Festival of the Book shortly after the publication of my debut novel, Fobbit.  I'd just given a reading and was sitting at the book-signing table when a slender blonde-haired woman came up, kneeled in front of the table, and took my hands.  "You must come to Sun Valley."  Did I mention Sarah is also a one-woman Chamber of Commerce for Ketchum?  Just like those Union-Pacific posters which called the rich and famous to come play at the Sun Valley Ski Resort back in the 1940s, I was being summoned to the mountains of Idaho.  How could I possibly resist?  (It took nearly eight months, but I eventually did make my way to Sun Valley and gave a reading at the Community Library and then splurged an appropriate amount of money on books at Iconoclast the next day.)

In preparing for this Bookstore of the Month post, I asked Sarah to tell me a little bit about what the store has to offer. Here's what she wrote in an email: "We encourage intellectual curiosity.  We pride ourselves on being unique and going beyond the bestseller selection. New, used and rare titles, Hemingway and Idaho history, book clubs, magazines, gifts, stationery, candles, educational games and toys, and more. Our cafe features locally roasted coffee, local organic dairy, homemade chai, organic teas, smoothies, fresh-baked goodies, bagels, homemade soup, paninis and salads. We specialize in unique cards, gifts, candles and host the area's largest children's section--from baby gifts and board books to a phenomenal Young Adult selection, with everything in between. We host author events, Poetry Slams, music events, Open Mic Nights, book club discussions and educational events. We are also very fortunate to be a part of so many great partnerships with arts and non-profit organizations in the community, like the Sun Valley Writers’ Conference, The Sun Valley Center for the Arts/Company of Fools, and The Community Library."


Iconoclast Books, now occupying 4,800 square feet, began in the trunk of a car in the University District in Seattle. Here's a bit of the store's history, taken from its website: "Iconoclast Books was founded in 1993, to very little fanfare. After many years of working in restaurants and bike shops in Ketchum, Gary Hunt, a practicing ski bum, set out to find his niche in life. He traveled. He worked in more restaurants and bike shops. He grew weary of that and more importantly, he felt vaguely unfulfilled. He had a friend, Royce Wilson, who managed a used bookstore in the University district of Seattle and they would often talk late into the evening over red wine or scotch while Royce outlined the basics of the used book business to Gary. This led to a period of a few months in which Gary went around to garage sales and thrift stores buying books and selling them, or attempting to sell them, to used bookstores throughout the city. This is what is known as book scouting, and Gary discovered that he had a certain knack for it....It wasn't long before a tidy little stack of boxes of books had been built up and they no longer fit into the trunk of the car. And so Iconoclast Books was born. At first it was just on weekends in the street market on Capitol Hill, with weekdays devoted to scouring the yard sales for choice inventory. By the end of the summer there were enough boxes of books built up to open our first store, in Greenlake, a suburb of Seattle."

Eventually, Gary grew restless and in 1994 he decided to head back to Sun Valley (remember, he was a "practicing ski bum"). He landed in a basement studio of about 800 square feet off 4th Street where he could sell used and out-of-print books.  Somewhere along the line, he met Sarah (then a bookseller at, um, The Book Cellar).  They fell in love, got married and joined forces at the revitalized Iconoclast.  The business grew and moved from one location to another, adding new books, magazines, and gifts. Iconoclast Books spent five years in the historic Griffith building on Main Street in Ketchum before moving into its present location on Sun Valley Road at the end of 2007. Sadly, Gary was killed in a car accident less than a year later.  Even from the dark valley of her grief, Sarah has carried on Gary's drive and vision for the store.

I'm going to turn the rest of this section of the blog post over to Sarah because, frankly, I couldn't have described the store or the current state of bookselling any better than she did in an email to me yesterday....

*     *     *


Our philosophy is along the lines of this: anyone can sell New York Times bestsellers; we want to introduce you to something about which you haven’t already heard. We want to be relentlessly current and honor the classics.  We want to help you find you that rare book you remember from your childhood. We want your experience in a beautiful space--with a curated selection of books, beautiful music playing (often live on our “Dead Man’s Piano”), the smell of house-made chai being steamed, and a wise and well-read staff--to be so wonderful that you wouldn’t even consider an Amazon experience.

I think bookstore customers in general are the best out there.  Think about it: they’re intellectually curious, they’re usually not in a hurry, they are CHOOSING to be in a real store and not at their computer or in a fluorescently-lit box store (we like to say it’s the difference between a fine dining experience and fast food) and they’re buying something that is going to enlighten them, make them laugh, weep or think. This is an entirely different experience than buying most other retail items.

In a small valley we’re so grateful to our customers, not only for choosing us as the place to buy books, but because in a small town, they’ve become our friends and in some cases, our family.  We have some of the most curious and intelligent people coming through our doors and we not only get to help them, we learn from them. We have time to chat, to get to know their tastes, to remember what their spouses loved to read last month, or what we chose for their grandchildren. Because of the café we have people who stay for hours and hours. We have a customer we call “The Moon Man” because in the winter days when my daughter Penelope was a toddler, he’d take her outside and show her the early evening moon and recite “I love the moon and the moon loves me.” She’s now 8 years old and still brings him every book with moon in the pictures or title to read to her. These people are raising my children with me!

There's no way to choose the most rewarding thing about being a bookseller, but maybe one part of it can be found in this email from an employee the night before he left the country for a trip abroad:
Dear Sarah,
      I really want to thank you. Working at Iconoclast has been one of the best things that's happened to me. I don't think many people can say they love going to work, and I feel lucky that I can. I feel so much love from you and the people around me everyday. There's nothing more important than that. Working at Iconoclast I've grown as a person. I've become a reader, and have a deep appreciation for books that I couldn't have gotten elsewhere, and will have for the rest of my life. You've also given me the gift of travel. Letting me leave for 7 months and having a job I love waiting when I come home is invaluable. It's allowed me to live the life I want to live. There's no amount of quotes, novels, or libraries to express how grateful I am. You've changed my life.
      So really, truly, thank you Sarah, you're a great boss, and an even better friend.
Or maybe it's in this moment when, driving up to my store one day this summer, I saw a pre-teen girl having her photograph taken in front of the store’s sign like she was being photographed with Justin Bieber...I asked about it and she nearly screamed/wept: “Because I’ve been able to visit bookstores all over the world, and THIS IS MY FAVORITE. My friends will be so jealous when they see this.”

I now have a toddler customer who comes in once a week with his father, hollers a hello to “Uncle Sarah” and makes a beeline to my (now almost 18 year old) son’s wooden train set in the children’s section while telling his father which books to grab to read to him. His father has been a customer since his teens, buying Bukowski. From Bukowski to Board Books...

Three nights ago, I left work after a 14-hour Black Friday, which included an Open Mic Night of prose, poetry and LOTS of music, including a trio with a stand-up bass. We had a full house and the performances ranged from an 8-year-old telling jokes, to a 16-year-old singing and playing the ukulele, to a gray-haired, conservatively dressed father getting up there with an acoustic guitar and blowing us away (we found out later it was Dave Dederer, formerly of the Seattle rock band The Presidents of the United States of America). I went outside to my car at one point and what I saw from the outside made me nearly weep.  This beautifully-lit store with silver snowflakes hanging in the windows--it was packed with people, books, ideas, music, old and new friends, and three of my own children.  I just felt full, nourished and proud. We do good things inside those brick-and-mortar walls. So on my exhausted, I-can’t-keep-up-this-pace, drive home, I realized I can. I love it too much and we’re good at it.

I also love watching someone’s face light up when you finally nail the book they didn’t know they were looking for until you describe it and place it in their hands. Or the kid who calls my home, late in the evening with a shaking voice, “Sarah, do you have the third book in the Divergent trilogy at home? Or at The Modern Mercantile?  I am three blocks away....” (You can substitute that with Hunger Games, Twilight, Harry Potter, Series of Unfortunate Events, etc.)  It happens more times than you'd think and it's been this way for decades. You gotta love small towns.

Alexander Maksik signing books at Iconoclast
We’ve hosted so many amazing events it’s hard to choose. We’ve danced on table tops with Alex Kuczynski (author of Beauty Junkies), we’ve watched Billy Collins sing “Mustang Sally,” and I can remember making Pete Fromm nearly cry many years ago when he showed up at the store and we had a guitarist walking around strumming while a packed house of eager Fromm fans drank wine and nibbled cheese before his event. We go out of our way for authors because we realize we're off the beaten path. We found a Polish speaking ski instructor for Anne Applebaum’s kids when she came here, we took Jonathan Evison to every single Hemingway watering hole and closed down Ketchum, and we’ve called in favors to the best restaurants that were booked solid just to get a table for Walter Kirn. We’ll score you lift tickets, concert tickets, sometimes a funky condo.

*     *     *

I can testify to Iconoclast's Author TLC.  More than six months after Sarah first grabbed my hands and insisted I come to Sun Valley, my wife Jean and I drove our car off that beaten path and visited Ketchum for an all-too-brief stay.  Sarah did indeed arrange for us to stay at a friend's condo (an elegant place which was far from funky) and made sure everything was set up for me at the Community Library's lecture room (which is a bland name for what turned out to be a gorgeous auditorium--all the more impressive given the small size of the town).  The next day, Sarah even made us some of her Idaho-famous lattes (did I detect a hint of potato in the foam?).

While Jean and Sarah chatted about mutual vintage mercantile interests (Jean had just opened The Backyard Bungalow in here in Butte, Montana, and Sarah is the proud owner of the Modern Mercantile in Hailey), I wandered the store, browsing the books.  I zeroed in on the Hemingway section--an entire wall of shelves dedicated to the author who lived in Sun Valley off and on for part of his life and chose this mountainous Garden of Eden as the place where he'd end it with an early-morning shotgun blast.  While I didn't find exactly what I was looking for (a book specifically about Hem's Ketchum days), my eye was caught by another book on display near Iconoclast's front door: The Sun Valley Story by Van Gordon Sauter.  Perfect.


For those of you with even a passing interest in the ski resort's history, I highly recommend this sumptuously-illustrated account of the valley's history--its rise from a sheepherding crossroads to a multi-million-dollar winter wonderland where stars like Gary Cooper, Marilyn Monroe, Clint Eastwood and Jamie Lee Curtis came to play.  Sauter emphasizes Sun Valley's self-made entrepreneurship and resilience even during economic downturns.  Bottom line, the region's successful legacy begins and ends with the mountains and rivers, the solid foundation of nature which will never change.

Except when it does.

Resiliency and nature collided in Sun Valley this past summer, two months after my visit.  Six years after the devastating Castle Rock Fire roared over the mountains and down into the lowlands, flames once again threatened Ketchum, Hailey and the other small towns dotting the valley floor.  The Beaver Creek Fire forced hundreds of evacuations this past August and brought everything to a standstill--at a time when Sun Valley normally depended on heavy tourism traffic.

Most of us (myself included) hear about these things and while we may pause to read the headline stories and feel a little pinch of sympathy inside, the truth of the matter is, we turn the page of the newspaper, go on eating our toast and eggs and rarely give the ashes of Sun Valley forests a second thought.  Until, that is, someone takes us by the shoulders, gets all up in our face, and tells us that we should care.  Such a thing happened to me when I read the following heartfelt note Sarah included in her bookstore newsletter a few weeks after the fires had been extinguished.  I'll close with Sarah's words in hopes that, like me, you will be moved to help out the store with a donation or--as I did--by ordering a few books from Iconoclast instead of that Other Place which rhymes with Shamazon.


*     *     *

I've been ruminating for weeks on thoughts and the proper way to put them into words about the impact of the Beaver Creek Fire on our community, to my store and to my family. I've been interviewed many times--locally and nationally--and have (this should come as no surprise) worn my heart on my sleeve and often, possibly, said too much. The focus of many of these conversations has been about devastation: The damage to our beautiful landscape and the impact of that on our economy, the repercussions that losing the busiest three weeks of our season has on a budget that absolutely depends on tourism, the trickle-down effect of what occurs when a store loses necessary income and can no longer support the causes it normally does; the struggles with paying employees, vendors, taxes, rent and utilities. Sometimes, I've imagined the loss of the store.

Tonight, I want to tell the good stories and I hope you'll bear with me. I've thought a lot about the last 6 years--the Castle Rock Fire from which we're still not recovered as evidenced by still paying off the disaster relief loan from the Small Business Administration, the death of my husband and true iconoclast behind the store, the loss of our locally-owned bank which carried our credit lines so that we could get through slack seasons, the recession that hit not long after Gary's death, the egregious efforts of Amazon to destroy brick-and-mortar stores of all kinds, and yes, I have a hard time with that little Kindle.

Despite all of these obstacles, I am awake at midnight feeling invigorated about Monday morning--mostly because I adore what I do and also because I have a lot of great ideas AND I have a few beautiful stories to tell.  They may not save the store, but they have nourished my soul on sad days and reminded me why I do what I do, seven days a week.

In no particular order and because no monetary value can be attached to goodwill.

1.  During the evacuation I received a Facebook message from a stranger in Twin Falls: "Sarah, I know we're only fb friends but I love your store and all that you do for your community and book lovers. I was in the mall today and heard that all hotels are booked in Boise and Twin. If you and your children need a place to stay, we have a guest room for you. We'd love to have you."

2.  Numerous, and I mean numerous, offers similar to this from all over Idaho and beyond.

3.  This week, an online order from the Stanley Library for 25 books, all of which could've been purchased at cost through a book distributor. Yesterday an online order came in, for one book, with this message: "I'm a bookseller in California and I just heard about the wildfires in your area. I so hope things start looking better soon. Solidarity!"

4.  And a story that I hope goes viral, not for the benefit of Iconoclast Books, but because I hope people who are able will be inspired to support all local businesses--and for those of us who cannot, will remember it and do something similar in another way, down the road. Most of us know Carol and Len Harlig as they've been figures in and pillars of this community for decades; they're kind, generous and passionate about our valley, giving of themselves in more ways than this email will allow. I've known them for nearly 24 years and they never cease to amaze me. Read on...

This is what they've done and how Len explained it to me: "Carol and I sat down the other night and identified businesses that we're concerned about as well as the people we're grateful to in our valley, especially the fire fighters who saved our community. We would like to support and thank a few." The Harligs proceeded to spend a very generous amount of money at Iconoclast Books, citing us as a business they consider to be one of many that are integral to our community and they couldn't envision being without.

Clearly I wanted to give Carol and Len a public thank you without embarrassing them.  In their graceful way, they stated that they don't want acclimation for this gesture, but in hopes that others would do something similar, I was free to share. In Len's words:
      Our "plan" is to buy $1,000 worth of $100 gift certificates at local businesses for five months, thereby helping local businesses to survive until the snow flies, and by gifting the cards to emergency responders (firefighters first, law enforcement next, hospital workers third, and then another round for firefighters and law enforcement), as a way to thank the women and men who did so much for so many. (Apologies to Winston for the paraphrase).
      Our first thought was to do this below the radar as neither of us seeks publicity for our community efforts, but if getting the word out will encourage other residents to shop locally or to do something similar to our "plan" then we'd give up a little privacy for the higher cause. Maybe we can start a movement and help revitalize our local economy. "OCCUPY MAIN STREET!"
Need I say more about this incredible community and state we live in?  Yes, I want my store to survive this latest tragedy, not just because I want a job I love and appreciate, but because it allows me to live and raise my children in a community full of so many creative, smart and caring people in hopes that they'll continue in that vein for the rest of their lives.


Iconoclast Books is the featured bookstore all this month at The Quivering Pen.  By clicking on the links to books mentioned in this month's blog posts, you'll be taken to the store's website where you can purchase the book (or, better yet, several books).  The Quivering Pen is dedicated to supporting independent bookstores.