Tag Archives: independent store

Your Indie Bookstore, Alive and Kicking

Books used for sculpture wall hanging. One title reads, "You Too Can Teach."

Book Sculpture by Jim Rosenau

People love new buzzwords and phrases like “the death of print”so much that even lit lovers like (you and) me start to believe it. And since I’m knee-deep in journalism “J-school,” I often see this notion passed around like herpes at a Four Loko-sponsored event. It spreads as fast as mouths can move.

But print can’t die, book-lovers retort. Fine, screw newspapers, they say. But books are personal. You don’t mess with books.

And you know what? They’re right.

I set out to investigate independent bookstores in Los Angeles, expecting to find that shops were closing left and right, sales were down and customers were abandoning indies for e-books, Amazon.com and Borders. I mean, their discount e-mails are incredible, come on.

I was wrong.

Of course, indie booksellers still face the challenges of any small business, but they are loved by their communities. People still seek the well-loved pages of used paperbacks. House cats are still a staple of musty, literary aisles.

Check out this video story about a shop in Echo Park, Ca:

Thanks to Stories Books & Cafe in Echo Park, Calif., and Mrs. Nelson’s Toy and Book Shop in La Verne, Calif., for welcoming me and my little camera into their homes.

If you enjoyed this, check out my first-ever Square Syndrome review, which was about book sculptures and other ways artists repurpose used books for visual art: And Books Are Not Enough

The Brave Little Toaster Would Be Proud

New gadgets and apps stir the masses like no teenybopper concert can.

More than half a million people pre-ordered the iPhone 4 as thousands more camped out on sidewalks outside Apple stores across the world. News about insignificant changes in Facebook-land generate more articles than the midterm elections. And if you wanna talk obscure, the new iTunes icon even gave life (life, I say!) to a confrontational curmudgeon of a Twitter personality, dropping F bombs whenever Steve Jobs does something badass and unverified.

So it’s refreshing when humble technologies from older eras find their way back to relevancy.

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