Pasadena bookstore

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I Have Never Seen This in a Bookstore

When we walked into Book Alley, a group of about 15 people were solemnly saying goodbye to one another and leaving, each with a red carnation in their hand.  Talk about being involved with the community, a memorial service was just breaking up.  That is a full service bookstore.  I have heard of speed dating in a bookstore, birthday parties in a bookstore (I may try that), I even have a faint memory of reading about a wedding in a bookstore, but a memorial service?  A first for me, but for a person who loves books, having your friends and loved ones surrounded by them while they remember you isn’t such a bad idea.

New, Used and Rare Books & Other  Works on Paper

And these are lovely books to be surrounded by.  Book Alley is the classic used bookstore I love to meander around.  Books on shelves, stacked on the ground, sale tables bursting, all call out the sleuth in me.  The huge art section drew me in.  Just what I was hoping for, I found gems I didn’t know I wanted until I opened them.  For me, some books are more interesting used than new.  The Harold Letters:  The Making of an American Intellectual by Clement Greenberg is just such a book.  Clement Greenberg was the great American art critic who influenced the course of post-WWII American art.  I’ve read about him, but never his writings, nor do I have a sense of him.  The Harold Letters are a collection of letters written from 1928 to 1943 to Harold Lazarus, a college friend.  The letters start the summer of their sophomore year and comprise a sort of epistolary bildungsroman autobiography.  The Harold Letters reminded me of the books Helene Hanff would request in 84, Charing Cross Road. I haven’t been disappointed, the letters reflect Greenberg’s striving to lead an intellectual life.  They include what he’s reading, what books he purchased, and a variety intellectual observations, all in nugget bite-sized pieces that I can read while I’m waiting for my printer or sitting on hold.

Keith spent his time looking at the extensive collection of rare Los Angeles books.  He found several he loved, alas, the recession.  The bookseller was willing to be flexible with the price (love that) and Father’s Day isn’t that far away, hmmm.  The website highlights a variety of rare books, right now they are selling a collectible edition of The Hound of Baskervilles and a unique bootleg Russian version (in English) of Salinger’s works.  It’s worth perusing.

Book Alley

1252 E. Colorado Blvd.

Pasadena, CA 91106

T:  626.683.8083

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Every fan of independent bookstores talks about their importance in creating community.  Sometimes it’s hard to know what that means.  There is certainly interaction between the customers and the booksellers, and between readers and authors at events.  Those are “wheels and spokes” models of interaction, all directed toward a center.  How does an independent bookstore create an opportunity for the spokes to interact?  Visit Vroman’s.  It’s not unusual for me to chat up complete strangers looking at books in a bookstore.  Just pick up The Elegance of the Hedgehog and get ready to hear my thoughts despite the fact you’ve never met me.  At Vroman’s, customers were clustered in groups and talking all over the store.  And not all of them knew each other, I know because I was eavesdropping.  I wasn’t in the store for 10 minutes when a customer walked up to me, pointed at The Whistling Season by Ivan Doig and told me it was a beautifully written story.  Wanting to exchange the favor in the D section of fiction, I recommended The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson.  We both walked away with a new book.

Just when I was going to ask a bookseller for a recommendation, I heard one of the employees recommend Louis de Bernieres for a “sophisticated, educated woman” who was in the hospital.  Well, I’m not bedridden, but I flattered myself that the rest of the description may apply so I discretely followed along (stalked them).  I didn’t connect de Bernieres with Corelli’s Mandolin, probably because I’ve only seen the movie, but the bookseller raved about it.  I bought his A Partisan’s Daughter to give it a try.

What else did I find?  Looking at the WALL of employee recommendations I found Read the rest of this entry »

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Despite Kim’s best efforts, she can’t actually make it to every independent bookstore in the world, let alone this country, and of course I barely ever make it east of the 405.  So we’re incredibly grateful to our readers who have taken the time to write us about some of their favorite bookstores–it lets us expand the scope of this blog.

If you have a bookstore you love, please feel free to contact us at kim@bookstorepeople.com or claire@bookstorepeople.com and plug it.  You can also simply add a comment at the end of this blog and tell us about it that way, but then you’re depriving us of an easy future post and you don’t want to do that, do you?

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