used books

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Earlier this week, I wrote that a necessary ingredient for a successful bookstore is community support.  The Park Hill Community Bookstore operates as a non-profit, officially and intentionally.  It is all about community.  Last fall’s newsletter described the store as a sturdy three legged stool.  The three legs of support:

  1. Membership:  The store offers membership levels from $10 to $40.  Members receive a 7.72% discount, additional discounts during Christmas and sales, 10 used book credits (good for 10 used paperbacks or 5 used hardbacks) and a newsletter.
  2. Donated Used Books:  members and non-members alike receive credit for donating and exchanging books.
  3. Volunteers:  There is one paid employee, the manager, but otherwise the store is completely run by volunteers.  Volunteers sign up for at least one four hour shift a month.  Some volunteers have worked there for over 20 years.  If I lived in Park Hill, I’d volunteer in a flash!

Park Hill Community Bookstore is on a quaint street in a lovely neighborhood.  Park Hill is a suburb of Denver that looks like it came out of a Frank Lloyd Wright drawing book.  I wanted to stay for hours as soon as I drove up.  The store itself is as cozy as the neighborhood.

Park Hill Community Bookstore is two stories.  The bottom floor houses a small selection of new books, calendars,  and used fiction and children’s books.  Upstairs is a large room with rows of shelves of  mysteries, espionage, romance, and a variety of non-fiction genres.  At the bottom of the stairs was a bookcase full of plays; I wish I had hours to go through those shelves!

If you’re in the area, stop by, the volunteers are friendly and eager to chat with locals and visitors.

Park Hill Community Bookstore

4620 E. 23rd Ave.

Denver, CO 80207

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The drag queens are the large black and white photo

The drag queens are the large black and white photo

When I visited Capitol Hill Books, a used bookstore in Denver, CO, I noticed a collage running down the entire side of a bookshelf.  It was made up of all the things found in used books.  My favorite was an 8 x 10 photo that at first glance is a group of 1940s “pin up” girls, but on closer look is a lineup of drag queens.

Joel Eis, owner of Rebound Bookstore, described in an interview some of the interesting items found in books in his store:  a World War II book with a Dear John letter; stationary with the Union Army logo in a Civil War book; a coffee table book containing two huge marijuana leaves; a $100 bill (flip through the used books you buy, you could find lunch money); and, stacks of airline boarding passes (I use them as bookmarks when I travel, helps me to remember where the boarding pass is located).

In one of my book groups we’re reading the Rabbit series by John Updike.  One of the members is a John Updike fanatic and owns almost all of his books, many of them she purchased used.  She shared with us an old Book-of-the-Month Club summary of Rabbit Redux and a review from 1971 she found in a used copy of Rabbit Redux, it felt like opening a literary time capsule.

What have you found in a used book?  We’d love to hear, leave a comment and share!

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Rebound Bookstore, “the biggest little bookstore in the universe,” is storefront1a provider of all things art in San Rafael, CA.  A quality used bookstore that also sells CDs and video, hosts live events, offers free coffee with purchase of a book, and runs Higher Space Gallery a place of artists to hang their work.  The Marin Independent Journal quoted the owner, Joel Eis, describing the store as a cultural engine designed to “serve as a locus for cultural and idea exchange, not just be a business.”

Hand to Mouth:  WORDS SPOKEN OUT which generally features a poet but always provides a stage for local musicians and writers occurs the last Saturday of every month.  On nights the store doesn’t have an event, the space is available for rent.  My dream would be to have my birthday party in a bookstore, I don’t think that’s what Rebound is envisioning, but I could dress it up as a bookstore review reading!  Stop by the store and share your ideas over a cup of coffee, after buying a book.

Rebound Bookstore

1611 4th Street

San Rafael, CA 94901

T:  415.482.0550

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book-revueA Long Island Bookstore

As you know, we love when readers contribute reviews of their favorite bookstores and the farther from LA they are, the better we like them.  Supportive and enthusiastic reader Meagan Cea lives in Huntington, New York and is a sophomore at Queens College in Flushing.  We’re very grateful to her for the following review.  The rest of this post is hers.

In this economy everyone is trying to pinch pennies. A surprising
and wonderful side effect is that, in the effort to save money, more
and more people are choosing books over movies and video games. But for
those with a real habit, reading isn’t necessarily cheaper at 15, 20,
sometimes 30 dollars a pop. That is, if you haven’t discovered a way to
feed your addiction.

Whenever people think of New York, they think of New York City,
Manhattan. It’s only natural. Yet in doing so they forget about another
wonderful little island: Long Island. If by chance you do remember Long
Island and find yourself out in Suffolk County, you just may stumble
upon Huntington Village. Huntington Village, also known as downtown
Huntington, is THE hot spot for any kind of entertainment you’re looking
for: restaurants, cafes, bars, a movie theater, even a jazz lounge. But
the best thing in town is of course, the bookstore. Read the rest of this entry »

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A bookstore transforms itself at the New Year

Much as I loved to write at an early age, I never considered becoming any kind of a reporter because I hate talking to strangers.  (I could never become a talk show host, either, I guess).  That neurotic problem of mine definitely affects the way I judge bookstores: Kim chats up the owners and gets all the back story, while I lurk and shop.  (I have been known to ask questions, but the story has to be empty and the shopowner amiable.)

I approach new stores from a different angle.  At any given moment, I’m usually obsessed with a specific writer or subject, and will, when I walk into a new bookstore, check out their offerings in that particular interest.  I figure it’s like random polling: it gives me a quick idea of how good their overall selection is.  (Of course, that doesn’t work on specialty stores–I wouldn’t walk into a cookbook store looking for a graphic novel.)

So when my family and I walked the several blocks from one of our favorite places on earth–The Bone Room in Berkeley–to a bookstore we vaguely remembered was up the street, I knew what I was going to look for.  Pegasus Books offers a mixture of new and used books, separated out so you know what you’re getting and can, say, buy that new bestseller for a friend’s birthday gift, then go look for something to read for yourself in the used section. Read the rest of this entry »

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