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Dear
Laura,
Recently, as I was
setting up my
“Great American
Book Tour”
itinerary for Walking to Gatlinburg, a bookseller asked me to define “a good
independent
bookstore.”
I’d like to
share my reply with
my blog readers and
fellow fans of indie
bookstores
everywhere:
"In
response to your
inquiry, I believe
that a good
independent
bookstore always
puts good books and
good customers ahead
of the bottom line.
Interestingly,
by doing so,
passionately and
knowledgeably, many
(though, sadly, not
all) independent
bookstores have
managed to stay in
business in this
economically
depressed era when
even chain stores
are suffering.
Of
course, one of the
reasons that chain
bookstores are
having their own
difficulties is that
many of them do not place a top priority on books and customers.
In fairness,
though, I have to
say that, from time
to time, in chain
stores, I meet very
independent
booksellers who love
books and respect
customers and like
to match them up.
Good
independent
bookstores – like
Tolstoy’s families
– are all
different.
But they are
very happy places.
When I walk
into one, the
colorful jackets of
books that are my
old friends or may
become new friends
excite me the way
walking out of the
dim concourse of a
major league
baseball stadium
onto the bright,
geometrical
familiarity of the
diamond below
excites me.
Good independent
bookstores are
always welcoming.
Customers are
invited to browse.
Booksellers
make time to talk
about – books!
Go into any
university English
department at the
end of the day.
All you hear
is people grousing
about poor students,
parking
restrictions, pay
freezes.
Booksellers
should be so lucky.
Still,
they’re as
enthusiastic about
Elizabeth
Gilbert’s Committed
and the new Raymond
Carver collection at
the end of the day
as at 10 a.m.
They just
plain love books.
And
there’s something
else about
independent
bookstores.
Something
important.
They keep
writers like me, and
hundreds of others,
going. They don’t
overload their stock
with just the best
sellers.
Most of my
favorite writers –
Richard Russo, Chris
Bohjalian, Annie
Proulx, Richard
Ford, Ivan Doig –
got their start in
independent
bookstores.
What’s
more, by championing
freedom of speech,
our constitutional
right to privacy,
and freedom of the
press, the indies
help preserve
America’s precious
political and
cultural heritage.
Thank
you, independent
booksellers!"
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About
the Author
Howard Frank
Mosher is
the author
of ten
novels and a
travel
memoir. Born
in the Catskill
Mountains
in 1942,
Mosher has
lived in Vermont’s
fabled
Northeast
Kingdom
since 1964.
He has won
many awards
for his
fiction,
including Guggenheim
and National
Endowment
for the Arts
fellowships,
and the American
Academy of
Arts and
Letters
Literature
Award.
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About
Us
Lorelei
Books
1103
Washington
St.
(click for
map)
Historic
Downtown
Vicksburg,
MS
39183
601-634-8624
loreleibooks@wave2lan.com
GPS
Coordinates
32° 21.112N
090°
52.910W
Sunday
and Monday, Closed
Tuesday
through Saturday
10:00 AM to 6:00 PM
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