All Booked Up: Another Declaration of Independents

Just this side of hoarding, I collect books. First editions. Modern fiction. A handful of children’s classics: Alice in Wonderland(s), vintage Dr. Seuss and all-and-anything Sendak, where the wild things are. Goes without saying, I browse with the best of them. As for indie bookshops, I know and love a slew of them across the country. A few honorable mentions, as follows:
- The Odyssey Bookshop: Independent Since 1963. I’ve never set foot in the store, because I’ve never been to South Hadley, Massachusetts. But I’m a devoted subscriber to the shop’s Signed First Edition Club - whereby I receive books of note each month. Located in the five-college region of western MA, across the street from Mount Holyoke College, the Odyssey gets its share of celebrity-writer traffic, affording spot-on book selections and signed first novels of emerging stars. Recent acquisitions include: The Art of Fielding (Harbach), The Marriage Plot (Eugenides) The Night Circus (Morgenstern), State of Wonder (Ann Patchett) The Year of the Flood (Atwood), Chronic City (Lethem) and Matterhorn (Marlantes)
- Printer’s Row Fine and Rare Books, 715 South Dearborn Street, Chicago. Specializing in 16th through 20 Century American and British Literature - mostly first editions. Displayed in elegant oak cases. All under lock and key. Get past the first standoffish impression of owner John LaPine, (who deplores, if not banishes, the use of cell phones in his store) and you discover a man obsessed with his books, but most knowledgeable and generous in discussing them with you.
- Beckham’s Bookshop, 228 Decatur Street, New Orleans. Two floors of current fiction, out-of-print editions, rare secondhand books and thousands of LPs. Yum!
- Wessel & Lieberman Booksellers, Pioneer Square, Seattle. New, used, rare and out-of-print books, catalogued and available online.
- Kaleidoscope Books and Collectibles, 200 North Fourth Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI. A favorite spot of mine in Ann Arbor, where there are many fine bookstores from which to choose. Whimsical. And magical. Here’s a book store stuffed with the “stuff” of childhood memories: vintage children’s books, science fiction, sports memorabilia and toys, not to mention an impressive collection of classic fiction. Owner Jeffrey Pickell is welcoming, but restrained, often knocking his own prices down for earnest collectors.
Photos: Vhenoch
Illustrations: @www.wlbooks.com (Charles van Sandwyk)
Thanks for browsing.






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Comments
If yr gonna be the one who takes this theme and runs with it, don't forget the St. Mark's in NYC and City Lights i SF. They ain't the biggest but they got it going, and thank god for little favors, the St. Mark's just got its lease renewed by Cooper Union so it can stay in business.
Stay with this one and you may have a groove.
The book store I really want to see is Larry McMurtry's "Booked Up" in Electra Texas -- yeh, coincidence that I entitled this post but didn't actually know that was the name of the bookstore until I googled it, just now.
Haven't explored St. Mark's in NYC - but have wandered into the famed flagship Bauman Rare Books on Madison Avenue -- just for fantasy and fun.
More favorite haunts: Dawn Treader in Ann Arbor next door to the now-closed Borders, Howards Bookstore - on Maple in Evanston, Blue Bicycle Books in Charleston, S.C.. Parker's Books on Main in Sarasota (in search of Stephen King), and Paul's Book Store on State St. in Madison... and oh yes, must mention, BookBeats in on Greenfield Oak Park, Michigan. I could go on and on...obviously.
Again my husband would heartily agree with your perspective. He puts up with my book collection; I put up with his bike obsession. (The bikes however, are a lot easier to move.)
Ooops, South Hadley. Right you are. Thank you for the correction. I will note and edit. This month's First Edition selection just arrived - The Uninnocent - a collection of short stories by Bradford Morrow.