Seattle's Used Bookstores 1999 and 2019: A LOVE NOTE TO BOOK CULTURE AND THE PRE-DIGITAL AGE
By Mary Brown
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About this ebook
Seattle's Used Bookstores: 1999 and 2019 is a collection of essays and photographs celebrating independent used bookstores in Seattle just before and twenty years after the city's tech boom. It is an homage to the culture of print and the world of used bookstores, reveling in their randomness, quantity of books, resident cats, patrons, and hard-
Mary Brown
Mary Brown is President and Creative Director at Portland, Maine–based Imago Creative, the only strategic marketing firm in the U.S. specializing exclusively in helping companies reach women of the Baby Boom generation. With more than 20 years as an art director, creative director, and brand champion working with many of the country’s top companies, she has distinguished herself as a leading voice on the subject of marketing to Baby-Boomer women.
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Seattle's Used Bookstores 1999 and 2019 - Mary Brown
Copyright © 2023 by Mary Brown. All rights reserved.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
Published in the United States of America
Brilliant Books Literary
137 Forest Park Lane Thomasville
North Carolina 27360 USA
ISBN:
Paperback: 979-8-88945-293-5
Ebook: 979-8-88945-294-2
Contents
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1 Twice Sold Tales, Capitol Hill
Chapter 2 Magus Books, University District
Chapter 3 Blmf Books And Lamplight Books, Pike Place Market
Chapter 4 The Globe And Arundel Books, Pioneer Square
Chapter 5 Ophelia’s Books, Fremont
Chapter 6 Couth Buzzard Books, Greenwood
Conclusion
Appendix
Endnotes
DEDICATION
For Mom (the painter), Dad (the builder), and Jessie (the reader).
For Tommy, whose readings of
Taffy Sinclair I will never forget.
For Gus and Penny.
And in memoriam, John Stamets
(1949–2014), Seattle’s photographer.
Elizabeth Reutlinger, my mother, in an unidentified downtown Seattle bookstore, 1999.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Iam very grateful to all the bookstore owners who permitted me to photograph their stores, answered questions, and wished the project well. I would also like to acknowledge the people in the photographs, readers and booksellers, who are not named, as they are the essential part of the ecology of bookstores and create some of the most interesting photographs.
Charles Fischer’s 2013 article, Seattle’s Disappearing Bookstores,
from Seattle Magazine, is a gem of insight into his experience working in a used bookstore and is quoted at length herein.
Special thanks to Roxi Kringle for her excellent feedback on the photos and essays as well as unfailing warmth and good cheer as a friend and neighbor. Elizabeth Reutlinger, my mother, helped fine-tune the final draft by freeing me of my attachment to commas, semi-colons, and unnecessary phrases.
Further thanks are due to Ellen and Tom Flynn of the Art Establishment in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, for operating a multipurpose art studio with a first-rate darkroom, the only public darkroom within a ninety-mile radius. Dan’s Camera City in Allentown also deserves credit for not giving up on the print and continuing to sell photo paper, even if it is kept in a backroom closet.
To contain the project within workable boundaries, several unique bookplaces in Seattle have been omitted: Lion Heart Bookstore and Left Bank Books in Pike Place Market (a mix of new and used books), Mercer Street Books in Queen Anne, Pegasus Book Exchange in West Seattle, Twice Sold Tales in Ballard, Horizon Books on First Hill, the three locations of Third Place Books (new and used) in Ravenna, Seward Park, and Lake Forest Park, Estelita’s Library and Bookstore between the Central District and Leschi Park, and B. Brown and Associates between Fremont and Northlake. Sea Ocean Books, once a neighbor to B. Brown selling rare naval and marine-themed titles, shuttered at the end of 2019. All of these places have stories and collections as interesting and valuable as those featured in this project, and I hope my readers will discover them.
INTRODUCTION
There is no death, only a change of worlds.
—Chief Seattle
Don’t it always seem to go, that you don’t know what you’ve got ’til it’s gone.
—Joni Mitchell
If you are taking in these words, you already understand something about why this project came into being and recognize the pleasure and edification obtained through reading. Every book is a conduit to other worlds of thought and experience that, once assimilated, become permanent mental keepsakes. While the magic may reside in the books, the libraries, bookstores, and personal collections that house them possess their own transformative power. Book-filled spaces offer both a refuge from exterior chaos and the thrill of possibility within their rows and nooks. Fiction, mystery, world art, religion, sexuality, biography, gardening, parenting, humor, horror, and countless more