Protecting the Literary Zeitgeist of Hyde Park’s Indie Book Scene

“A good bookstore sells books, but its primary product, if you will, is the browsing experience…One of the great benefits of the act of browsing is the rumination it evokes.”Source: Jeff Deutsch, “In Praise of Good Bookstores

If there is a neighborhood in Chicago that reaches for the pinnacle of a book lover’s nirvana, it has to be Hyde Park. Surrounding the University of Chicago and situated just south of the Loop, this epicenter of learning, education, and literature is a bibliophile’s wonderland of Indie bookstores. 

Source: schoolstreetposters.com

However, just when it felt like the dust had settled from years of fighting off the tentacles of Amazon’s loss-leading blitzkrieg on bookstores, a new threat has set up shop right in Hyde Park’s very midst. This time it’s not a digital menace, but instead a big-box goliath — Barnes & Noble.

Yes, in a free market, competition is supposed to benefit the consumer. But, and this is a big but, at what cost? Price is not and should never be the sole factor, especially in the book realm. What about the value of the experience? What about service? What about variety? What about the discovery of the unexpected? What about home-grown? What about locally owned and operated? What about sanctuary-like ambiance? What about a delicate mix of existing independent bookstores who live and operate as a cohesive draw to Hyde Park?

“The value is, and always has been, at least in the good and serious bookstores, in the experience of being among books–an experience afforded to anyone who enters the space with curiosity and time. And the yield is discovery, not of what we think we know we want, but of that which we have yet to encounter.” Source: Jeff Deutsch, “In Praise of Good Bookstores

Typically, a big-box store will not draw people from far outside the local vicinity when it has dozens of locations spread all over Chicagoland (21 at last count).  Meanwhile, a unique and varied collection of Indie bookstores can and will do just that (draw customers from further afield) because of the collective experience they offer — and that sublimely satisfying pastime known as “browsing” where one can wander, wonder, discover, ponder, and partake without interruption. Such a unique labor of love [browsing] can never be truly replicated in a big box. Imitated maybe. Replicated, never.

“Big-name box bookstores have installed cafes and armchairs precisely because people like to hang out around books. Next time you’re in one of those cavernous megasellers, see for yourself how they’ve worked yo create ambiance. Look at the shelf placement, how they’ve been arranged to mark off cozy little reading nooks. Somebody’s tried very hard to make you forget you’re in a warehouse.” Source: Wendy Welch, “The Little Bookstore of Big Stone Gap”

University of Chicago in the heart of Hyde Park – Source: pme.uchicago.edu

Call & Response, 57th Street, Powell’s, Seminary Co-op, University of Chicago Bookstore, and Build Coffee & Books all combine to fulfill a literarian’s needs in this special corner of the Windy City.  Why, other than to disrupt the curated zeitgeist of Hyde Park, does B &N really need to be there?

Hopefully, over time B &N will find itself out of place in Hyde Park and move on to greener pastures elsewhere. And if they do hang around for longer, it’s as a cohort versus a predator.

My guess is the good people who shop the existing Indie bookstores in and around Hyde Park will continue their time-honored tradition of supporting the stores that germinated in and around Hyde Park and avoid the intruder. May it be so.

In the interim, either the individual store websites or bookshop.org offer easy access for all of us who cannot be physically in Chicago on a regular basis to assist the Indie bookstores in Hyde Park. All of them, except the campus bookstore have a presence on the bookshop.org site (57th Street through Seminary Co-op).

Peace, happy reading, and great browsing!

“Every great bookstore allows the reader to get lost in it.” – Source: Jeff Deutsch, I”n Praise of Good Bookstores

#57thStreetBooks #books #bookstores #browsing #BuildCoffeeBooks #CallResponseBooks #Chicago #competition #history #HydePark #indie #literature #opinion #pondering #PowellSBooks #reading #retail #rumination #SeminaryCoOpBooks

I rarely, if ever, post pics of myself, but my wife snapped this one of me returning to the car from #PowellsBooks in #Portland #Oregon. I looked pleased with myself 😂

@Drwave

Man I love that place.. #PowellsBooks

Spotted this book on a trip to #PowellsBooks this afternoon, and as a self-proclaimed #JavaScript hater I’m genuinely curious to read it.

Will I suddenly turn into a fan? Perhaps not. But even a hater has a thing or two to learn.

I was left unattended in Powell’s City of Books for 3 hours. I can’t be held responsible for my actions 💙📚
#books #portland #pdx #powellsbooks #bookstodon #reading

I saw a post that complained that the only place they could buy physical media like books or DVDs any more was Amazon. Well for books anyway, #PowellsBooks is one answer. They ship.

https://www.powells.com/

Powell’s Books | The World’s Largest Independent Bookstore

#BoringTravel In #Portland #UnionStation #MetropolitanLounge, after a visit to #PowellsBooks and a nice #Vietnamese #lunch nearby, awaiting my next #train.

Just ordered this from #PowellsBooks (It’s a no Bezos zone in mi casa).

I’ve enjoyed @breadandcircuses running examination of #TheClimateBook by #gretathunberg. He’s doing important work disseminating knowledge in a time when so many of us are pushed so hard economically we just don’t have time to … read.

They say imitation is highest form of flattery. So, I’m going to take a page from B&C’s playbook and do the same. I’ll be providing notes, quotes, and summaries as I make my through what some are saying could prove to be one of the most important books of our age.

Stay tuned.

https://andrimagnason.com/books/on-time-and-water/
#Climate #ClimateCrisis #Water #Time #OnWaterAndTime

On Time and Water - Andri Magnason

Year: 2019Genre: Narrative Non-fiction, Non-Fiction, HighlightsPages: 320Translation: 32 languages Sold to: Bulgaria (Janet45) Canada - English (Biblioasis) Canada - French (Éditions XYZ) Croatia (Planetopija D.O.O) Czech Republic (Argo) Denmark (Klim) Egypt - Al Arabi Estonia (AS Postimees Grupp) Finland (Aula Kustannus) France (Éditions Leduc.s) Germany (Suhrkamp) Hungary (Gondolat Kiado) Italy (Iperborea) Korea (Bookhouse) Macedonia (Art Connect)

Andri Magnason -