Bookless in Manhattan

I suppose the fact that I still harbor an inordinate love of dinosaurs, geology, ancient civilizations, and liberal politics should prepare me for the demise of books. The short road to extinction lies along the path of my interests. Except, of course, Bible. There must be a portrait of a very old, decrepit scroll somewhere in someone’s attic. The culture of books, apart from the library, is a fairly recent one in human history. Even the concept of stores dedicated to books is one that has had a very tenuous lifespan. Now that Borders is gone, I’m sometimes reduced to skulking about Barnes and Noble to find my quarry. So on my lunchtime yesterday I decided to visit the Barnes and Noble on Fifth Avenue and then swing by the Gotham Book Mart. I had heard of the Book Mart before—the store that hosted visits by Truman Capote, James Joyce, Arthur Miller and many, many more luminaries. I thought it would be a good antidote to B&N, and besides, the address is just blocks from my office.

Barnes and Noble is the last resort of a reading man. I don’t have much time for holiday shopping these days, so I figured I’d nip in with my list (nothing too obscure; in fact, I’d seen the titles in an indie bookstore over the weekend, but my family was with me) and be back out in a jiff. Fifth Avenue. Midtown Manhattan. The choice of books was atrocious. Purely lowest common denominator selection. It is symptomatic of America’s love affair with the ordinary, the lower-quality-if-higher-quantity mentality. Cosco of the intellect. Barnes and Noble is the only show in town and they don’t have the selection or panache of many a much smaller Borders. I had to walk out empty handed. Well, at least there was the Gotham Book Mart to look forward to!

I suppose my first clue should’ve been the fact that the photo on Google maps showed a storefront reading “Food World” at the address which still maintained the bookstore name. I thought maybe the Book Mart was behind it or something. No Gotham Book Mart. Back at the office, chewing a dry peanut butter sandwich, I stared crestfallen at the computer screen. Wikipedia informed me that the famed Gotham Book Mart closed four years ago. Rising rents in Manhattan and the very Barnes and Noble I’d just visited drove it out of business. e e cummings, George Gerschwin, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, and J. D. Salinger passed their hours here. Katharine Hepburn, Woody Allen, and Charlie Chaplin were no strangers here. When the remaining stock—valued at 3 million dollars—came up for auction, it was purchased for $400,000. By the landlords. So ended an era.

From monks hunched over their vellum by the sallow light of candles to the modern dreamer in the glow of her or his laptop screen, we have brought writing an unimaginable distance. Unfortunately, many of the landmarks along the way have vanished without the blink of an entrepreneurial eye.

3 thoughts on “Bookless in Manhattan

  1. J Holmes

    Hi Gene, Sorry that Gotham Book Mart vanished.

    “Costco of the intellect.” forgive me for profiting from your misery but I have been harboring an anxiety about many of the book stores that I have visited in the last fifteen years. As the years have passed I have found fewer and fewer books that appeal to me. I thought perhaps my brain had suffered damage and that I was unable to enjoy books that I might previously have been attracted to. I think you are right. While there are some great non-fiction works being published overall there does seem to be a wide variety of unappealing books on the shelves these days. Maybe they are books that come from minds trained by television.

    While I empathize with you for your loss I can tell you that you are the fourth person to express to me something similar about what modern book stores are like.

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  2. Chains are ruining more than books. Go to a new town, it has the same restaurants as the old one. If you were dropped blindfolded into a mall, you wouldn’t know where you were, because all the stores in all the malls of all the world are all the same. Give me breakfast at a local cafe, buy me something at a store no one’s heard of. Release me from the chains!

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    • Steve Wiggins

      There are precious few places where we can get away from chain stores any more. When I find one I keep it to myself so some speculator doesn’t get any ideas…

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