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Found! Bookstores With Charm

Deborah Stokol |
April 17, 2009 | 2:42 p.m. PDT

Senior Editor

A young bookstore patron is spied nestled with a novel at Children's Book World.
(photo by Deborah Stokol)

"I noticed I had developed a fantasy about myself as a
writer as opposed to actually doing it, [so] I finally summoned up the
bad taste to move to Los Angeles."

--Leslie Dixon

Perhaps there really is something inherently tacky about Los Angeles.

Whether it's the mismatched houses, the nouveau riche displays of
wealth, or the combination of flip flops with ball gowns, this dis-uniform sprawl is undeniably unconventional.

But despite that gaucherie, LA has a pretty long tradition (well,
long for a relatively new town) of city-based writers--especially
screen writers.

Besides Hollywood's (questionable) allure, one of the things that
draws out-of-towners to this coastal metropolis, or keeps locals from
leaving, (besides the weather) is that very bizarre collection of brash
traits and bad taste.

And at odds with its "airhead" reputation, LA boasts a diverse population of people who love to read.

It's no surprise Los Angeles has a slew of Borders and Barnes & Nobles.
And I'd be lying if I were to say I wasn't a fan of these mammoth,
warehouse-like book sources, replete with carpets, coffee and
couches. (Look, at the end of the day, I can't help thinking it's better to have a chain book store than no book store at all.)

But the city's large, commercial bookstores find a much-appreciated complement in the
many independent book shops you'll find here. LA's big enough to
accommodate those hoping for the practical chain store, with its supply
and consistency, as well as the cozy, one-of-a-kind shop.

The Great Gatsby's
Jordan Baker once said she liked "large parties [because] they're so
intimate. At small parties there's never any privacy." The same rule applies to wide cities: their size can account for many mounds, crannies,
crevasses, variety, and secrets.

Here are five bookshops--small, perhaps even unknown--that grace the city's many borders.

Children's Book World

10580 ½ W. Pico Blvd.
LA, CA 90064
310.559.2665
Mon-Fri: 10 a.m.-5:30 a.m.
Sat: 10 a.m.- 5p.m.

It's hard for me to be objective about this gem. Its enthusiastic
employees introduced me to too many of my favorite books growing up. I
spent many riveting afternoons there, curled up with an
otherwise-impossible-to-find piece of fiction. But even were I not to
have the fondest memories of the place, and even were I not to be aware
of the fact that those working there know the ins and outs of all pages
making their way through the ½ sign door, I would still say anybody
with a soft spot for children, or children's literature, or finger
puppets, or story time should make his or her way to this three-room
fantastical HQ.

Hennessey + Ingalls

214 Wilshire Blvd.
Santa Monica, CA 90401
310.458.9074
Mon-Sun: 10 a.m.-8 p.m.

Hennessey + Ingalls is beautiful, a real treat to explore.
Just around the corner from the 3rd Street Promenade and another from
the Santa Monica bluffs, this shop, like Rizzoli and Taschen,
is a monument to art and architecture, and books concerning the two. It
takes the specialized bookstore to an elegant and almost old-world
level--you can almost see a scribe, a quill, and handwritten sets of
parchment maps out of the corner of your eye--while offering intricate
cards and handmade journals to purchase on your way out as you leave,
inspired to create something lovely of your own.

The Mystery Bookstore

1036-C Broxton Ave.
LA, CA 90024
310.209.0415
Mon-Thurs: 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Fri-Sat: 10 a.m.-9 p.m.
Sun: 12 p.m.-7 p.m.

An almost subterranean bookstore implausibly hidden between Westwood
Village's Eurochow and a parking lot, the Mystery Bookstores sells
books only dealing with, yes, mysteries, offering the random and weird in
addition to the commercial and easy-to-find. Harried passerbys and
sweatershirt-clad students will be surprised at the scope of the
Mystery Bookstore's offerings. They are as likely to find new copies of
Agatha Christie and Christopher Pike as they are to see dog-eared copies of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's works.

Metropolis Books

440 S. Main St.
LA, CA 90013
213.612.0174
Tues-Sat: 11 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sun: 12 p.m.-5 p.m.
Second Thurs of each month (Art Walk): open until 10 p.m.

Straight out of Fritz Lang's
brain and onto the city's streets, the title of this bookstore
fittingly responds to its placement in the bleak, post-apocalyptic
setting of LA's Downtown. True, this little section of Downtown is
eclectic and funky, attracting a twenty-something crowd to its
SoHo-like blocks, but the rest of the general area is stark and almost
forbidding. Nevertheless, there's something truly poetic--almost
reminiscent of a comic book aesthetic--about that desolate countenance.
It makes escaping into a warm, spacious, brightly-lit, well-stocked,
book-filled zone all the more appealing. And once you've stepped inside
and inched towards the shelves, you can pull a book down, one that's
either new, or one once lovingly paged through by unknown hands, sit on
a stool, and begin to read with your coffee beside you and your knees
drawn to your chin.

Village Books

1049 Swarthmore Ave.
Pacific Palisades, CA 90272
310.454.4063
Mon-Fri: 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Sat-Sun: 10 a.m.-6 p.m.

LA hipsters have long and disparagingly called the Pacific Palisades
a cultural wasteland, full of people more concerned with tennis and
tanning than with literary pursuits. But that characterization is
unfair--well, ok, slightly unfair, that is. Not-so-hidden at the end of one of the city-within-a-city's
main street blocks, Swarthmore, lies a small, warmly lit, and very
welcoming bookshop by the name of Village Books. Veteran
employees bake biscuits once a week and pass them around, the back-end
children's section looks like a full nook or one half of an internal
brown gazebo, and the multitude of books makes a visitor wonder how so
many volumes can fit into so petite a space. What the store doesn't
carry, its workers can order, and this haven has another marked
advantage in its very near proximity to the sea.

Honorable Mentions:

Book Soup

8818 Sunset Blvd.
West Hollywood, CA 90069
310.659.3110
Mon-Sun: 9 a.m.-10 p.m.

Vroman's Bookstore

695 E. Colorado Blvd.
Pasadena, CA 91101
626.449.5320
Mon-Thurs: 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Fri-Sat: 9 a.m.-10 p.m.
Sun: 10 a.m.-9 p.m.

Skylight Books

1818 N. Vermont Ave.
LA, CA 90027
323.660.1175
Mon-Sun: 10 a.m.-10 p.m.

Portrait of a Bookstore

4360 Tujunga Ave.
Studio City, CA 91604
818.769.3853
Mon-Sat: 9:30 a.m.-10 p.m.
Sun: 10 a.m.-10 p.m.

Hi De Ho Comics & Books with Pictures

525 Santa Monica Blvd.
Santa Monica, CA 90401
310.394.2820
Wed-Sat: 11 a.m.-9 p.m.
Sun-Tues: 11 a.m.-7 p.m.

All photos depict Children's Book World and are by Deborah Stokol, 2008.

***

This article originally appeared on Pop + Politics.



 

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