Support your indie bookstore!

Local bookstores keep our literary culture alive. This holiday season, remember where you spend your money matters

Published November 28, 2011 12:30PM (EST)

      (AP/Richard Drew)
(AP/Richard Drew)

If you're like most readers, chances are the last time you discovered a great book by a new author it was because a friend recommended it. Maybe you read that book on an e-reader, or you picked up a used copy online or downloaded the audiobook. Maybe that's how your friend read it as well. If so, chances are that neither of you realizes the key role independent bookstores played in helping that new favorite find its way to you.

An independent bookstore brings a lot to a city or a town: a showroom for the latest literary releases, an auditorium where authors share their work and meet their fans, a bookish environment in which to sip coffee and a fun place to browse in the 20 minutes before the movie starts. But what's less immediately visible is your local bookseller's expertise and influence when it comes to introducing great books to your community and, ultimately, to the world.

Name the last book you really loved -- be it "The Help," The Hunger Games," "Like Water for Elephants" or "Game of Thrones." The authors of all those popular titles and many, many more can testify that independent booksellers were crucial in moving their work from a sleepy shelf against the back wall to a stack prominently displayed on a front table. They're  the people who helped Harry Potter take off. Local booksellers know their customers better than any computer program, and when they press a book into the right hands, insisting "You've got to read this," their recommendation really counts.

So even if a friend was the the first one to tell you about "Seabiscuit" or "Cutting for Stone," and even if that friend heard about it from yet another friend, most likely if you follow the chain of recommendations far enough back, you'll end up meeting a bookseller, an independent bookseller. They offer a much-needed counterbalance to centralized corporate management and big-budget ad campaigns because they answer directly to us, the readers, the customers they see every day.

There are lots of reasons to support local businesses, whether it's mom-and-pop hardware stores or neighborhood farmers' markets. But when you buy from an independent bookseller, you're doing something more. You're helping to keep alive an important force in making our national literary culture more diverse, interesting and delightful. Your shelves are full of books that wouldn't be there if not for indie booksellers you've never met, struggling to get by in shops you've never heard of. That's why it's so important to support the one next door.

Squeezed first by chain stores like Barnes and Noble and later by online retailers like Amazon, these beloved neighborhood staples are a dying breed. We'd like to draw more attention to these fantastic local shops by featuring your favorites. Is there a great independent bookstore in your area? Tell us about it!

Tag your entries "Declaration of Independents. Include a picture of the store, its address and 200-300 words on what makes it great. We'll feature our favorites on the cover of Open Salon and we're hoping to cross-post some onto Salon as well. Please note by using the tag "Declaration of Independents," you are giving us permission to cross-post your piece on Salon.


By Laura Miller

Laura Miller is the author of "The Magician's Book: A Skeptic's Adventures in Narnia."

MORE FROM Laura Miller


Related Topics ------------------------------------------

American Spring