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Tribune News Service | BDN

Tribune News Service | BDN

Click here for the latest coronavirus news, which the BDN has made free for the public. You can support our critical reporting on the coronavirus by purchasing a digital subscription or donating directly to the newsroom.

Why should it be easier to buy marijuana than a good book during the coronavirus shutdown?

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s stay-at-home edicts let dispensaries stay open but force bookshops to shutter indefinitely. …

Powell’s Books, one of the nation’s largest independent bookstores, with five Oregon locations, laid off more than 300 staff members last week, although some have been rehired as a surge of online orders came in. This legendary institution is still shipping books from its warehouse, but you can’t go in and browse, even in small numbers, separated by plenty of open space.

And it could get worse. “These are unprecedented and grievous times,” Emily Powell wrote in one letter to employees, calling the path ahead “dark and scary.” When she announced Saturday that she’d been able to rehire 100 staffers, she was only marginally more optimistic: “We don’t know what the future holds … . We’re going to keep the doors of Powells.com open as long as we can.”

[Our COVID-19 tracker contains the most recent information on Maine cases by county]

Diesel in Brentwood has opted for an ad hoc form of curbside pickup, leaving books in bags with customers’ names on them on a table just inside the store’s door for a few hours each day. Though they’re still recommending books by phone, Diesel’s employees are uncertain about the future.

“We consider ourselves essential, like newspapers, media, magazines. That is our mindset,” said bookseller Lynn Aime.

Aime is right. Books are essential goods and that ought to mean bookstores are exempt from shutting down during the coronavirus pandemic. As are bread and milk, gas and aspirin, alcohol and marijuana, books should be available, with safety precautions in place, at the usual places we buy them in our neighborhoods.

States are largely left to make their own decisions about public health shutdowns. Newsom could put California in the vanguard by expressly adding bookstores to the list of essential businesses. Surely with people maintaining 6 feet of social distance, hand sanitizer everywhere, a strict limit on the number of customers let inside and the by-appointment option — in-person book buying can be made at least as safe as shopping for dry pasta or strawberry cannabis gummies.

In the meantime, some bookstore owners are trying to pay their staffs even while books aren’t going out at the usual rate and most of their employees are staying home. As Linda McLoughlin Figel of Pages in Manhattan Beach put it, dryly: “It’s a bit tricky.” Yes, bookstores will get some sort of help from the emergency stimulus bill Congress has teed up, but bricks-and-mortar bookshops are already fragile enterprises, so who knows how many will survive the shutdown?

We readers can help. Until bookshops fully reopen, we can use our discretionary income to order books directly from independent booksellers. We can buy gift cards to help the bottom line too. While it’s true we can also get deliveries from the likes of behemoth Amazon, or download e-books and audiobooks, those shopping choices are already part of independent bookstores’ economic woes. (Besides, there are many customers with lower incomes who don’t have access to iPads or Kindles. With libraries also out of the picture, these readers are left without words.)

Finally, we can also let our city, county and state leaders know how much we need bookshops and their staffs as the shutdown goes on, and once it’s over.

Books provide spiritual nourishment, education, enlightenment, role models, diversion. As Lori Gottlieb, therapist and author puts it: “One way to feel understood and part of something bigger, less alone, is to immerse ourselves in stories. They help us see ourselves.”

Journalist and novelist Michael Scott Moore, who was held hostage in Somalia for more than two years, had scraps of newspapers but no books when he was trapped with nowhere to go. As Moore says, “I don’t wish a coronavirus lockdown on anyone without books.”

The health of a nation’s literature depends on its availability to the people, and “if a nation’s literature declines,” wrote Ezra Pound, “the nation atrophies and decays.” Bookstores are essential because books are essential.

Wendy Paris is the author of “Splitopia: Dispatches from Today’s Good Divorce and How to Part Well.” This column was originally published by the Los Angeles Times.

 


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