Left in a hefty anthology titled The Faber Book of War Poetry (ed. Kenneth Baker, 1996) was a postcard from O’Gara & Wilson, Ltd. Booksellers in Chicago. More than forty years ago I visited that shop near the University of Chicago and purchased a partial set of Conrad for a decent price. They bundled the books and I carried them back to Ohio on the train. The card suggests a seriousness of purpose often missing from bookstores today:
“Chicago’s
Oldest Bookstore
Established
1882
200,000
Titles in Stock
Used
Books Bought & Sold
Small
Collections or Complete Libraries
No
Quantity Too Large – House Calls Made”
Smaller copy says O’Gara
& Wilson carries books “in almost all fields, but we are especially
interested in American history, art, Balkan and Central European history,
English and American literature, Greek and Latin classics, medieval history and
literature, military history, philosophy, religion & theology.” In other
words, a serious bookstore for serious readers. This is not Harlequin Romance
country.
Joseph Epstein’s great
friend, the late sociologist Edward Shils, who taught at the University of
Chicago, published “The Bookshop in America” in the winter 1963 issue of Daedalus.
In it, Shils calls bookshops “an almost indispensable part of life. Like
libraries, one goes to them for what one knows and wants and to discover books
one did not know before.” He continues:
“I have gone to bookshops
to buy and browse. I have gone to them to buy books I wanted, and because I
just wanted to buy a book, and much of the time just because I wanted to be
among books to inhale their presence.”
He speaks for me. I have
gone to bookstores I knew from prior sad experience were lousy, just to wander
among the shelves, hopelessly hoping for treasure. In such places, I have been
tempted to buy books I already owned just to salvage something tangible out of
disappointment. Shils formulates a theory of good bookstores contrary to
conventional economic sense:
“A bookshop, in order to
be good, must have a large stock of books for which there is not likely to be a
great demand but for which there will be an occasional demand. This means,
unlike the retail trade in groceries, or the practice in industry to produce on
order, a bookshop must render its capital inert by putting a lot of it into
slow-moving lines.”
Shils is writing, of
course, long before the Age of Amazon. I looked online to see if O’Gara &
Wilson is still in business. It is, but relocated to Chesterton, Ind., fifty
miles southeast of Chicago. I wish I could visit. More power to the new owners
Doug and Jill Wilson. Shils writes:
“The wonder is, given the
unremunerativeness of the business, that bookshops exist at all. It takes a
special kind of person, somewhat daft in a socially useful and quite pleasant
way but nonetheless somewhat off his head, to give himself to bookselling. Why
should anyone who has or who can obtain $10,000 or $20,000 invest it in a
bookshop to sell serious books when, if he were an economically reasonable
person, he would do better to open a beauty parlor or a hamburger and barbecue
shop, or put his money into the stock market? The bookseller must be one of
those odd people who just love the proximity of books.”