Writing Shotgun

AUTHOR RAY BRADBURY PLANS ACRES OF BOOKS VISIT

 

Noted science fiction author Ray Bradbury plans to visit Acres of Books tomorrow at 1 p.m., his health permitting.

It’s not for sure, cautions publisher Craig Graham, whose Los Angeles-based imprint Graham Press recently reprinted the fanzine Futuria Fantasia, the Pulitzer-cited writer’s very first, self-published work–but both men are eager to make the trip.

“We tried to do this about a month and a half ago and he wasn’t able to make it,” Graham said of Bradbury, author of such classics as Fahrenheit 451 and The Martian Chronicles. “He loves the place and he always wants to go there.”

(So give him some space! Let the man look at a book. Ask Dennis Rodman to sign your bra. Remember Dennis Rodman?)

“He just likes the experience of being in the place. He likes books on dinosaurs. He likes the smell of books, old wood bookcases, the whole disappearing world,” Graham said. “I think he sees bookstores like a time machine because they have the history of the whole human race in them.”

Bradbury, who turns 88 in August, suffered a stroke in 1999, but it hasn’t slowed him much. As the New York Times reported last year, he’s still writing–dictating his works via telephone to his daughter in Arizona.

And the man who called Acres “a labyrinth, a tomb, a catacomb, a maze” in California magazine 26 years ago calls the store “every couple of months, manager Raun Yankovich said today.

“I haven’t met him. But I’ve talked to him on the phone,” Yankovich said.

The City of Long Beach, of course, exercised eminent domain to purchase Acres of Books’ 1924 location at 240 Long Beach Blvd. for $2.8 million earlier this year.

It plans to replace the bookstore with a mixed-use development that will some day take up the entire Broadway Block of land bounded by Third Street, Broadway, Long Beach Boulevard and Elm Avenue.

Terms of the sale specify that Acres of Books has one year to vacate the premises once escrow closes–meaning this could well be Bradbury’s last visit to the former used car lot and country dancehall turned bookstore.

“Tell everyone we’re still open,” Acres owner Jackie Smith said when I visited the store–a city historic landmark–recently. But Smith also said the store could close as soon as October.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

  • Chris Ziegler
    ray bradbury, meet roky erickson
  • Andy
    If you miss him on this visit, I'm sure he'll be back when it's a Quizno's.
  • G.F. Babbitt
    Andy...Quiznos will be a magnificent addition to the downtown scene. I'm glad you haven't bought into all that hype about the Quiznos hepatitis stuff and the suicidal franchisees. It's all a bunch of hooey only losers believe. By God, we're finally going to get rid of that filthy collection of obsolete so called literature nobody in their right mind would be interested in in the Age of the Internet and the Amazon Kindle. There are plenty of books (for those who want them) to be found at Barnes and Noble and Borders where, at least, they dust once in awhile. Progress. Always folks against it but they will soon be swept away by the Tide of Change. This country wants Change and I believe there's going to be a pot of money in that. Yesiree. Let's get on with it.
  • Where have all our book stores gone? First Nathan's in Seal Beach, now Acres. What a bummer.

    p.s. Eminent Domain is a crock!
  • Chris Ziegler
    as the man said to the martian, the old got to make way for the new. also i just called acres and they said this is confirmed and happening.
  • harlow
    I am so sorry for people like G. F. Babbitt who only see value in the new. Yes, Acres is old and dusty, but remember that the building has been under threat for years. Who in their right mind would spend money to beautify something that was known to be lost soon?
    There are books of great value that are no longer available at B&N.
    When all the used book stores and other small business are gone in favor of condos and chain stores, you will find that you will miss all the wonderful family owned, unique things. Everything is becoming cookie cutter and the same with the same stores no matter where you go. The world is becoming a boring place due to people like Babbitt.
  • Chris Ziegler
    maybe dr pangloss will come on in here and cheer us up
  • Octomorph
    Geez, people actually read? It's heartening--I love you all, even Mr. Babbitt, who by his sobriquet appears to be more than literate. At least he reads.
    Can we import a few anarchists from Seattle (where it is reported that reading is a popular indoor/outdoor sport) to keep this icon?
  • Andrew Williams
    This breaks my fucking heart. I'm not kidding.

    Yeah Mr Mayor, you tell the world-famous author, fantasist and imagineer (before walt copyrighted the word) why the fuck Acres of Books can't stay at its location in Long Beach. Go on. I'm waiting. You pussy.
blog comments powered by Disqus
 

© 2007-2008 Seven Days Publishing LLC.