Everything about Booksmith totally explained
Founded in 1976, The Booksmith is an
independent bookstore located in the
Haight Ashbury neighborhood of
San Francisco. The Booksmith is a general interest store, and as such, carries books and magazines in many subjects. The store is located at 1644
Haight Street, and is open 7 days a week. Other nearby businesses include the Persian Aub Zam-Zam,
Amoeba Music, and the former
I-Beam nightclub.
Today, the store is best known for its events program. The series has featured more than 1000 authors including novelists, poets, politicians, biographers, historians, cartoonists, actors, musicians,
McSweeney's contributors, two U.S. Poet Laureates, numerous
science fiction and fantasy writers, and various
Pulitzer Prize,
Booker Prize,
National Book Award, and
National Book Critics Circle Award winners.
The Booksmith is a member of the Northern California Independent Booksellers Association and the
American Booksellers Association.
Authors events
Among the celebrated authors who have appeared at Booksmith events are the Nobel Prize winning Polish poet
Czeslaw Milosz, science fiction great
Ray Bradbury, gonzo journalist
Hunter S. Thompson (together with Johnny Depp), Simpson's creator
Matt Groening, rock legends
Neil Young and
Patti Smith, and acclaimed photographers
Richard Avedon and
Annie Leibovitz. Notably,
Beat generation poet
Allen Ginsberg gave his last ever reading at The Booksmith, a number of months before his death.
Other authors who have appeared at store events include Lemony Snicket,
David Sedaris,
Nick Hornby,
Art Spiegelman,
Dave Eggers,
Khaled Hosseini,
Isabel Allende,
Paul Auster,
Michael Ondaatje,
Jeffrey Eugenides,
Jim Harrison,
Amy Tan,
Maya Angelou, and
Robert Bly - as well as
Neil Gaiman,
Wes Craven,
Forrest J. Ackerman,
Camille Paglia,
Spalding Gray,
Margaret Cho,
Tom Robbins,
Lynda Barry,
Alice Walker, Senators
George McGovern and
Gary Hart, and
Louise Brooks biographer
Barry Paris. Of note, a number of critically acclaimed and bestselling novelists gave their first San Francisco readings at The Booksmith - these authors include
Chuck Palahniuk,
China Mieville, and
Sarah Waters.
Located in the heart of the Haight Ashbury, the store has hosted a number of individuals associated with the 1960's. These include Sixties icon
Timothy Leary, one-time digger
Peter Coyote, alternative press editor
Paul Krassner, artist
Stanley Mouse, Beatles associate
Barry Miles, and Hell's Angels founder
Sonny Barger. Among the era's musicians who have appeared at the store are
Marianne Faithfull,
Grace Slick (Jefferson Airplane),
Eric Burdon (the Animals),
Ray Davies (the Kinks), Ray Manzarek (
The Doors), and
Grateful Dead band members Phil Lesh and Mickey Hart. Some of the Beat-related authors who have appeared at the store include
Lawrence Ferlinghetti,
Michael McClure,
Diane DiPrima,
Anne Waldman,
Joyce Johnson, and
Ann Charters.
The five authors who have appeared most often at The Booksmith are novelists
William T. Vollman and
Jonathan Lethem, culture critic
Greil Marcus, sexpert
Susie Bright, and science fiction writer
Rudy Rucker.
Other information
IBID, a widely used bookstore inventory system, had its origins at The Booksmith.
Since 1994, The Booksmith has offered author trading cards for most all of the writers who appear at the store. Modeled after baseball cards, Booksmith trading cards promote store events. On the front is a picture of the author. On the back is text - information about the writer and their book as well as the time and date of their appearance. A display at the front counter of the store showcases each month's cards. To date, approximately 1000 cards have been issued since the series began. The honor of being card #1000 went to
Mary Roach.
Only one author included in the author trading cards series never appeared at the store -
Thomas Pynchon. In 1997, The Booksmith hosted a no-author reading to celebrate the release of Pynchon's novel,
Mason & Dixon. The well-attended event included a Pynchon look-alike contest.
Prompted by comedian and actor
Robin Williams, award winning author
Harlan Ellison wrote a short story in The Booksmith store window. That story, originally titled "Computer Vampire: The Byte that Bites," appeared as "Keyboard" in the Ellison's 1997 collection,
Slippage: Previously Uncollected, Precariously Poised Stories (Houghton Mifflin).
In 1999, the Indian-born novelist
Vikram Seth wrote an original poem on the bathroom wall of The Booksmith. The poem, a quatrain which began with the words "In this loo . . .," was later printed as a signed, limited edition broadside by PandorasBox Press.
A number of published authors have been employed by The Booksmith, including writer Lewis Buzbee (author of
The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop), novelist
Kiara Brinkman (author of
Up High in the Trees), syndicated cartoonist
Tom Tomorrow (author of the
This Modern World comic strip),
San Francisco Bay Guardian contributing writer Todd Lavoie, short story writer Lisa Buchanan, and humorist / stand up comic Paco Romane.
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Neighborhood resident Daniel Handler has appeared at Booksmith events as himself, the novelist
Daniel Handler, as the children's author "
Lemony Snicket," and as McSweeney's author "The Pope" and "Snicket Squirrel."
The Booksmith is a long-time sponsor of the San Francisco Silent Film Festival. As such, the store helps arrange book signings with film historians, biographers, and film world celebrities who appear at the twice annual Festival. Among the authors hosted by the store have been the silent film star
Baby Peggy, stage star
Sydney Chaplin, Jr., screenwriter
Frederica Sagor, and film historians
Leonard Maltin,
Mick LaSalle, Anthony Slide, and Arthur Lennig.
In June 2007, The Booksmith was sold to new owners who plan to take the store in a new direction.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Booksmith'.
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