Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: McHuston Booksellers (Page 115 of 125)

Stacking the stacks.

The days are long but the hours fly by. The front door is wide open and a springtime breeze carries with it the sound of Main Street traffic. Along with the cars is the sound of sound of voices, snippets of conversation as passersby make their way along the sidewalk in front of the store.

Although the door is open, it isn’t official yet. There are still a number of boxes to be unpacked and there are stacks of books scattered around the store waiting for a designated location in which to be stashed. There have been a number of folks wandering in through the door as well. Some are surprised to find a bookstore and say so. Others – perhaps visitors to town or newer residents – simply set themselves for browsing as though the store has been here for years.

There have been some sales, too.

Some of the buyers are customers from the old location who have been patiently awaiting the reopening. Others are first-timers that had no idea the store was located a mile and a half down the street for over five years. I have a feeling that the new location is going to be much more visible to the public.

You remember the three most important things regarding property: location, location, location.

Even the atmosphere is different. I realize this is a long stretch, but it’s true: when I prop the door open early in the morning on these wonderful spring days it reminds me of wandering Bourbon Street in New Orleans. The old structures alive with commerce and characters. I’ve been on Main Street going on six years now and had no idea that there was this kind of activity just a mile to the north.

The thing is – I think it is going to get better, too. There is a buzz currently that is likely partially due to the relative newness of the Main Street Tavern, a really classy restaurant that is two doors to the south of McHuston Booksellers. (You have to walk across Commercial Street, but still…). There is a new children’s clothing shop two doors to the north. Dooley’s Angus Inn has revamped their neon sign out front and Fiesta Mambo’s Mexican Restaurant is drawing capacity diners regularly.

Some folks are nervous about the possibility of changes downtown, but change is usually met with uncertainty and challenges. Sometimes, though, changes work out for the best. The BOK Center is an example of a project that met with opposition but has succeeded as proposed by its backers. BA’s downtown can do the same, I believe, since no plan has yet been etched in stone.

Meanwhile…

Still don’t know the date for the official re-opening of McHuston Booksellers, but – as of today, if the door is open and the lights are on – come on in!

The pictures don’t show the stacks of boxes at the back and the jumble of books still present on a number of shelves. You can click on any image for a larger view.

The days are long, and the hours are flying by as I get the out-of-sorts all sorted and filed in their proper place.

McHuston Booksellers is well on its way to getting back on the track in stylish new surroundings!

April update: no foolin’.

I’m grabbing a minute to give an update on the store’s progress – lots of folks have been asking and dropping by. I’ve been leaving the front door unlocked and have met some people and have had a chance to catch up with former customers wondering where I’ve been hiding.

The inventory is going on the shelves in spurts, I’m afraid. Monday brought with it grand intentions for bringing over several loads from storage, but after two trips there were a number of things that demanded immediate attention in other areas. Errands prevailed later. Finally, early Tuesday I managed to get the remainder of the boxes unpacked with the aid of my sister Kathy, who had part of a day off from her activities as proprietor of Martha’s Health Food in Broken Arrow. (Just down the street and around the corner these days…)

I’ve included some pictures that show the interior with a few of the books in place.

It isn’t easy to decide a logical way to arrange the inventory, but it’s getting there. Okay, so it isn’t brain surgery, either. Basically it has boiled down to fiction on the walls and on the right, non-fiction to the left. Exceptions expected and permitted.

The little almost-Irish-green tables came Saturday, courtesy of a now-closed restaurant west of Tulsa. They aren’t exactly what I had in mind, but I’ll admit I like them better in the McHuston interior than I did in the storage unit where they were stashed when I bought them. At the price, I couldn’t really turn them down, and I do like the chairs. Sturdy and comfortable.

Food service is still intended to put those tables and chairs to good use. Questions have been posed as to whether it will be a printed menu or daily chalkboard, and the truth is, I don’t know yet. I have a menu ready that could be printed in a jiffy. I also have a white board on an easel. After running the bookstore all alone for the past five years, I realize that the kitchen will bring on an addition set of tasks and chores. With a five-month hiatus, I’m not in a position to hire someone to help while waiting for customers to come in. That point will arrive soon enough, I hope.

In the meantime, I cannot be worrying too much about cooks and kitchens. There are plenty of books that need to be unpacked and organized before moving on to phase two, which is getting the doors open – for business.

Let the Books begin: McHuston Booksellers on Main.

Let the work finally begin.

Not that there hasn’t been a lot of that going on already, at the site of the former Francy Law Firm on Main Street. It’s just that the work from this point forward is a different kind.

There won’t be professional carpenters, contractors, plumbers, and HVAC workers. Just me. And the volunteers. And there aren’t many of those.

But that’s okay.

It’s been a labor of love all along, running the bookstore in Broken Arrow. The book industry is changing almost every day, what with electronic readers, authors posting chapters in their online blogs, store closings, and a general decline in reading habits. There are still plenty of things being read, but a lot of the reading is online: blogs, websites, tweets, news aggregators, and Facebook updates.

That piece of paper, the final page of a small stack of numbered papers, has my signature on it. The lease is signed, and the official okay to begin moving items into the new location has been given, as of Tuesday, March 12, 2012.

That’s just shy of five months since receiving the official heave-ho notice from the previous landlord, who declined to provide a month-to-month rental arrangement to allow the bookstore to remain in operation until the new location was completed.

No hard feelings.

It just amounts to more work, moving for a second time those items carried into storage five months ago. And that work begins Tuesday.

Well, in all honesty – it could. Due to the timing, it won’t really get started until Wednesday to avoid a scheduling conflict – of all things.

Then, the shelves may be hauled out of the church where they’ve been stashed, to be reconstructed in the new location.

Books to follow that – but, all things in due time.

Let’s get the shelves rebuilt first. In the meantime, I snapped a couple of pictures of the exterior on my way back from signing the lease, showing the brick front without awning, and the trusty old Firebird parked in front. Click for a bigger view.

PS. The old Pontiac doesn’t look too bad for 16 years on the road, eh?

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