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BREWERY BOOK CLUB

- Justin Papp is a staff writer; justin.papp@scni.com

meetings became focused on home brewing and, eventually, they decided to go into business together.

Michelle Retter is from California, met Max in Austin and, together, they lived in a van in Colorado before returning to Max’s hometown. As they stopped at breweries along the way, they developed certain preference­s for how a brewery should look. With its dark walls hung liberally with art work, wooden floors and tables and shelves of books, the taproom looks like a bohemian study or a Brooklyn coffee house. According to Michelle Retter, the owners wanted a “vaguely horrorthem­ed” taproom and endeavored to keep the artwork displayed on the walls, and on their merchandis­e, “ghoulish.”

“We kind of knew we wanted to do something very different than standard cement floors — the same brewery that everybody’s been to,” Michelle Retter says. “People are definitely surprised when they come in. They forget they’re in a strip mall, which was our goal. But we’re selffunded, so we were like, ‘we can afford this rent even if we don’t make any money, so that’s what we’re gonna go with.’”

Bad Dream started small. They’ve recently started a push to get their beers into local bars and restaurant­s and hired parttime staff. Of the owners, Michelle Retter is the only one who works full time at the brewery. Leone, a chemist, Max Retter and Benzinger, both computer programmer­s, split their time.

The brewery has eight taps, with seven beers of varying styles and a cider. The beer names are in keeping with the brewery’s horror theme — Pensive Skeleton, a hoppy sour, for example — or are otherwise comical — Tortuga Lechuga is a Mexican lager, Squirrel Awareness Month is a harvest ale. According to Michelle Retter, they brew predominan­tly India pale ales, because it’s what’s popular. Before any beer is served in the taproom, it needs approval from each of the owners.

“Our guidelines is that all four of us have to like it, which is really hard, actually,” Michelle Retter says. “If somebody doesn’t like it we’ll dump it.”

For many book club members, the appeal of the brewery is at least twofold.

Kat Goeppel, who regularly attends the monthly meetings with her daughter, Killian Bradbury, is a major fan of horror, as well as Bad Dream’s beer. The atmosphere of the space and the camaraderi­e built out of the book club — attendance at which can range between single digits and more than 20, depending on the book — are also important draws.

“This is our happy place,” Goeppel says.

This month, the club will read “The Ritual,” by Adam Nevill. In the past, they’ve read books by Stephen King, Dean Koontz and Ray Bradbury, some of which are recommenda­tions are others are chosen by the Retters.

Sauer says she was heartened to find a group open to drinking before noon on a Sunday and, in a sleepy, small town, likeminded people excited to talk about books. Sauer, who was an English major in college, said she was prejudiced against horror books, which she thought mostly “sucked.” She’s since discovered many that she enjoys, as well as an expanding group of friends in town.

“I was pleasantly surprised,” Sauer says, to the Retters, of her experience. “Because book clubs, you know, they’re not exactly what the kids are talking about nowadays.”

“WE KIND OF KNEW WE WANTED TO DO SOMETHING VERY DIFFERENT THAN STANDARD CEMENT FLOORS — THE SAME BREWERY THAT EVERYBODY’S BEEN TO.”

 ?? Justin Papp / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? A meeting of the Bad Dreams book club mixes beer and horror novels.
Justin Papp / Hearst Connecticu­t Media A meeting of the Bad Dreams book club mixes beer and horror novels.
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