Los Angeles Times

A big day for book lovers

Organizers of California Bookstore Day anticipate a bestsellin­g concept.

- By Carolyn Kellogg

If you see a quote from Don DeLillo’s “White Noise” spray-painted around the city next week, blame California Bookstore Day.

A wooden stencil reading “California Deserves What it Gets” — suitable for graffiti or, less criminally, hanging on a wall — is one of the limited-edition items that will be for sale on Saturday, the first-ever California Bookstore Day.

“A lot of bookseller­s across the country had thought what a great idea Record Store Day was,” says Andrea Vuleta, head of the Southern California Independen­t Bookseller­s Assn. Launched in 2008, Record Store Day has led to recordbrea­king sales for independen­t record stores in the U.S. and abroad.

“When I saw lines of hundreds of people lined up at record stores, I just thought bookstores needed something similar,” Pete Mulvihill of San Francisco’s Green Apple Books told The Times via email. “We also sell LPs, and we were seeing spillover sales on Record Store Day.”

Bookstores don’t have the same rock star cachet — there won’t be anything like the live in-store performanc­e by Metallica that kicked off the first Record Store Day — but they do have creative limited-edition items designed to appeal to book lovers. Statewide, 93 stores are official participan­ts in California Bookstore Day; some are holding events, while all will stock at least a few of the special bookish items.

In addition to the stencil, the Bookstore Day group created a California Literary Map; there is a California Classic box set containing books by Charles Bukowski, John Fante, Elmore Leonard and Armistead Maupin; a Lemony Snicket poster; and a tote bag that fits the entire text of “A Heartbreak­ing Work of Staggering Genius” into a single illustrati­on of a car crossing the Golden Gate Bridge.

“This is very California in flavor, very localized,” Vuleta says. “Ideally we would love to see it be so successful in California that the rest of the country would want to jump on the bandwagon.”

It’s hard to pass up. This year independen­t record stores garnered the highest percentage of physical album sales they ever have for the week including Record Store Day, according to Nielsen, which has tracked sales for 23 years. The special day helped record stores report sales 91% higher than the week before.

“I know from my conversati­ons with people who own record stores in the area, Record Store Day is so important to them now. It’s better than Christmas,” Vuleta says. Although it probably won’t happen the first year out, she says, “I’d love to see that be the case for Bookstore Day.”

Vuleta is not just an idealistic bookworm who hung around her local bookstore until she wound up behind the counter. She used to work for Target and before that Limited Brands, helping to launch its chain Bath & Bodyworks. “I took a huge pay cut to work at a bookstore,” she says. “I took that job because I wanted to sell books.”

Now as head of SCIBA, Vuleta has been California Bookstore Day cheerleade­r and organizer. When it turned out that the distributo­r, Ingram, wouldn’t be able to process some of the specialty items through its warehouses, Vuleta’s Claremont home filled up with themed items that had to be sent to various bookstores. “I am not the best person for having my living room all torn up with boxes and boxes and boxes of stuff,” she says. “It was a little scrambly there for a while.”

All that stuff represents both the possibilit­y and the dilemma of California Bookstore Day. The day celebrates the physicalit­y of brick and mortar stores. But that physicalit­y also presents problems, for the bookstores and the publishers who create specialty merchandis­e for the day. The items have to be made in specific quantities, shipped and then loaded onto shelves. Not every store will stock every item, so shoppers may get frustrated.

Vuleta knows these are concerns that need to be ad- dressed. “Ideally, what I’d like to see happen in the long run: The bigger publishers offer two or three [items] and the smaller publishers maybe offer one. We have a lot of small independen­t publishers here — I would love to see Prospect Park or Angel City Press do something that was very Southern California, and they would only have to produce enough for 50 stores.”

What’s more important for Mulvihill than the things for sale is the kinds of unique engagement bookstores offer. On Saturday, his San Francisco store will have Dave Eggers providing relationsh­ip advice, a panel of McSweeney’s authors, a scavenger hunt, kids’ projects and a taco truck.

The implementa­tion of California Bookstore Day heralds a change in their retail environmen­t. “With ebook growth flattening, our growth resuming, other indie [bookstores] filling Borders-shaped holes around the country, Amazon finally collecting sales tax in California and elsewhere … and customers consistent­ly buy- ing real books in real bookstores, the time seemed ripe for a party,” Mulvihill says.

Organizers are also hoping to piggyback on the success of Free Comic Book Day, which falls on the same Saturday. “We had a short window to figure out a date,” says California Bookstore Day producer Samantha Schoech, “and in the end we thought we could all benefit from the book-buying frenzy that will be May 3.”

Most Southern California bookstores are taking a lower-key approach, planning some signings, literary trivia, giveaways and discounts. The place to find the biggest party here is in Montrose. Its children’s bookstore, Once Upon a Time, has built an entire day’s events around a single California Bookstore Day product: “Do You Smell Carrots,” a joke book for kids. Expect free carrots, places for kids to create carrot-populated stories and as many carrot books as one children’s bookstore can hold.

 ?? Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ?? ANDREA VULETA, an organizer of California Bookstore Day, shows off some of the event’s specialty items.
Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ANDREA VULETA, an organizer of California Bookstore Day, shows off some of the event’s specialty items.

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