Los Angeles Times

Book lovers receive an SOS

Struggling outposts like Chevalier’s and Vroman’s need their holiday season now.

- By Dorany Pineda

Another beloved Los Angeles bookstore is in trouble.

Chevalier’s Books, an 80year- old independen­t bookstore located in Larchmont Village, sent some 3,000 readers an email Monday calling on them for increased support.

When COVID- 19 led to a general shutdown in March, “like most retailers, our sales fell about 40%,” wrote owners Bert Deixler and Darryl Holter. “A [ Paycheck Protection Program] loan, a dedicated staff and loyal customers kept us just af loat.” Then came another hardship. “[ O] ur new landlords announced we would not be able to extend our lease and required us to be out of this space by the end of the year.

“So, Chevalier’s Books is now at a crossroads. We’ve located a vacant space on Larchmont that could be a new home for us, but the rent there will be more than double what we currently pay. There will also be significan­t moving and design costs. It will be a huge f inancial undertakin­g for us, made even more daunting by the uncertaint­y that Covid- 19 poses for our business and everybody’s lives,” they wrote in the letter.

“We are now asking you to help keep Chevalier’s Books a part of the Larchmont community.”

The Hancock Park shop joins a growing list of independen­t bookstores asking for f inancial help from their customers. Some — like Hollywood’s Larry Edmunds Bookshop and Diesel, A Bookstore — launched GoFundMes to help keep their businesses alive as the novel coronaviru­s continued to impact sales.

Others, like Vroman’s Bookstore and now Chevalier’s, are urging readers to keep buying from them, especially as the holiday season approaches. These two bookstores are the latest to make urgent community appeals to stave off grave losses.

The end of Chevalier’s lease has added another stressor to the Larchmont bookstore: Along with other businesses in the building on Larchmont Boulevard, they have to vacate by Dec. 31.

The reason? The commercial real estate developers who own the property the bookstore has leased for decades decided to “turn the

space into a more upscale setting and try to attract national chains,” according to Deixler, who is also a lawyer. Half of the spaces have already been vacated, he said.

That’s not the whole picture, according to Lawrence N. Taylor, president and founder of Christina Developmen­t, which owns the building.

“The previous owner of the property set all tenant leases to expire at the end of 2020,” Taylor told The Times in an email. “This decision was intentiona­l so the building could undergo necessary repairs, which are long overdue.” The company wanted to keep businesses running during the restoratio­n, he said, but that “the noise and disturbanc­es” would be too disruptive to tenants.

“We welcome and encourage all existing tenants to return to the building and will initiate those conversati­ons once we have a f irm date for completion,” he said, adding that he still expects the storefront­s to be occupied by “smaller, neighborho­odfriendly tenants.”

The announceme­nt triggered Chevalier’s desperate search for a new home on the same historic street with its small- town feel: In recent years, Larchmont Boulevard has been a battlegrou­nd between small businesses and developers.

Deixler and Holter purchased Chevalier’s six years ago and transforme­d it into a neighborho­od cultural hub. They remodeled the store, expanded their inventory, launched in- store readings and author events, and stabilized finances.

“We took it from a store that was really struggling and turned it around,” Holter told The Times in April. “We turned it into part of the intellectu­al infrastruc

ture of the city in order to compete with Amazon and survive.”

Now the owners have their sights set on a larger, pricier location across the street. “We want to make sure that we have people who will support us to help us pay the rent by buying books,” said Deixler.

The open letter seems to have worked.

“We’re overrun with sales, we’re selling gift certificat­es like crazy, and we have all these people offering to help us,” he said. “The response has been overwhelmi­ng.”

Asked if he’s optimistic, Deixler responded: “If [ Monday] was any indication, I’ve never been more confident about anything in my life! ... We really want this to work. We really want to keep this store open. I always tell people that [ buying Chevalier’s] is easily the worst economic investment I’ve ever made in

my life — and I’ve made some bad investment­s — but we’ve gotten so much pleasure out of serving a community.”

Last week, Vroman’s made a similar public plea.

On Sept. 28, the bookstore tweeted a thread to its 21,000 followers with a grim message: “Friends, the past few months have been the most difficult in our company’s 126- year history and Vroman’s needs your help to stay open.”

Foot traffic and sales have steadily improved for months but remain almost 40% below previous years because of the pandemic. If it is going to survive, according to its website, “sales must increase significan­tly from now through the holidays.”

Joel Sheldon, Vroman’s chairman and a co- owner, said the past several years had been among the bookstore’s most profitable, “and

all of a sudden, you fall off a cliff.”

It was a cliff they had been confident they could quickly rescale — perhaps a bit overconfid­ent about it. Their monthly projection­s weren’t synchroniz­ing with actual sales.

“We were losing more cash than we had anticipate­d,” Sheldon said. Cash reserves and a PPP loan have kept the store af loat into the coming holiday season. “But after that,” he said, “nobody knows.”

So Sheldon, who grew up in Altadena and has been active in the Pasadena community for decades, decided to launch a “Support Vroman’s” campaign.

“[ I] t is critical now that our sales volumes return to much higher levels,” he wrote to about 50 friends and inf luencers in an email two weeks ago. “Up until now I have resisted asking for community support — it’s a very humbling experience. But it is now time.”

In the email, he implored bookworms and locals to buy from Vroman’s and encourage others to do the same. He urged them to shop in October and November before the holiday rush and to buy in- store on weekday mornings, which are quieter than weekends and afternoons.

The message spread like wildfire.

Sheldon said it reached at least 100,000 people through a contact’s mailing list. “The store has been completely crowded almost all the time ever since,” he said. “The parking lot and as many people as we can let in.” Online purchases have also skyrockete­d.

On social media, people also began the # MyVromansS­tory, sharing personal anecdotes about what the bookstore means to them.

“As an art student I went to the children’s dept to read books that would inspire me to become a children’s book author and illustrato­r,” wrote Dan Santat, the New York Times bestsellin­g author of “The Adventures of Beekle: The Unimaginar­y Friend,” in a tweet. “This store is the center of our universe.”

Sheldon said sales at its Colorado Boulevard location increased 169% the week of Sept. 25 to Oct. 1 compared with the week before.

But it’s not out of the woods yet. Survival will hinge on the holiday season, a month that accounts for at least 20% of annual sales and contribute­s almost all the annual profit, he said.

“The next few months will determine the future of Vroman’s,” Sheldon’s letter says.

“I truly appreciate your friendship and support during this critical time.”

 ?? Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? AT CHEVALIER’S BOOKS, the beloved but struggling Larchmont Village indie, Noelle Park, then 8, relaxes with her book in pre- pandemic bliss of August 2019.
Christina House Los Angeles Times AT CHEVALIER’S BOOKS, the beloved but struggling Larchmont Village indie, Noelle Park, then 8, relaxes with her book in pre- pandemic bliss of August 2019.

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