Vancouver Sun

BOOK IT TO THESE 5 SHOPS

Canadian Independen­t Bookstore Day marks the perfect time to support local businesses

- SHAWN CONNER

Ah, the joys of frittering away an hour or two at a bookstore and coming home with a pile of printed matter that you'll get around to reading who-knows-when. But Canadian Independen­t Bookstore Day is about more than the lazy afternoon browse.

The annual event celebrates indie bookstores as community hubs that host author events and readings and give readers a place to meet, discuss ideas, and share recommenda­tions. With that in mind, here are five local bookseller­s to check out.

THE PAPER HOUND BOOKSHOP (344 W. PENDER ST.)

This cosy Gastown store offers an eclectic selection of new, used, and rare books. As the owners say on the store's website, “We don't specialize in one particular kind of book, but we favour the classic, curious, odd, beautiful, visually arresting, scholarly, bizarre, and whimsical.”

Paper Hound also offers free delivery (by bicycle) within Vancouver proper.

UPSTART & CROW (1387 RAILSPUR ALLEY)

Featuring a limited but lovingly curated selection in a contempora­ry West Coast setting, Upstart & Crow focuses on new books from small and independen­t presses. The website directs you to “Team Favourites” (“books we're holding near and dear”), “Indigenous Storytelle­rs” and “Books by Black Authors,” among others. On April 27, author John Vaillant will drop by as “special guest bookseller.”

IRON DOG BOOKS (2671 E. HASTINGS ST.)

The Hastings-Sunrise bookseller began as a bookmobile before expanding to include a brick-andmortar store.

Specializi­ng in backlist and remaindere­d books, Iron Dog also sources used books through a trade-in program. Author events occur on-site as well as off, including a book launch at R&B Brewing on Sunday.

LUCKY'S (3128 MAIN ST.)

Lucky's is the place to go to stock up on your graphic novel needs — not the latest hardbound collection of Batman vs. Joker comics but eye-poppers like Club Microbe, a colourful, comedic look at micro-organisms for microreade­rs; What It Is, cartoonist Lynda Barry's guide to creativity; and Spa, a critique of the wellness industry by Swedish artist Erik Svetoft.

You'll also find non-picture books like a Shirley Jackson short story collection, James Woods' How Fiction Works, and gift-y tomes like The Ultimate Excuse Generator along with small press publicatio­ns and zines.

CROSS & CROWS BOOKS (2836 COMMERCIAL DR.)

It's easy to forget that, among its other attraction­s, Commercial Drive probably has the most bookstores of any other neighbourh­ood in Vancouver — five at last count, including the latest, Cross & Crows Books. For Independen­t Bookstore Day, the shop is hosting upcycled jewelry maker Bonnie Hammond/Bits & Keys, a book launch for Li Charmaine Anne's Crash Landing, a chance to win a $1,000 shopping spree at a local independen­t bookstore, and a hunt for five surprises hidden within the store.

 ?? ?? Iron Dog Books on East Hastings Street specialize­s in backlist and remaindere­d books.
Iron Dog Books on East Hastings Street specialize­s in backlist and remaindere­d books.

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