Poets and Writers

Kelly Link Returns to Booksellin­g

- –JOY BAGLIO

In October 2019 author Kelly Link and editor-publisher Gavin J. Grant opened their own bookstore in Easthampto­n, Massachuse­tts. Book Moon, formerly White Square Books, carries both new and used books and features titles by local authors and a variety of indie publishers, including Small Beer Press, which Link and Grant, who are married, have run together since 2000. The two are no strangers to booksellin­g—they both worked at the Avenue Victor Hugo Books in Boston in the 1990s—and they are excited to return to the business. Meanwhile they will celebrate the twentieth anniversar­y of Small Beer, which publishes innovative fiction by writers such as Ursula K. Le Guin, Karen Joy Fowler, and Sofia Samatar. Link, a 2018 MacArthur “Genius” Fellow and the author of four acclaimed story collection­s, most recently the Pulitzer Prize finalist

Get in Trouble (Random House, 2015), shared her thoughts on the store’s opening, the pleasure of connecting a customer to just the right book, and how her and Grant’s many ventures influence her writing life.

Why did you and Gavin decide to return to booksellin­g?

We were both very happy as bookseller­s, first of all. We’re coming back to it now because my MacArthur made it financiall­y possible, and because the previous owner of White Square Books wished to get out of the business. It was a turnkey deal: We took over everything as is, including several comfortabl­e reading chairs and a couch. The stock is roughly 50 percent new and 50 percent used, which is more or less the same as the Avenue Victor Hugo Books in Boston, where we previously worked together twenty years ago. It all feels very full-circle. I love hand-selling books and diagnosing the tastes of people who come in looking for a book to fall in love with.

What role do you think independen­t bookstores play in the literary community, and what is your vision for Book Moon? Independen­t bookstores can function as third spaces. They connect readers from their local communitie­s with books, writers, and creative and political projects. They reflect the tastes and interests of that community. The Pioneer Valley is already rich in notable bookstores. Gavin and I have an interest in science fiction and fantasy, as well as work in translatio­n, poetry, and children’s literature. We’ll build up those sections and, along the way, figure out what Easthampto­n readers want in a bookstore. My personal goal is to handsell as many copies of Molly Gloss’s The Hearts of Horses and Robert Jackson Bennett’s City of Stairs as possible.

This winter also marks the twentieth anniversar­y of Small Beer Press. What have you loved most about bringing books into the world?

I’m happiest that the books we publish continue to find an audience. Getting to design covers is also a great deal of fun.

You wear many hats in the literary world: writer, editor, publisher, and bookseller. How do these roles affect your writing? I’ve always written in bursts rather than daily. I would, in fact, prefer not to write at all. In order to make myself write, though, I’ve arranged my working life so that I spend at least four afternoons a week with my friends Cassandra Clare and Holly Black. We all sit at the same table and write, with short breaks for complainin­g, gossip, and snacks. I’ll be at Book Moon two or three days a week. There’s a desk in the fiction section of the bookstore—I may try writing there some, too.

Your work as a publisher and bookseller suggests your personal commitment to the literary community. What do you think makes a good literary citizen?

I have mixed feelings about saying anything proscripti­ve here. Or prescripti­ve. But here goes: Celebrate writing and writers you love. Don’t go out of your way to be an asshole or devalue writing that matters to other readers. And don’t buy books on Amazon!

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