Struggling bookshops turn to online fundraisers to keep lights on and the pages turning [View all]
In the cozy confines of Once Upon A Crime in Minneapolis, thousands of volumes of murder, mayhem and mystery crowd the shelves and creep up the walls. The shop has survived three decades, a change of ownership and millions of whodunits. But its struggling to stay in business in the middle of Uptown construction gridlock that snarls traffic and chews up parking spaces.
(snip)
Book clubs meet at the shop. Authors come here from across the country for readings. But for small business, small setbacks like the headaches from an ongoing, yearslong highway construction, or a new bike lane that gobbles up parking spaces in a part of town where parking is already scarce can create huge problems.
The parking issue wont kill Once Upon A Crime. Not if the readers can help it. Hundreds are trying to help flooding a new GoFundMe page www.gofundme.com/keep-once-upon-a-crime-books-open with almost $20,000 in donations, money the bookstore can use to update its website, offer new amenities or even search for a new location with ample parking and more square footage.
(snip)
Once Upon A Crime isnt the only Minnesota bookstore that is fundraising to keep the lights on and the pages turning. For decades, scholars and theologians searching for rare and vintage volumes knew their books could probably be found in Stillwater, Minn.
Loome Theological Booksellers is a gem of shop, where readers wander the book-stacked catacombs in the basement, Gregorian chants fill the air, theres a discount on your purchase if you can guess the age of the ancient tome sitting on a pedestal, and where its easier to find the bathrooms if you know your Latin (hint: seek out the necessarium). Its a space that draws in book clubs and author readings and solitary browsers, drifting from volume to volume for hours.
(snip)
In June, Hagen launched a GoFundMe campaign www.gofundme.com/protect-our-independent-bookstore to try and offset the cost of moving the shop to its new location on Main Street in downtown Stillwater. Although the fundraiser is still well short of its $120,000 goal, almost $30,000 in donations rolled in.
More..
http://www.startribune.com/struggling-bookshops-turn-to-online-fundraisers-to-keep-lights-on-and-the-pages-turning/502033152/
========
I love the Once Upon a Crime but have not been there ever since... well, getting to any part of the city is a bother. I switched to the library, instead.. And donated many mystery books to retirements homes. They loved them!