Shelf Awareness
The effort comes after last week's reports that owners of the building that houses Rizzoli Bookstore plan to demolish the six-story, 109-year-old structure--as well as two small, adjoining buildings--to potentially make way for a luxury high-rise. Rizzoli responded to the news by insisting that it remains open for business at its current location while it seeks new space.
Jon Michaud wrote a tribute to Rizzoli Bookstore, his employer from 1991 to 1994, on the New Yorker's Page-Turner blog last week, concluding: "Rizzoli's thirty-year run at its Fifty-seventh Street location is a more-than-respectable showing in the convulsive annals of midtown retail. If nothing else, its potential disappearance should remind us to value the many magnificent bookstores that the city still boasts: Three Lives, Book Court, McNally Jackson, Word, Word Up, and Book Culture, to name a representative handful. The migration of bookselling to Brooklyn, uptown and Jersey City follows the flow of the city's literary life. Only the ghosts of bookstores past remain in midtown."
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