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Reading Local Seattle

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Introducing Reading Local: Seattle

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Reading Local: Seattle is the second, I hope, of many literary efforts recording, promoting, and listening to the efforts of locally produced lit. There are similar efforts occurring in other cities, such as Chicago’s New City Lit.

It seems like either a really good time or a really bad time to start an effort like this. For one thing, this is the twilight of print media, for the most part. (Maybe it is even the twilight of all print media?) Seattle not only lost the daily, The Seattle PI, but the book coverage in the Seattle Times has decreased. The Stranger has kept a book reviewer, Paul Constant, who has been very active both in the paper and on The Stranger Blog, but the Seattle Weekly doesn’t really publish much about books anymore aside from the event listings. Furthermore, independent bookstores continue to close their doors. In the last ten years Seattle has lost some great bookstores such as the urban bookstore M. Coy, which used to be on the ground floor in the downtown office building where The Raven Chronicles had a desk in the late 1990s. (They couldn’t really afford an office.) The store contained an idiosyncratic selection of new releases, and an even better collection of paperback lit. They also carried a few of the local lit mags. They managed to survive the incoming rush of mega-bookstores such as Borders (just down the block) and Barnes and Noble (about five blocks away). They even survived the rise of Amazon. They were a small, precise shop that offered good coffee and music. It was great to get coffee there, read submitted manuscripts, and feel like the city and books and writers who wanted to get published were all connected by print, postage, and coffee cups.

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