My pal
Matt Tannenbaum is about to celebrate 50 years as a bookseller. He made his bones at the Gotham Book Mart,
working for the legendary Frances Steloff.
“Always bring the customer with you back to the shelf when he or she
asks for a book which you don’t think you have in stock. Especially if you know you don’t have
it. Your customer is bound to see
something else along the way.” Frances was
enormously grateful for having been led into a trade she so cherished, and Matt
clearly is, as well. He once remarked
that when you’re young, you’re unlikely to recognize a life-changing event,
because you haven’t lived enough of a life to realize it’s going to change. But that
first day Matt walked into the Gotham, he set
his life on a different path.
Matt Tannenbaum - Photo Credit: Bill Shein/Berkshire ArgusIt’s enormously
satisfying to see somebody imagine a thing, and make it happen. Matt moved to the Berkshires, in western Massachusetts, and bought
his own bookstore, on Housatonic
St., in Lenox.
He and the store have been an enduring resource since, for both readers
and writers. Matt is very much a bookman, in the sense of loving
everything about them, the texts, the smell, the history. He’s achieved something not everybody gets,
which is to make a vocation from his ardor.
This is a guy who breathes the
written word. And as a kind of grace
note, in 2022, during COVID, a filmmaker named A.B. Zax made a documentary called
Hello, Bookstore, which is in fact
how Matt answers the phone. I can’t
recommend this movie enough. It’s hugely
charming, and a terrific surprise. I was
prepared to like it, of course, because
it’s somebody I love and respect, but there’s always your dread going in – like
a high school production of Oklahoma
– that it’s going to be amateurish and squirmy, and you have to trust me on
this one, squirmy it ain’t. It’s without
pretense, and I hope I don’t doom your interest by calling it heart-warming.
https://www.hello-bookstore.com/
I was
on the phone with Matt, just the other day, and if I sample a piece of the
conversation, it gives you an idea of how his mind works. He mentioned that he’d struck up an
acquaintanceship with Otto Penzler – another bookseller, of course – because of
their shared enthusiasm for Charles McCarry.
(McCarry hailed from Pittsfield,
MA, just up the road from Lenox,
and he and Matt had gotten to be pals; Otto, as a publisher, had anthologized
McCarry in several collections, Best
American Mystery Stories among them.)
My own acquaintance with Otto is very slight, but I’ve been short-listed
several times for BAMS, and the first
time I got in was the year it was guest-edited by Donald Westlake. I told Matt that I wrote Westlake a fanboy thank-you, and we had a
desultory correspondence over the next half-dozen years, snail mail, because he
didn’t do internet, and his letters were written on a manual, because he didn’t
like electric typewriters, either. He
didn’t want something humming at him, he said.
I’m thinking Don punched those keys pretty hard, and he must have gone
through a whole bunch of Smith-Coronas over time, because the e was always out of alignment, about a
sixteenth of an inch above the line of type.
Matt laughed, and said something about technology, and how of course Westlake was allowed his
idiosyncracies, and then he said, You realize there are no rough drafts
anymore. On a computer, you don’t mark
up a hard copy, you just overwrite what you wrote before. It took me a minute to think that
through. Word-processing is a huge
convenience, and I, for one, like being liberated. But the consequence is an actual loss.
What we gain in momentum, we lose by having no record of the process. It’s a thoughtful insight.
I’ve
had a lot of eye-opening conversations with Matt. He’s always been a very alert reader. He was the one who pointed out the elegance of
the last line of John Crowley’s Little,
Big to me – a shared appreciation – but truth to tell, I’d missed it, first
time around. I think, too, that I would
have turned a deaf ear to Lawrence Durrell, if not for Matt. Laurie Lee’s Cider with Rosie. Patrick
Leigh Fermor, maybe. He can be very
attuned to what a reader might not realize they’d been missing. This is the natural magic of the bookshelf,
one thing next to another.
"...as once upon a time they were." I love that book. Read it as a teen and it stayed with me. A few years ago I bought the giant hardcover illustrated edition but I wish I still had the original crappy paperback. Good post. I wonder if I have ever been in his shop on a trip to that part of the state. Will check out the doc.
ReplyDelete