Another bookstore closes and San Francisco yawns. But Adobe Books on 16th Street, between Valencia and Guerrero isn’t another bookstore. It is a haven, a port for lonely souls, readers.
How many nights, after wandering hours, have I landed in one of the broken down easy chairs at Adobe Books? All the conversations I have listened to. I’ll miss a place where people actually talk to each other.
When it closes for good, sometime next month, some will mourn but not nearly enough. And Adobe too will be replaced with another sleek, high end clothing store. I’m afraid there is nothing unique about this lament.
All the books are now 60% off, but Andrew McKinley, among the kindest and most generous bookstore owners on earth, will still try and make you pay even less.
Last night I bought The Collected Stories of Wolfgang Hildesheimer. The book was originally listed at 9.95. Then it went down to 6.50. 60% off of 6.50 is, what? I’m terrible at math. I tried to pay four dollars. Andrew wouldn’t take it. He’d only accept three bucks, his final offer.
Is there another place in the universe can you buy The Collected Stories of Wolfgang Hildesheimer at one o’clock in the morning?
Wolfgang Hildesheimer by the way is – was – a very good, and funny, German story writer. Among the stories in the book is one called, “I Am Not Writing A Book On Kafka.”
Evil tongues, or rather their owners, claim (and I can see them sneering) that I am writing a book on Kafka. This accusation is false, I repudiate it. For I am working on a book on Golch.
No, the narrator is not writing a book on Kafka. The narrator is writing a book on Golch! Of course, Golch. Golch, an unknown schoolteacher from the town of Altzmunzach, a town in which the express trains do not stop…
Golch taught English and German at the High School for Daughters (this institution actually existed then and still does today)….
Don’t you all see what we are losing? If this city still has a soul, it’s at Adobe.
So long books I will never find. So long Wolfgang Hildesheimer. So long, Adobe Books. 16th Street will never be the same, and neither will we.





5 responses
So what happened between now and the October article that said, despite rumors to the contrary, Adobe Books would not be closing?
Libraries and book stores were the most civilized gathering places in this culture. Writers love them; readers love them; they’re more benevolent than parks as places for children to be.
live around the corner & pretty torn up about this… got down with some Carver there just the other night.
Very sorry to hear this. Adobe was one my haunts for many years when I lived in the Mission. Sadly, I’d already assumed that they’d closed.
A group formed in June and has been working to save the store, having formed a co-op and organized an infrascture that can hopefully push it forward into the future. There was a press release sent out a few months ago that outlined this which even included a personal letter from Andrew Mckinley;
http://www.missionmission.org/2012/10/08/contrary-to-popular-belief-adobe-books-is-not-closing/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+MissionMission+%28Mission+Mission%29
http://www.sfgate.com/music/thewatch/article/Collective-push-to-save-Adobe-Books-3936918.php
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