Like a novel from the five and dime…

When I started seriously reading and collecting books, I could tell you where I bought any title on my shelves. Noah II — a bookstore in Daytona Beach. The Shining — Waldenbooks, Hampton, ’77. Two Doc Savage pulps from the forties — Richmond Book Shop on Broad, ’73 (and the store is still there). Swords of Mars — mail order from a Burroughs collector.

Now days, forget it. I have way too many — all over the place, in stacks, in boxes — and only certain titles will jog my memory enough so that I can reach that far into the dim, distant past.

Whenever my parents wanted to get out and about, I was assured of finding something to read almost everywhere, from Rose’s, to Thalhimer’s, Miller and Rhoads, or People’s Drugs. Every “general” store, from department stores to drug stores, used to have decent book selections. Today the phrase “decent selection” doesn’t apply — books in these stores just don’t pull in a lot of revenue for the chains, so inventory is handled by a regional distributor, who picks only bestsellers for the racks, and the selection is typically minimal.

The late sixties and the ’70s were wonderful years for paperbacks. Even if the insides were tame by comparison, the covers were gaudy, glorious, cheesy, carnal — and especially memorable. Woolworth’s had magic in their wire racks, as did my local Peoples Drug, at Riverdale Shopping center in Hampton — a whole corner of the store was paperbacks and magazines, right next to the fountain area. The drug store in Colonial Williamsburg — it’s now the Trellis restaurant — is where I bought several memorable paperbacks (some against my mother’s wishes, who thought they might be racy — and they were).

While I was in Woolworth’s on Washington Avenue in Newport News one day in 1971, I found this paperback.

I had heard about the upcoming movie, and was dying to see it. (I wasn’t disappointed, either. Almost forty years later, it remains one of my favorite films, and is one of those movies when, if I come across it on television, I HAVE to watch it.) This paperback used the hardcovers’s earth and computer graphics artwork, but placed a naked guy right next to it. This was one of the first times that I consciously recognized “marketing” — another popular title at the time was Desmond Morris’ The Naked Ape, which, not coincidentally, was published by the same publisher as Andromeda Strain.


Dell obviously wanted some of that same bestseller magic to rub off on Crichton’s novel. I don’t know if it worked, but Andromeda was a bestseller that year, and a hell of a film.

I almost didn’t buy the book. I hesitated because I thought I might not understand the science. I’m glad I changed my mind and got it, though: it’s Michael Crichton at perhaps his best, with perhaps his best story; and Crichton’s gift at that time was that he could take complicated science and make it understandable — and enjoyable — to lay people. (As opposed to his anti-global warming polemic, State of Fear. A complete 180. Avoid at all costs.)

The other reason I love this book was Crichton’s incorporation of graphics with the text. In a seamless way, he added faux computer readouts and used typography creatively that served not just as mere illustration, but to further the story along. As a lifelong comic book reader, his use of graphics blew me away, in the same way that split-screen cinematography added dynamics to movie watching. I’ve since incorporated graphics and illustrations in my own fiction to help propel the story and to create a believable world filled with unbelievable creations. The Enigma Club trilogy, especially, uses graphic design as both verisimilitude and as storytelling:

There was magic in The Andromeda Strain just as there was magic in the book sections of even the littlest stores. But books today, as more and more publishing companies are bought out by international conglomerates, have lost some of their magic, as there isn’t much of a midlist any more. Publishers aren’t allowed to take too many chances — the execs want every book to be a bestseller (it’s the Jaws Syndrome), so we have Wal-Marts and CVSs and Krogers, all with the exact same titles, all in cramped little spaces that minimum wage workers don’t care about keeping neat. Outside of Barnes and Noble, book purchasing has become horribly homogenized, and magic is sometimes hard to find.

The five and dimes are mostly gone now. But good storytelling will never die, whether its printed and bound on paper and board, or whether its backlit on an iPhone or a Kindle.

The only thing missing is the joy of finding something unexpected in an unexpected place, that you can grasp in your hands and marvel at, that touches something in your soul, and you can claim it as your very own. That’s the magic of a book.

2 thoughts on “Like a novel from the five and dime…

  1. Dude,Amen! Doc Savage? I only got introduced to him via a 1970s comic book revival. LOVE to see your original pulps (he said lasciviously). Shecky

    Like

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