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Read all about it: Downtown Palm Springs bookstore owners hope to start new chapter for city in November

The atmosphere will be designed more for browsing than bustle, with a goal of becoming an inviting hub for not only locals but visitors who might be looking for something to read poolside.

Sarah Lacy holds the hand of daughter Eli Ellis as she points to a spot that will someday hold a bookcase at a new bookstore in Palm Springs. In the background is Paul Bradley Carr. The bookstore is the culmination of a dream for the family that loves to read.

What would happen if you took two highly respected writers and media entrepreneurs accustomed to competing in the rat race of Silicon Valley, offered them a serene life in Palm Springs, and told them they could now create their dream? You would get something many here have been yearning years for โ€“ a bookstore.

But it wonโ€™t be just any bookstore. Using a touch of marketing savvy they picked up while building successful careers, Paul Bradley Carr and Sarah Lacy are naming the new venture โ€œThe Best Bookstore In Palm Springs.โ€

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โ€œWe named it that so our ambition wonโ€™t outgrow it,โ€ Lacy said, adding that in the corporate world, they are often expected to scale their companies massively in order to appease investors. This venture has only one simple goal: โ€œWe hope to delight in ways other bookstores canโ€™t.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ve started several media companies,โ€ Lacy explained as she offered a tour of the space that formerly held Interstellar Comic Books & Collectibles and will soon house the coupleโ€™s bookstore. โ€œItโ€™s an amazing privilege when somebody gives you millions of dollars to build something. But that comes with pressure.

โ€œThis is the antithesis of any Internet business.โ€

It will also be the antithesis of what book lovers throughout the Coachella Valley have experienced since corporate-run Barnes and Noble in Palm Desert became what is believed to be the only remaining brick-and-mortar bookstore in the area. Interstellar, which specialized in comic books and collectibles, closed earlier this summer. The Book Rack used bookstore in La Quinta closed just this month.

Carr is both a prolific writer and prolific reader, polishing off roughly a book a day. He was a technology columnist forย The Guardianย and a senior editor atย TechCrunch. His 2021 novel,ย 1414ยบ, is a fast-paced murder mystery set in familiar territory. โ€œThere is no keener observer of Silicon Valley sociopaths than Paul Bradley Carr,โ€ one reviewer wrote.

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Lacy reported on Silicon Valley for two decades as a staff writer and columnist forย BusinessWeek, a senior editor atย TechCrunch,ย and as the founding co-host of Yahoo Financeโ€™sย Tech Ticker. In her spare time, she managed to author three critically-acclaimed books about the tech industry, create the websiteย Pando, and, along with Carr, launchย ChairmanMe, a learning and networking platform built for working women โ€œand other badasses.โ€

At ChairmanMe, Lacy and Carr specifically created โ€œan intersectional, accessible learning space where our members can improve their lives.โ€ Theyโ€™re aiming for something similar but on a smaller scale in Palm Springs.

When it opens, between 7,000 and 10,000 new books will be on display in 1,025 square feet. The atmosphere will be designed more for browsing than bustle, with the goal of becoming an inviting hub for not only locals but visitors who might be looking for something to read poolside.

Behind the papered windows of the former Interstellar Comic Books & Collectibles off Tahquitz Canyon Way in Downtown Palm Springs, The Best Bookstore In Palm Springs is readying for its late November debut.

Carr, who is busy curating the initial offerings, said he expects to pivot the stock based on customer feedback that comes as he and Lacy dive deeper into a shared passion.

โ€œWe love, both of us, nothing more than talking about books,โ€ he said.

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Like many who transplant themselves here after a life spent grinding it out in a major metropolitan city, the Racquet Club Estates homeowners also love Palm Springs. Both first visited the city years ago while attending separate conferences. Carr soon found himself returning several times a year โ€œto focus and finish my books,โ€ while Lacy came to be at ease.

โ€œThe city itself is a story, going back to the Cahuilla tribe and the healing waters,โ€ Lacy said. โ€œThat sense of ease is why this place exploded during the pandemic.โ€

But while visitors and transplants were flocking to the city and discovering the same magic that many locals have known their whole lives the past two years, they also found something locals knew was missing.

โ€œThe fact thereโ€™s no bookstore here is madness,โ€ Carr said. โ€œI know there are stores in town that sell books. But a town should have its own dedicated bookstore.โ€

Starting in late November, Palm Springs will have The Best Bookstore.


More information:ย True to their backgrounds, Carr and Lacy recently launched the bookstoreโ€™s website. Theyโ€™re asking for input from the community and offering a chance for $500 in store credit for providing it. Click here toย help them out.


Author

Mark is the founder and publisher of The Post. He first moved to the Coachella Valley in 1994 and is currently a Palm Springs resident. After a long career in newspapers (including The Desert Sun) and major news websites such as ESPN.com and MSN.com, he started The Post in 2021.

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