Thursday, December 7, 2006
Black Images Bookstore Shutting Down
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For the last few years, there has been plenty of talk and innuendo that Black Images Book Bazaar was on the verge of shutting down. However, last week a reliable source told me that the store's last days were eminent. Needing to hear the news for myself, I stopped by Black Images on my way home from work today. One of the store's founders and co-owners, Ms. Emma Rodgers confirmed that what I had heard was indeed true, and that the store will close its doors at the end of December.
Black Images is the oldest black bookstore in Texas, and was founded in 1977 by Ms. Rodgers and Ms. Ashira Tosihwe. The bookstore is located in Wynnewood Village Shopping Center in Oak Cliff, and has been an anchor there for years.
As I talked with Ms. Rodgers at the store, her eyes said more than her words ever could. I imagined what it will be like at the end of the month for her to walk away from the space that probably feels more like home than her own residence: never to return again.
Black Images Book Bazaar began selling books by black authors at a time when it was believed that black books had no market. I've often recounted how my mother would drive down to Dallas from Paris, Texas in the mid 80's just to purchase books from Ms. Rodgers. Now that you can find black authors at any Tom, Dick and Wal-Mart, it's easy to drive right past Wynnewood Village in favor of a bigger, shinier option.
In the end, this is another story of a small business that will succumb to the bundled solutions and varied options offered by less personal retail chains and megastores. Black Images has fallen victim to the same market forces that recently shut down Tower Records, an independent music store in the Oak Lawn area.
The demise of the independent bookstore has been well documented in recent years. Slate Magazine has a comprehensive piece on the subject in an article titled "What Are Independent Bookstores Really Good For?" In our brief discussion, Ms. Rodgers spoke of how consumers are looking to get books, movies, music, and of course coffee, all in the same place. Even as she explained, I could see the wheels in her head turning on thoughts of how their business may one day be reinvented.
Though Black Images will no longer operate in its current form, the brand will continue to exist. Ms. Rodgers will facilitate book signings for high profile authors - like a recent stop in Dallas by Tavis Smiley - as well as aspiring new writers. I'm encouraging everyone to stop by Black Images between now and the end of the month to thank Ms. Rodgers and Ms. Tosihwe for the contributions that they have made to the city of Dallas. The best way to show your love is to make a holiday purchase for someone on your gift list.
Pegasus News content partner - Dallas South Blog
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Comments
Pikahsso allen Poe Verified
I know Emma Rodgers she is the Black Bookstore Queen, she is the inspiration behind my daddy and I when we had a bookstore called Afro Awakenings. It's a shame when the African American community doesnt support an institution such as Black Images my momma use to buy books from there. Emma is a good dignified woman my God bless her....verb
1 year, 10 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )
5044life Anonymous
There are/were a couple of Black book stores in New Orleans. They each served their individual purpose. However, Community Book Store was the first. Vera Williams started the bookstore from the back of her car. She eventually purchased a building, then moved a couple of times. She had a large building on Bayou Rd. in which she housed the bookstore and was going to put in a coffee shop, a copy center and a computer center. Then Hurricane Katrina came. But, thank God, she is back up and running; not like before, but she is there.
We not only get books from there, but also tee shirts, Kwanazaa products for the holiday, African jewelry, artifacts, etc. It was more than a bookstore; it was a way to connect to our culture, our heritage. Also, Mama Vera could and did order rare books for us. One of the greatest lost that I suffered in the hurricane was the lost of my books and the info contained on my computer hard drive. I had books that were signed by authors, as Vera also hosted authors as Ms. Emma does. We had books signed by Ivan Van Sertima, Randall Robinson, Molefi Asante, Cornell West, etc. Those things cannot be replaced.
I am so sorry to hear that this bookstore is closing. I don't think that people realize the importance of good books and a culture-centered bookstore. I wish her the best in whatever else she attempts to endeavor; but I would hope that she could start a bookstore elsewhere.
I live in West Plano because I needed handicapped accessible housing. But I have been to that area a couple of times. Once I think I saw the bookstore, but didn't stop. But when I went back, I didn't see it. There was a shoe store or something else there, or maybe I missed it. But maybe Ms. Emma can open somewhere where there is a greater need and less competition. I hope she does. In the meantime, I will definitely try to come by and purchase a book. My funds are so limited, post Katrina, but I will definitely try to buy something. History books are my passion. Books, like "We, the Black Jews,' "They Came Before Columbus," and any and all books that give us a sense of who we are and where we came from.
God Bless and hope things work out.
5044life
10 months, 1 week ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )
Mike Orren Staff
5044life, sadly the store is long gone. This article is from a year ago (making it one of the first articles on http://PegNews.com).
10 months, 1 week ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )
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