BookWars
The subculture of street booksellers described by Rosette
may not be as misrepresented by the media as
sadomasochists, but they've become more and more
marginalized over the course of Manhattan's gentrification.
His look at their world dispels quite a few received
notions: very few vendors are homeless, and most acquire
their books from private collections and small-town thrift
stores and library sales, rather than theft. Rosette
himself fell into the "career" by accident. After
graduation from NYU, he wound up unemployed, living with a
junkie roommate and one valuable asset: a huge book
collection that could readily be turned into cash. He wound
up selling books - on the stretch of Manhattan's West 4th
Street in front of the NYU library, ironically - for three
years and documented much of his experience, including
interactions with customers and other booksellers, on
video.
Although marred by Rosette's glib voice-over, BOOKWARS does
a fine job of exploring various aspects of his trade, as
well as the hardcore bibliophiles attracted to it. While a
few of them have the kind of troubled background one might
expect - several are recovering alcoholics or drug addicts
- most are bohemians who simply prefer it to the 9-to-5
office grind. Thanks to Rosette's loose, digressive
structure, BOOKWARS often seems to have edited rather
aimlessly, but it builds towards a climax - courtesy
Giuliani's "quality of life" campaign - based around the
growing harassment of street vendors, despite their First
Amendment right to sell books on the street without a
license, and his subsequent burn-out. (Oddly, he never
discusses the racial disparity between the mostly white
vendors on 4th Street, who sellˆä literature and philosophy,
and the African-American ones on 6th Ave., who usually sell
old comic books and magazines, especially porn, although he
does show that the latter are more often harassed by the
police.)
Rosette may be painting an overly rosy view of the
bibliophile subculture, but he gives us a fascinating look
into a world most New Yorkers have had a brush with - I've
bought plenty of books from the West 4th Street crew - but
know little about.