I've kept it pretty low-key this week as I continue to heal from my gum graft. I haven't been exercising, but I managed to get twelve thousand steps yesterday as I participated in the 2026 Independent Bookstore Crawl!
On my work email, I'm subscribed to Benchmark Books, which sells LDS books and hosts events with new authors. From them, I learned that April 25 was Independent Bookstore Day, and twenty-five Utah bookstores were participating in this crawl. There are two options: On Independent Bookstore Day, visit ten bookstores; or by December 31, go to all twenty-five in Utah. I love supporting local businesses, so I thought it might be fun to go to all twenty-five—though I'm not committed to it—and going to ten in one day would allow me to get a good start.
I started the day at the Book Garden in Bountiful. I love this bookstore, and I have bought things there many times. I have also sold my books to them. But I didn't buy anything this time.
Next I drove down to Draper to the Book Box Bookshop, which was quite busy.
It was here I first realized how different I was from most of the other people doing the crawl. I am squarely on team nonfiction. I don't have anything against fiction, it just doesn't really interest me. But most of the people at Book Box seemed to be there for fiction. They did have one section of nonfiction, so I bought David Archuleta's new memoir, the one actual book I bought all day.
Next I headed to Benchmark Books, which was very much not busy. It is totally my kind of bookstore, so that was surprising to me. But I get a lot of free books because of my jobs, and I already had the books I might have wanted. (My BYU boss talked about his new Salt Lake Temple book there in October, and on that occasion I bought Matthew Harris's Second-Class Saints and Taylor Petrey's Tabernacles of Clay.) There was also an antique store in the same building, so I looked there but didn't buy anything.
Next I went to Marissa's Bookstore, which is pretty close to my state office.
I'm a committed journaler, and they had a good selection of journals I enjoy, which have classic art on the covers and a magnet to keep it closed. So I got a journal with a 1607 map on it. I'll use it eventually.Then I drove up to the King's English. I had been there once before, when a colleague was doing a book reading there. It is arranged more like a house, with lots of little rooms and hallways. That meant it was hard to get around when it was a busy day. People were buying stacks of books, but I didn't buy anything.
Then I went to 100 South to go to Books & Supply, which was the strangest "bookstore" I visited all day.
They had a small selection of books, and I honestly can't imagine anyone wanting to read them. They were mostly about architecture and design, and yet I imagine architects, designers, and artists would be reading other books instead. Actually, I was kind of interested in a book about salt lakes, but I didn't buy it. A lot of the store had art supplies. It seemed like a very niche store, yet I don't even get what the niche was. They've been there since November, and I can't imagine they'll last very long.
I went to Trolley Square to go to Weller Book Works. I have been there many times, especially since I used to go to Trolley Square Barbers before the Park Barbershop opened up near me. I think they are my favorite store I visited yesterday, though I didn't buy anything. They have such a big collection of books on so many topics. This is where I bought my copy of Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling back in 2022.
Then I went to Salt Lake's Maven District to Lovebound Library, which is devoted entirely to romance novels. Again, I was surprised at how busy this store was, because I wasn't interested in those books at all. One of the cashiers saw me with my map and offered to stamp it without me even asking—perhaps she recognized that I was out of place there. Most of the customers were women, though there were some men standing around, presumably waiting for their wives. There were a good amount of queer romances, but those don't interest me any more than straight ones.
And the final stop was Ken Sanders Rare Books, which moved into the old Leonardo Museum. I never visited them in their previous location, but of course I was aware of them—you can't work in Utah history and not know about Ken Sanders. Inside they had the old Salt Lake Lego display from the Leonardo. They had a selection of books on the top level, but then most of them were in the basement, which is also where you had to get your map stamped. It appeared to me that they hadn't fully organized the books after the move, because much of the store was in disarray. I'd say this store was second only to Weller Book Works, mostly because so much of it remained unorganized. Near the entrance, there was a cabinet full of postcards. I wanted to see if they had any holiday postcards, but there were people looking in the drawers, and I didn't feel like waiting for them.
So then I went to the other side of the block to get my prize at the Salt Lake Library. It wasn't clear where to go, but I found my way to the roof, where a woman was giving out little pennants and bookmarks. The prize was a little underwhelming (it's not even a cool bookmark!), but the real prize is the adventure. I enjoyed taking the stairs to the roof.
Then as I walked back to my car, I had to pass Ken Sanders again, and I thought I would see if there were still people looking at the postcards. Nope, the cabinet was unoccupied.
Last Christmas, there were lots of posts about weird old Christmas cards, so I hoped I would find some. Nope, no really weird ones. And there were no Halloween ones. But there were weird Easter ones! And weird Thanksgiving ones! And other holidays I found interesting for various reasons! I love this kind of thing, so I bought nineteen postcards. Because of Indie Bookstore Day, everything was 25 percent off, so I got them all for about twenty-six dollars. This was the highlight of the day for me. I am so excited to have them. Maybe I'll have to go back sometime to get more, though I already got my favorites. Of the ones that have dates on them, they're mostly between 1909 and 1913.
| This was the weirdest Christmas one. Why does Santa have a turkey? |
| The one on the right is the cover image of Thanksgiving: The Biography of an American Holiday, the fateful book that literally changed my life |
| The middle one is stamped 1933, which is still cool. I like that the kids are wearing their winter clothes. And I love the car on the bottom. |
| There were lots of Washington cards, many with a cherry motif. I only found this one that explicitly mentioned Washington's Birthday |
| What is life like in Thanksgiving Towne? |
| ...is it like this... |
| ...or like this? |
| They always used to refer to the "Glorious Fourth of July." It was so common that I'm surprised we don't really call it "glorious" anymore. |
| I absolutely love the weird Easter cards. The kids in the nest. The rabbits' egg-shaped boat. And is the rabbit at the barn door the father of the rabbits emerging from the eggs? |
| The card on the right is for Decoration Day, which is the original name of Memorial Day |
| More weird Easter. The cheerful bunny band might be my very favorite. |
| These are the same cards with better lighting, except "A Joyful Easter" is covered up |















