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| From THE BEAT GENERATION IN SAN FRANCISCO: A Literary Tour By Bill Morgan If any city in American deserves the title of home of the Beat Generation, it is San Francisco. While New York can rightly boast to be the birthplace of the Beats, the literary group came to maturity and national prominence in this most beautiful city by the bay. In the 1950s San Francisco was a magnet attracting inventive writers, artists and thinkers during the conservative post-war years. Intellectual freedom blossomed with the publication and trial of "Howl" and by the 1960s, San Francisco was the destination of choice for a new generation of radical social innovators. |
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CITY LIGHTS BOOKSELLERS & PUBLISHERS
The Artigues Building A lot of cultural history happened within these four walls (one should say these three walls, since the building is triangular). The back of the City Lights building faces Chinatown, while the Columbus Avenue side faces east and looks out on the far end of Western civilizationa fitting location for this crossroads of culture. Columbus Avenue was originally called Montgomery Avenue in the nineteenth century, when it was first cut diagonally through the city's rectangular grid system of streets and has always been the main street of North Beach. In 1906, most everything in this part of the city was destroyed by the great San Francisco earthquake and the fire that followed. This building was no exception. After the firestorm passed and the smoke cleared, the owners rebuilt using the original brick basement arches.
The Mezzanine It was on the mezzanine that City Lights was born. Peter D. Martin, a native New Yorker, came to San Francisco in the 1940s to teach sociology at San Francisco State College. Martins father was Carlo Tresca, an Italian anarchist and editor, assassinated in New York City in 1943, maybe by the Mafia. Martin created perhaps the very first pop culture magazine in July 1952. He called it City Lights after the great Chaplin film, and published Robert Duncan, Jack Spicer, Philip Lamantia, Lawrence Ferling (a.k.a. Ferlinghetti), and the first film critiques of Pauline Kael (of later New Yorker fame). Martin used the mezzanine as his office, above a flower shop once occupying the small entrance room where the cash register is today. The Triangular Storefront
The Basement
City Lights Publishers
Today, poetry has been elevated from the basement and occupies its own room on the second floor and the basement houses non-fiction, with sections titled Muckraking, Commodity Aesthetics, Topographies, Evidence, Peoples History, Class War, Stolen Continents, and other mind-shaking categories. The Main Room For decades the central room on the main floor was rented by an Italian travel agency, Fratelli Forte, who sold steamship tickets back to the Old Country. In 1978 the brothers retired, and City Lights moved in, making the store twice as large and twice as interesting. At that time Ferlinghetti and Nancy Peters moved the publishing branch back to the bookstore after a ten-year stay on upper Grant Avenue, setting up an editorial office in the basement, where Ferlinghetti had worked in the 50s and 60s. In a few years, the editors moved upstairs to the mezzanine, publishing such luminaries as Charles Bukowski, Georges Bataille, Sam Shepard, Karen Finley, and Andrei Codrescu.
The Barber Shop The next space to be added, through the three small doorways to your right, was occupied by a certain Ray the Barber. He seems to have augmented his tonsorial income by dealing dope, and was busted, ending up in Soledad Prison. Years later when Ferlinghetti was giving a reading in the prison, who should he see but Ray the Barber, still doing time. In this room (and elsewhere in the store) you can see many hand-lettered signs by Ferlinghetti:. Stash Your Sell Phone and Be Here Now. "A Kind of Library Where Books Are Sold." "Free the Press from Its Corporate Owners. Printers Ink Is the Greater Explosive. Have a Seat and Read a Book. You'll also find the City Lights logo here and there around the store; its a medieval guild mark Ferlinghetti chose from the Koch Book of Signs. At the front door, he has improved on Dante with a sign that reads Abandon All Despair, Ye Who Enter Here. Now known as the Third-World Fiction room, it has books by writers from Asia, Africa, Latin America, the Middle East, and the Caribbean and Pacific Islands. Youll find short story collections here, too, and a rack of literary periodicals. As a young poet, Diane di Prima often sat at a table and wrote down the addresses of all the poetry magazines to which she might send poems. The small alcove in the back has self-published books, books by very small presses, and cutting-edge zines. New technologies have now made it possible for writers to design and print their own books, bypassing big-scale distributors, and youre sure to find some results of this exciting self-publishing revolution. Poetry Room / Beat Literature One of the last of the old bohemians, Henri Lenoir, founded Vesuvio (the bar next door) and lived in two small rooms upstairs where the Poetry Room is now. It holds one of the largest collections of poetry in any bookstore anywhere. There are thousands of books by everyone from Auden to Zukofsky and there are separate sections for Beat literature, City Lights poets, poetry criticism, and poetry anthologies. Frequent readings, book parties, and signings are held up here, and the schedule for dates and times is posted around the store. There's even a small selection of used books, a small echo of Ferlinghetti's original used bookstore idea. (In fact, the whole store has somewhat the feel of an old used bookstore, since it never attempted to be a clean, well-lighted place.) Editorial Offices City Lights editorial offices occupy the rest of the second floor. In the 1960s Ferlinghetti began hiring part-time editorial assistants, among them Joanne Joseph, Stella Levy, Jan Herman and Gail Chiarrello. In 1971, he persuaded Nancy J. Peters (then at the Library of Congress) to work on a special project. He was so impressed with her intelligence and literary savvy that he talked her into working full-time. Since then, as director of the company with Ferlinghetti, she has become its heart and guiding spirit. He considers her one of the very best editors in the country. Bob Sharrard began working as a clerk in the store in the mid-seventies and is now a senior editor and the subsidiary rights manager. Elaine Katzenberger, who also began in the bookstore before joining the editorial staff as a talented generalist and first-rate editor, is now an associate director of the company. Today, City Lights publishes not only poetry and fiction including much work in translation but also books on social and political issues. There are over 100 books in print, and at least a dozen new titles published every year. The press, like the store, is known for its deep commitment to radical democracy and progressive politics. As former bookstore manager Richard Berman pointed out, "Without the publishing company the store would have been just another bookstore, but working together we have made an impact on American culture." |
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In 1984, Ferlinghetti made Peters his partner at a time when the business was in serious financial distress; Paul Yamazaki became chief book buyer and Richard Berman store manager. All three had already had over ten years experience at City Lights and they, with veterans Scott Davis, Gent Sturgeon, Andy Bellows and an outstanding young staff Lara Whitney, Jeff Battis, Janaki Rampura, Karl Bauer, Don Campana, Esther Morales, Luke Carmody, Mitra Ganley, Matthew Gleeson, Chanté Mouton, and Tan Cao continue to make City Lights a great independent bookstore-publisher combination. Youll find this energetic crew on hand every day from 10 am to midnight. In recent years Peter Maravelis, events coordinator, has organized many unforgettable literary happenings, publicist Stacey Lewis keeps the City Lights in the news, and theres a web site created by Eric Zassenhaus, covering all aspects of the store its history, special book stock, mail order department, events, and current news. |
| On July 16, 2001 the San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously named City Lights Landmark #228 because of its seminal role in the literary and cultural development of San Francisco and the nation, for stewarding and restoring City Lights Bookstore, for championing First Amendment protections, and for publishing and giving voice to writers and artists everywhere. Now, after half a century of supporting the right to read, think, write, debate, and dissent, City Lights has come to symbolize the American spirit of intellectual inquiry. From Des Moines to Delhi, people who have followed the fame of City Lights have come to see it with their own eyes. It is still the literary meeting place in town. As Ferlinghetti has said, In a time when the dominant TV-driven consumer culture would seem to result in the dumbing down of America, City Lights is a finger in the dike holding back the flood of unknowing. |
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Copyright © 2005 City Lights Books