Episode 345 – The Art of Libromancy with Josh Cook
Mark interviews Josh Cook, Josh Cook, an author, bookseller and the co-owner at Porter Square Books in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he has worked since 2004 about his writing, his book The Art of Libromancy and his life as a reader and writer.
Prior to the interview, Mark reads comments from recent episodes, welcomes new patron Jennifer Brinn, thanks Buy Mark a Coffee patron Nikki Guerlain, shares a personal update, and a word about this episode’s sponsor.
This episode is sponsored by the books The Art of Libromancy and An Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries and Bookstores.

Ask for these books via your local indie-owned bookstore or via your local community library.
In the interview, Mark and Josh talk about:
Josh’s earliest days really getting into reading and how he had wanted to be a writer since about the age of 16After post-secondary education, landing in Boston and deciding that working in a bookstore would be a good place for a writer to workDiscovering the “coming soon” and “help wanted” sign on a neighborhood bookstore: Porter Square BooksContinuing to build a freelance writing career, crafting articles, reviews, fiction, and poetryGetting his first manuscript into the hands of a publisher that he knew well from his role in bookselling, which was the novel AN EXAGGERATED MURDERThe path, via roles such as Online Presence Manager (website and social media) and Marketing Director that led to eventually becoming a co-owner of Porter Square BooksThe challenge of the most qualified people to take over owning and running a bookstore, the booksellers, often don’t have the necessary money, funding, and resources to do soThe model that has become a bit more common recently that enables employees the option of becoming a vested co-owner or interest sharing participant in a bookstoreThe genesis of the book THE ART OF LIBROMANCYThe major reckoning that many people had in 2016 when Donald Trump got elected at trying to understand their place in a world that would allow something like that to happenThe concept of how the book industry (publishing, bookselling) would continue to empower and legitimize the voices of misogyny, white supremacy, other bigoted ideasHow it all clicked after Josh had participated in a virtual event with Biblioasis author Jorge Carrion for the book AGAINST AMAZON AND OTHER ESSAYSPitching the book to Biblioasis and how the existing relationship and in-depth knowledge Josh had of their publishing house (and their editor’s knowledge of Josh himself) led to an instant acceptance of his book proposalThe importance of relationships and recommendations from people that you already know, like, and trust – and how that plays a significant role in book projectsElements of human curation that can happen in person within a community, particularly as something that Amazon can’t doThe idea of a bookstore as a “third place” that is neither home nor work where someone can go and be a human being with other human beingsA few of the challenges, both expected and unexpected, that happened when Porter Square Books had to adapt into an online and curb-side order facility during the pandemicHow the learned skills of booksellers being able to absorb information and insights about books from publishers, colleagues, and customers, even if they haven’t read them, is such an important aspect of a bookseller’s roleARCs (Advance Review Copies) as one of the primary ways Josh has of knowing what is on the wayChristopher Morley’s THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP and the Melville House edition that Josh first discovered which is a love letter to the art of booksellingHow books are great ways to be safely uncomfortableThe paradox of tolerance, as expressed by Karl Popper in THE OPEN SOCIETY AND ITS ENEMIES: If you tolerate the intolerable, your space will eventually become intolerantA bookseller’s role within that paradox of allowing tolerance for voices that seek fresh voices, but prevent those voices whose mandate is to shut-down or not allow diverse voices the ability to be expressedJosh’s perspective of how publishers, authors, bookstores and others within the industry involved in this process are all teammates working together to get books to readersStrategies authors can use to establish genuine relationships with their local community bookstoresAnd more . . .After the interview Mark reflects on walking away from fascinating conversations with a list of books to read, some of the parallels between Josh’s journey into bookselling and his own, and how the employee-to-owner situation also parallels the change-of-ownerships of Words Worth Books, a local indie bookstore in Waterloo that Mark adores.
Links of Interest:
Josh Cook on Social Media:BlueSky SocialInstagramThe Art of Libromancy (Biblioasis)An Exaggerated MurderPorter Square Books (Cambridge and Boston)Words Worth Books (Waterloo, ON)Me and White Supremacy by Layla SaadAn Author’s Guide to Working With Bookstores and LibrariesSmashwords Link (eBook 57% Off until end of Feb 2024)Mark’s YouTube ChannelBuy Mark a CoffeePatreon for Stark ReflectionsHow to Access Patreon RSS FeedsSuperstars Writing SeminarsHow to Write a Howling Good StorySmashwords linkPatron Coupon for 75% offThe Relaxed AuthorBuy eBook DirectBuy Audiobook DirectPublishing Pitfalls for AuthorsAn Author’s Guide to Working with Libraries & BookstoresWide for the WinMark’s Canadian Werewolf BooksThis Time Around (Short Story)A Canadian Werewolf in New YorkStowe Away (Novella)Fear and Longing in Los AngelesFright Nights, Big CityLover’s MoonHex and the CityThe Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and AutomobilesYippee Ki-Yay Motherf*cker: A Trivia Guide to Die Hard
Josh Cook is a bookseller and co-owner at Porter Square Books in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he has worked since 2004. He is also author of the critically acclaimed postmodern detective novel An Exaggerated Murder and his fiction, criticism, and poetry have appeared in numerous leading literary publications. He grew up in Lewiston, Maine and lives in Somerville, Massachusetts.
The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0