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On the south side of Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue ... you'll come across various boxes and crates of books...
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They belonged to Felix Caro. A sign posted near the books explains that he was a musician, spiritualist, martial artist, intellectual... and that he lived at 72 E. Seventh St. for over 40 years. "Please treat his marvelous library respectfully. RIP."
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Caro died last Dec. 17. He was 63.
14 comments:
I think I need The Contact Lens Book; it may be out-of-print.
That's all going to get rained-on tomorrow if it's still outside - which would be a shame.
I am a bit surprised that Manhattan, considering all the corner free newspaper and magazine boxes, never considered a leave a book take a book type kiosk. I have seen these in Rockaway Beach and read that other towns in some states have this program.
It would certainly be a good way to disburse these books, because it's already leaving a mess on the sidewalk since some people don't have the brains to put them back in the crates if they don't want them.
The Book of Est - holy cow, does that movement even exist any more?
9:13 AM,
There used to be one on 4th Street between 2nd and Bowery. Just a couple of shelves mid block. it is gone and missed like a lot of good things in the neighborhood.)
Gojira:
I think Est became the Landmark Forum which is full swing.
The Tuck shop on St Marks had a take-one-leave-one library, with the admonition "No Shit Books".
One of the books appears to be about CP/M. CP/M was the operating system that was the basis for DOS, and hasn't had a release since 1983.
Between that, the EST and fad diet titles tell me that none of these would have made the cut at the Tuck Shop.
I bet there are seem gems in there...
Picked up--
Piano Rags by Scott Joplin, LP.
Handbook on Vines
A Chronological History of Puerto Rico.
@ 9:13am
Also, Dempseys on 2nd Ave between 3rd & 4th, before the owner "renovated" it and made it a tourist kids' hangout and pseudo sports bar, used to be a great neighborhood pub with bookshelves and loads of books that locals would read, bring back or swap. Actually, now it's not even called Dempsey's anymore...same owner though.
Ira Progoff "At a Journal Workshop" is a good one. Dr. Progoff passed on but there are still journal workshops nationwide. Great if you like to write and keep a journal.
Whoever put these out should post a curb alert on the yahoo freecycle group, they would get scooped up.
@10:34
I remember that one. the last time I saw that there was scaffolding at the building.
At 9:42 AM, Gojira said:
The Book of Est - holy cow, does that movement even exist any more?
A few years ago, it did; I'm sure there's always going to be someone who's ripe for the message "You're the gift!"
somebody buy some plastic for the rain!
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