PITTSBURGH â Some love nothing more than quietly browsing in a bookshop. Not me: I browse loudly. Especially in secondhand stores. If I find a comely edition of an old favorite or an intriguing title by an author I donât know, I look up for someone, usually the owner or clerk, to kibbitz with.
All too often, I fail. Used bookstores, in particular, seem to be staffed by those who disdain my lowbrow tastes or resent talking to customers.
Then thereâs Eric Ackland, owner of Amazing Books & Records in Pittsburghâs Squirrel Hill neighborhood. He seems to have read or listened to everything in his shop, from Isaac Asimov to Michael Connelly to that small-press biography of a dead Hasidic master. Heâll gladly neglect the endless task of computerizing his shelf-busting inventory to talk with you about his beloved 19th-century authors like George Eliot and Fyodor Dostoyevsky or his fine selection of Jewish theology. On his way to becoming an Orthodox Jew in his 30s, Ackland briefly took an interest in Christian apologetics, and one day last winter we talked G.K. Chesterton as the storeâs hi-fi piped early Pat Benatar.
âA bookstore clerk or owner is inevitably something of a therapist,â Ackland, 47, said more recently. âIâve worked dozens of retail and restaurant jobs, and this is the one that seems to invite the greatest degree of intimacy, probably because people think that the shop-person doesnât have anything to do but read and talk.â
Squirrel Hill is one of the oldest Jewish neighborhoods in the country, home to synagogues such as the Tree of Life, where 11 worshippers, from the three congregations sharing the building, were killed last fall by a gunman shouting anti-Semitic slurs. After the massacre, shops like Amazing Books functioned as sanctuaries.
It is the quintessential Squirrel Hill venture, being obviously commercial â books coming in by the shopping bag, going out one or two at a time â and spiritual. I donât mean Acklandâs black skullcap or the ritual fringes visible below his shirttails but rather the temples to freewheeling curiosity that he has built at this location and his other branch in downtown Pittsburgh.
A Philadelphia native who never finished high school, Ackland moved to Pittsburgh for the woman who eventually became his wife; they are raising her three children from her first marriage and the two theyâve had together. In 2013, when he was trying to build a freelance copy-writing business, he had gone downtown to the Department of Motor Vehicles, which was closed, and wound up in a store called Awesome Books, which was open. He began chatting up the owner.
âI mentioned how Iâd worked in a bookstore like this and at one point had been thinking about opening one,â Ackland said. âAnd he said, âWell, this oneâs for sale.â â But the owner wasnât selling the name, so after Ackland sank a small inheritance from his grandmother into acquiring the business, in 2013 Awesome Books became Amazing Books. The next year, he opened the Squirrel Hill location and changed the businessâs name to Amazing Books & Records.
Besides those two branches, which each have about 12,000 books on the floor â he sells thousands more online â Ackland has opened and closed two others, in Pittsburghâs Oakland neighborhood and on the South Side. Mistakes, heâs made a few, and it doesnât help his bottom line that he stays closed Saturdays, the Sabbath.
Browsing at Amazing can be pleasurably disorienting. Standard sections like biography and literature are alphabetically organized, but other shelves have a logic all their own. On one, a Calvin and Hobbes compendium sits next to William Burroughsâ âNaked Lunch.â In the vinyl racks, âThe Greatest of Nat King Coleâ is one flip away from Elvis Costello and The Attractionsâ âGoodbye Cruel World.â
Ackland raised himself on the Victorians, sci-fi, plot-stuffed beach reads like Pat Conroy and avant-gardists like Henry Miller. Musically, he dug The Ramones, Willie Nelson and Guns Nâ Roses. âI still have a real affection for, like, early â80s pop ballads, like Air Supply,â he said.
Listening to Ackland fret over his affection for Henry Miller, I worried that his ethical punctiliousness must be exhausting. âHe wrote about the struggle to become a writer, and that was what I wanted to be,â Ackland said. âYet he was a misogynist and an anti-Semite and a pornographer. I was never comfortable with that aspect of him, but I could take the good and leave the bad. Thatâs how I could rationalize selling him now, is that there is good to be extracted.â
In the end, Ackland wants to do right by his customers. Heâs their bookseller, not their rabbi or tutor. âI feel that far too many book- and record-store owners and employees are better-read-and-listened-than-thou and donât at all mind if you know it,â he said. âI often think of the Jack Black character in âHigh Fidelityâ as a prime, if extreme, example: âDo we look like the kind of store that sells âI Just Called to Say I Love Youâ? Go to the mall.â â
A bookstore, like literature and music, should enlarge us, not make us feel small, Ackland said. âEarly on in my grand tour of menial jobs, I realized that I had an incredible opportunity to make a moment of a strangerâs day better, and that was a priceless thing. A moral obligation, really.â
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.