CHELSEA, Mich. (AP) — Residents of all ages in a small Michigan community helped a local bookshop move each if its 9,100 books — one by one — to a new storefront about a block away.
A “book brigade” of around 300 people stood in two lines on the sidewalk in downtown Chelsea on Sunday, passing each title from Serendipity Books’ former location directly to the correct shelves and alphabetized in the new building, down the block and around the corner on Main Street.
“It was a practical way to move the books, but it also was a way for everybody to have a part,” Michelle Tuplin, the store’s owner, said. “As people passed the books along, they said ‘I have not read this’ and ‘that’s a good one.’”
Momentum had been building since Tuplin announced the move in January.
“It became so buzzy in town. So many people wanted to help,” she said Tuesday.
Tuplin said the endeavor took just under two hours — much shorter than hiring a moving company to box and unbox them. She hopes to have the new location open within the next two weeks.
The bookstore has been in Chelsea, about 60 miles (95 kilometers) west of Detroit, since 1997. Tuplin has been owner since 2017 and has three part-time employees.
“It’s a small town and people just really look out for each other,” said Kaci Friss, 32, who grew up in Chelsea and has worked at the bookstore a little over a year. “Anywhere you go, you are going to run into someone you know or who knows you, and is going to ask you about your day.”
About 5,300 people call Chelsea home.
Friss said Sunday’s book brigade reminded her of “how special this community is.”
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