
THERE'S NOTHING MORE DELIGHTFUL about parenthood than cuddling with your child and sharing a book. Over the years, I've spent many hours sprawled on the carpet at Adventures for Kids in Ventura, reading books, playing with puppets and leaving with a purchase or two tucked under my arm.
So my heart really sank when I learned our beloved local children's bookstore would be closing by the end of July. I knew they were struggling a bit. But I didn't really know just how much until I spoke to store owner Barbara O'Grady. She's devastated.
"Books aren't a lucrative business," she explained. "I'm just barely surviving. It's just all over the book industry. It's a bad business to be in right now."
Adventures for Kids has been a local literary fixture since 1979. It was a labor of love for the store's previous owner, Jody Shapiro. She sold the enterprise to O'Grady two years ago who at first had high hopes for the business. "I told Jody the other day it wasn't part of the dream to close the store," O'Grady said. But after months of just barely squeaking by, she knew she had no other choice.
IT WAS NO ORDINARY bookstore. Over the years, the biggest luminaries in children's publishing passed through those doors. "Harry Potter" author J.K. Rowling's visit brought huge crowds. My children met Daniel Handler, otherwise known as Lemony Snicket, author of "A Series of Unfortunate Events." Gifted illustrator Jan Brett signed books for us as well as humorist Dav Pilkey and "Princess Diaries" author Meg Cabot. And the store held the best midnight Harry Potter parties around.
Adventures for Kids was also stellar about giving back to the community, participating in numerous fundraisers for the local schools.
Tell me, what has Amazon.com done for you lately?
O'Grady's not shy about blaming that particular online book business for the death of local bookstores. "But I know times are changing and people choose to shop differently for a number of reasons," she said with a sigh.
But I have always seen great value in a business where a salesperson goes out of her way to pick out just the right book for my child, which always happened when I visited Adventures for Kids. You can't get that online. This store was special.
"If people want to have unique communities, people have to support the uniqueness of it," O'Grady said.
Ironically, since Adventures for Kids announced its "going out of business" sale, the shop has been busy again. "There were days when nobody came in," O'Grady told me. "I think to myself, 'Where were all you people before?' "
Shop local. It's my mantra. Don't let another gem slip away.








