Monday, October 22, 2007

Powell's

Truth be told, Portland is a pretty lame town. I don’t mean this in a bad way- I consider myself a pretty lame person. Portland’s lameness can be immediately demonstrated by asking any native Portlander what to do there. Eight out of ten times, the first thing out of their mouth will be “Have you been to Powell’s?”

Powell’s is a big book store. Actually, it’s a Portland chain, and there are a ton of them strewn all over town. I almost dare not mention that Powell’s originated in Chicago, lest some Portlander reads that fact and kills himself over the lie he’s been living. But THE Powell’s is on Burnside. Actually, the entrance is on Couch, which is stupidly pronounced Cooch. There’s nowhere to park near the store. They have a parking garage but it is always full.

I have no idea why anybody thinks Powell’s is a good tourist destination. Powell’s specializes in selling new and used easy-to-find still-in-print books. It is not like one of those used book stores on Telegraph in Berkeley, where you can spend hours happily stumbling across intriguing out-of-print titles you’d never heard of but wish you had time to read. Instead, you spend hours miserably stumbling over people trying to find the exit. Perhaps the fascinating lure of the store is that it was apparently designed by Daedalus, the architect most famous for creating the labyrinth that held the Minotaur in Greek mythology. Also, if you’re one of those people who likes going to carnivals but doesn’t ride the rides, Powell’s might be right up your alley.

In order to find a book, first you have to find a computer. In order to find a computer, you must randomly squeeze through narrow aisles past hundreds of people intentionally pretending to not notice they are in your way until you come across a line of people. Make sure it’s not the line for selling used books, the checkout counter or coffee shop. And not the long line: that is the line for the bathroom.

Before I continue, let me just pause to point out one fact about Powell’s. It contains 68,000 square feet of floor space and ONE BATHROOM. I am not kidding.

Okay, so you must stand in line for several minutes until a computer becomes available. Incidentally, computers are usually found near “information” booths, which are either empty or contain some cocky frat jock with a computer of his own in which he does the exact same thing you would do if you could just use the damn computer yourself, only slower and including superfluous questions about the book you are looking for. So just get to an empty computer, type in the book or subject you want. If you’re lucky, you won’t get a “Please Try Again” request or 255 listings to sift through but a correct title with a color and number under it. Write these down: you will not be able to remember them by the time you find what they correlate with in the store.

Every room is inexplicably assigned a color. I have no idea what these colors mean or how they relate to anything. I only know that to find a colored room, you must once again randomly squeeze through aisles, hoping to come across doorways and stairs, until you find the color you are looking for. Once you’re in the correct colored room, you must find the correct aisle number. Every aisle is numbered, but these numbers are not sequentially ordered or always easy to see. If you decide you want to purchase a book, then you’ll have to find the line to the checkout counter and be herded through it like bovine. Good luck!

An important word of caution: NEVER go into Powell’s with anybody you ever want to see again if you do not both have your cell phones on you. Never mind the fact that the person next to you is using their cell phone to loudly read every title to whoever’s on the other end. If you want to prevent spending the rest of your life in jail for what any fair court would deem “justifiable homicide,” leave all weapons at home.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

So native Portlanders, and not transplants or Portland itself, are lame and are lame at a rate of 80%. OK. Portland is consistently ranked very high on various measures of quality of life and the flow of Iowans to the area seems to indicate that there might be some truth to this. I also happen to think that you are not lame, even though you don't care whether I ever show back up from solo walks on the beach. I don't know many native Portlanders, so I wouldn't really know if they're lame or not - and at what rate of lamitude. I've only been here for a few months, but already have a heavy list of interesting things to do and see here that would not include Powell's (outside of entertaining visitors who actually want the tourist/shopping thing). I haven't fully explored Portland's independent book stores yet, but know that Powell's is the better (easy) choice over Wal-Mart (Bentonville), Borders (Ann Arbor), Barnes & Noble (NYC), or most any of the other big box stores. Outside of being able to buy used in order to reuse/recycle and buy cheap, I'm buying and supporting local. Listen: I usually ride my bike there to avoid the parking mess, wander the colorful store without care to check out books as part of the experience, and have a large bladder/great rentention - who needs bathrooms when you have a full parking garage (just ask Carl). I would gladly visit Powell's with you anytime, and (if you wish) I'll leave my large caliber handgun at home.

oudev oida said...

the fact that neither you or i can even name another used bookstore in Portland demonstrates that there is a fundamental problem in this town.

saying Powell's is better than wal-mart (and any bookstore found in a mall) is like saying chicken tastes better than shit.

i'm holding out hope that there is a good used book store in this town, and if i find it i'll let you know.

in fairness, i will say the library system here is very good.

Olive Bread said...

Portland is my favorite big city. I haven't lived there, but I have been there more times that I can count, and I don't remember ever seeing any "native portlanders". So I can only tell you from an Iowan perspective: we tell people here (in Iowa) about how great P-town is: the wine, the microbreweries, the coffee, the dogs, the bikes, oh and the sex scene! (Which I've only heard stories about)... I always seem to forget to mention Powell's. I've only been to the big one once, and it was on a Sunday, so we parked on the street right out front and there wasn't a huge crowd. My decision after about 45 minutes was that it would be cool if you had a list of specific books you were looking for, instead of just wandering around aimlessly going "wow. this place is big". From a national perspective, it's the next biggest online bookstore to amazon, so that is cool that it's that big and a portland thing. And the Powell's branch in the pdx airport is a nice place to be when you're killing time at the airport.
Just so you know, Smith Family bookstore in Eugene is probably more up your alley. If you had an alley to go up. I'm not going there. I've said too much.