Final chapter for Spartacus in DTES
Spartacus is down, but not out for the count.
Spartacus Books, the little counter-
Now the mainstay is moving to Commercial Drive, pushed out as gentrification grips Hastings Street and the surrounding area.
In an age when bookstores are vanishing, Spartacus has a counter-
“We’re all volunteers,” said Alexander Daughtry, the longest-
“Maybe I’m in a rut,” chuckled the 69-
“Most people are about 20 years old—
While left-
“These are tools for social change,” says Daughtry. “Unlike a store that sells just the same seven popular novels, we carry hundreds of titles that people can’t find anywhere else.”
Old-
Regular visitor Miranda de Groot makes the trip from Burnaby because she finds what she’s looking for.
“That’s why I come here—
And she’s got what a good book store needs—
“I’m not going to change—
Long a fixture near Victory Square, the collective’s future was darkest in 2004, when a fire—
“Our contribution to the community is recognized by the people who supported us when we needed it most,” says Daughtry. “We didn’t have fire insurance, so we lost everything.”
Spartacus leaves behind a gentrifying block featuring the Union Gospel Mission Thrift Store, Mission Possible, and Tin Tin Printing, bound for a former neighbourhood grocery near the Croatian Cultural Centre that can accommodate new-
And an army of volunteers preparing to move a boatload of books across town—