Takoma Voice

Silver Spring Voice

Print Archives

 

News

Columns & blogs

Voice Box

Photos

 

Calendar

Business Directory

Classifieds

Voiceshop

 

Advertise

About the Voice

Contact the Voice

E-mail Lists

 


Special Sections

Arts & Entertainment

Best of the Best

Health & Fitness

Home & Garden

Hometown Resources

Real Estate

Restaurant reviews

Summer Camp Guide

 


Columns & blogs

Biz Buzz

Citizen Bill

Easy Gardener

The Eclectic Ear

Editor's blog

Et al.

Fashionista

Gardening Coach

Going Green

Granola Park

Green Money

Heart of Parenting

Inside Blair

Kids' Voice

Parents' Voice

Photos

Press Play

Profiles

Voice Box

Queries for Carrie

Question of the Month

School Scene

Silver Spring: Then & Again

Sin of the Month

Silverblog

Sligo Naturalist

Somewhere in Silver Spring

Somewhere in Takoma

Sportscene

Takomablog

Talk of Takoma

Takoma Archives

Takoma Pork

V-Tube

Vox Poetica

Voz Latina

World on a Plate

World View

 


Advertise
E-mail Lists
About us

Contact the Voice

The independent voice of Takoma Park and Silver Spring, Maryland, since 1987

Features

Old Takoma Profile: Takoma Books

In downtown Takoma Park, tucked away in the basement behind the row of shops on Carroll Avenue, resides the home of Takoma Books, which stands alone as the city's only used book store.

Takoma Books, which was first known as the Takoma Book Exchange, was created by its current owner Mark Elliott in 1999. The store is stocked with shelves of books, music, videos, and a few DVDs. Despite its hidden entrance, the store relies on its location for most of its business.

"Having the downtown is nice," said Elliott, who noted that more than 75 percent of his customers are Takoma Park residents. "If we didn't have a downtown I wouldn't exist, certainly not in a strip mall."

Mark Elliott and Tika preside over a treasure trove of used books, music and videos at Takoma Books.

Elliott, who was in the Navy for 20 years before moving to Takoma Park, started the business with a love for books and a desire to be his own boss. He currently employs three part time workers and has started selling books over the internet. Other than 2003, when the United States went to war with Iraq, the store has been doing steady business.

"I'm not sure how they make it," said Denise Whitman of New Carrollton. "When you're often the only customer [at used book stores], you sort of wonder." Whitman, who was exploring Takoma Books for the first time, said she believes there is a mystique to Takoma Park that allows for many of its smaller stores to flourish.

"Takoma Park is the kind of place where people still sit out on their porches on warm days," Elliott said with a smile. "There aren't very many places like that anymore."

Even though he is the only employee on most days, Elliott does not work alone. He is accompanied by Tika, a chihuahua who likes to sleep belly up on a chair by the register, and Little Beard, a cat who mysteriously gets lost in the piles of books.

Elliott said he has no plans for expansion, but is worried that increased development in the area could hurt his business. With many apartments converting to condominiums, the business district could face similar changes in the future. Elliott said that if his store was affected, he would have to rely more heavily on his internet sales.

For now, however, his only concern is where to put all the books he takes in. The limited space of the store has forced Elliott to turn the bathroom into its own section. The stacks next to the toilet are labeled "Humor, Essays, and Odds and Ends."

"It's a good place for things that don't go anywhere else," Elliott said.

HOME CLASSIFIEDS RESOURCES BLOGS CALENDAR ADVERTISE CONTACT US
Takoma Voice / Silver Spring Voice
P.O. Box 11262 • Takoma Park, MD 20913
301-891-6744

Copyright © 2008, Takoma Publishing, Inc.