Threatened with eviction, a Brooklyn comic shop raised almost $90K to stay open.

Date:

Share post:


October 9, 2024, 1:14pm

Image from Desert Island’s fundraiser.

Here’s some good news to brighten your Wednesday: after being threatened with eviction, beloved indie comic shop Desert Island raised nearly $90,000 in three days to keep the shop in business.

The outpouring of support from Desert Island’s community of shoppers, fans, and artists is a testament to how essential the shop has become. The 16-year-old store and its owner Gabe Fowler are an oasis in New York for comics, art, events, and weird, beautiful window displays.

Recently the Brooklyn store’s landlord alerted Gabe that the liquor store down the street wanted to buy out Desert Island’s lease, offering to pay more in rent. The landlord gave the store a deadline to match that higher rent, or vacate.

But in just a few days, Desert Island was able to raise more than enough money to keep the shop open. The funds will go towards a renewed lease, or moving and building out the shop in a new location — I would also feel a bit shaky about sticking with this landlord.

And as a fun wrinkle, Gabe added on the GoFundMe page that “with money in excess of our goal, we’ll edit and publish a free comics anthology in which all the artists get paid.” That’s community, baby!

It’s a happy ending, and we wish Desert Island many more years of business. And with rents going up everywhere, there’s never been a better time to visit your local comic shop: Desert Island in Brooklyn, The Million Year Picnic in Cambridge, Floating World in Portland, The Beguiling in Toronto, Atomic Books in Baltimore, or Secret Headquarters in LA. Support your local shops!





Source link

Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lamber is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes about arts, entertainment, lifestyle, and home news. Nicole has been a journalist for years and loves to write about what's going on in the world.

Recent posts

Related articles

Mary Bennet is getting her own show.

October 9, 2024, 11:53am The bookish sister, under-regarded in every film adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, is finally...

Lit Hub Daily: October 9, 2024

The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day ...

Terry J. Benton-Walker and Sarah Henning on Writing Scary Stories for Kids

Tor Books, in partnership with Literary Hub, presents Voyage Into Genre! Every other Wednesday, join host Drew...

The Invisible Women, Immigrants, and Poor Americans of The Great Depression

While I was researching my book on the Great Depression, the stories of hundreds of extraordinary people...

The Real Tomb Raiders: How Freeports Enabled International Art Theft

On a steamy day in August 1995, a retired Italian customs cop named Pasquale Camera was driving...

Five Books That Showcase the Fascinating Landscape of European Folklore

It has been nearly a decade since I first stumbled across a group of Druids performing their...

What the Science of Memory Can (and Can’t) Reveal about Truth in Memoir

On a cold, clear evening in February 2002, on the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation where my mother...

Secrets of Los Alamos: How Family Stories Can Help Inform Historical Fiction

“No right turns and no photographs for the next three miles.” The guardsman at the Omega Bridge...