Yu & Me Books is an independent bookstore in Chinatown, Manhattan. The only bookstore in New York City owned by an Asian American woman, the bookstore sells books relevant to the Asian American diaspora and has hosted events with authors like Ocean Vuong, Sayaka Murata, and Hua Hsu. In 2023, the bookstore was closed following a residential unit fire and, after a community fundraising and rebuilding effort, reopened for business seven months later at its original Mulberry Street location.
Lucy Yu, an avid reader while growing up in Los Angeles, had a dream to someday run a coffee shop and bookstore. With a career in chemical engineering and supply chain management, Yu was working at a food startup in New York City during the COVID-19 pandemic when she began envisioning and planning out her idea for a bookstore. [1]
Despite reported decline in American bookselling due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Yu decided to open a bookstore in Manhattan's Chinatown. [2] With help from a GoFundMe which raised around $16,000, as well as tens of thousands of dollars from her own savings, Yu opened Yu & Me Books in December of 2021, making it the first and only bookstore in New York City owned by an Asian American woman in the city. [3] [4] [5] With its launch coinciding with a spike in hate crimes toward Asian Americans, Yu intended the bookstore to be not merely an inventory of books relevant to the community but also a safe space for its members. [6] [7] In addition to selling books, Yu hosted events with authors, open mics, and even plant-potting workshops. [8]
On the Fourth of July in 2023, a fire broke out in a residential unit above the bookstore, killing a tenant named Frank Yee and causing serious damage to the entire building that prompted the bookstore's closure. [9] [10] Over a thousand books were permanently damaged.
Immediately, Yu started a GoFundMe after forecasting that $60,000 would be needed to replace inventory and $80,000 would be needed to rebuild the bookstore. Within a day, Yu raised over $230,000 from thousands of supporters, including Simu Liu and Celeste Ng, and the fundraiser would raise a total of $369,555 by its end. [10]
Funds were also raised through events, such as a reading with Hua Hsu at the New Design High School, as well as solidarity efforts by fellow booksellers like Archestratus Books, Astoria Bookshop, Books Are Magic, and Book Club Bar. At an auction meant to raise funds for the bookstore, prizes like a dinner with actor Randall Park were raffled. [11] While tending to its reconstruction with landlords and contractors, Yu sold books and ran events out of several temporary pop-up shops and later Market Line Food Hall. [12] Welcome to Chinatown, a local nonprofit, offered storage space to hold Yu's remaining inventory in the meantime, while Golden Diner, a nearby restaurant, helped Yu with insurance and sketching out a timeline. [8]
Yu predicted that renovations and a subsequent reopening would take a year, but the bookstore instead opened up after seven months on January 28, 2024. [13] Many authors, booksellers, and members of the community came out to celebrate, including Min Jin Lee. [4] [14] In addition to having rebuilt the original storefront, Yu had also remodeled its basement to shelve more inventory and provide seating for customers. [8]
Past events at Yu & Me Books have included Sally Wen Mao, Neema Avashia, Nini Nguyen, Anton Hur, Susan Bernofsky, Sam Bett, Ocean Vuong, Marie Myung-Ok Lee, and Sayaka Murata. [15] [16] [9] [17] [18] [2] The bookstore also hosted a Lunar New Year pop-up with the Metropolitan Museum of Art to support Soar over Hate, a nonprofit. [19]
For the release of The City and Its Uncertain Walls by Haruki Murakami, the bookstore will be one of eight bookstores across the United States to hold a Murakami Midnight Party on November 18, 2024. [20]
Manhattan's Chinatown is a neighborhood in Lower Manhattan, New York City, bordering the Lower East Side to its east, Little Italy to its north, Civic Center to its south, and Tribeca to its west. With an estimated population of 90,000 to 100,000 people, Chinatown is home to the highest concentration of Chinese people in the Western Hemisphere. Manhattan's Chinatown is also one of the oldest Chinese ethnic enclaves. The Manhattan Chinatown is one of nine Chinatown neighborhoods in New York City, as well as one of twelve in the New York metropolitan area, which contains the largest ethnic Chinese population outside of Asia, comprising an estimated 893,697 uniracial individuals as of 2017.
The American Booksellers Association (ABA) is a non-profit trade association founded in 1900 that promotes independent bookstores in the United States. ABA's core members are key participants in their communities' local economy and culture, and to assist them ABA creates relevant programs; provides education, information, business products, and services; and engages in public policy and industry advocacy. The Association actively supports and defends free speech and the First Amendment rights of all Americans, without contradiction of equity and inclusion, through the American Booksellers for Free Expression. A volunteer board of 13 booksellers governs the Association. Previously headquartered in White Plains, New York, ABA became a fully remote organization in 2024.
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An independent bookstore is a retail bookstore which is independently owned. Usually, independent stores consist of only a single actual store. They may be structured as sole proprietorships, closely held corporations or partnerships, cooperatives, or nonprofits. Independent stores can be contrasted with chain bookstores, which have many locations and are owned by corporations which often have divisions in other lines besides bookselling. Specialty stores such as comic book shops tend to be independent.
Mott Street is a narrow but busy thoroughfare that runs in a north–south direction in the New York City borough of Manhattan. It is regarded as Chinatown's unofficial "Main Street". Mott Street runs from Bleecker Street in the north to Chatham Square in the south. It is a one-way street with southbound-running vehicular traffic only.
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The first Brooklyn Chinatown, was originally established in the Sunset Park area of the New York City borough of Brooklyn. It is one of the largest and fastest growing ethnic Chinese enclaves outside of Asia, as well as within New York City itself. Because this Chinatown is rapidly evolving into an enclave predominantly of Fuzhou immigrants from Fujian Province in China, it is now increasingly common to refer to it as the Little Fuzhou or Fuzhou Town of the Western Hemisphere; as well as the largest Fuzhou enclave of New York City.
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There are multiple Chinatowns in the borough of Queens in New York City. The original Queens Chinatown emerged in Flushing, initially as a satellite of the original Manhattan Chinatown, before evolving its own identity, surpassing in scale the original Manhattan Chinatown, and subsequently, in turn, spawning its own satellite Chinatowns in Elmhurst, Corona, and eastern Queens. As of 2023, illegal Chinese immigration to New York has accelerated, and its Flushing neighborhood has become the present-day global epicenter receiving Chinese immigration as well as the international control center directing such migration. As of 2024, a significant new wave of Chinese Muslims is fleeing religious persecution in northwestern China’s Xinjiang Province and seeking religious freedom in New York, and concentrating in Queens.
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