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![]() Click for words events The Good Fight Women & Children First helps keep feminism alive
Handwritten recommendations are taped to shelves and stuffed between
pages, Dixie Chicks' newest release plays in the background and neon
hot-pink signs hang throughout the store, "lesbian, gay, bi,
transgender, queer books this-a-way," pointing customers to a section
that takes up nearly half the space. Opening in 1979, in Lincoln Park on
West Armitage Avenue, Women and Children First had maybe a shelf of
lesbian literature, says Linda Bubon, co-owner of the store. Business
grew every year for the first fourteen years, allowing them to expand
and move twice since 1990, until it reached its present location in
Andersonville. "For Ann [Christophersen, the other owner] and I,
deciding to be owners was seen as kind of politically incorrect at the
time. We really had to prove ourselves." Battling for years with the
major bookstore chains, Women and Children First has been holding its
own. Bubon recalls one struggle involving the American Book Association
in which Women and Children First received $10,000, which "was used to
buy our beautiful awnings," says Bubon, looking out the front window.
"We've been fighting the fight against chains decimating independents
locally and nationally." Taking into account the free programs provided
such as book clubs, author readings, discussions and story time for
thirty-to-forty toddlers a week, Bubon says the store does essentially
what a women's center might do. Which led to the start of their newest
not-for-profit project, entitled The Women's Voices Fund, which was
established to help with feminist programming at the store while
providing a unique focus on women's lives, ideas and work. The store
also prides itself on its children's section and business in children's
books. Bubon notes, all people buy books for their children...even
conservatives. An application to be a part of this staff may include an
author ID list (and you better know who Gloria Steinem is) and the
question "do you consider yourself a feminist?" And on every
application, the answer is yes. And you thought feminism was dead. "Oh,
they say that every ten years or so," Bubon laughs. "The women's
movement has never gotten smaller, it has done nothing but grow." Women & Children First, 5233 North Clark, (773)769-9299
Also by Leah Westfall Braving the Body
Calling All Kennedys
Roller Me Away
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