Thursday, September 24, 2015

Bicycle Bob's crazy 1960 interview about his bookstore on Stanley

   Robert "Bicycle Bob" Silverman talks to interviewer Henry Lowy about his then-new bookstore the Seven Steps on Stanley in 1960.
Q: What did you do before this?
Bob: Can you put I was a bum? No, eh? How do you define a bum? And what is the difference between a bum and a sportsman? A bum is somebody who is unemployed and poor and a sportsman is somebody who is unemployed but too rich to be a bum. I had a job which I hated. I had nothing but interference. My father thought I was insane. He said if I wanted to open a bookstore to first get experience by working in one.
Q: You had no experience at all in this type of enterprise?
Bob: No only imagination. At times I feel that experience can be a hindrance to new trends and ideas. I feel that a bookshop should be something beautiful where people don't feel rushed, a place that sets a mood of well-being. My friends thought I was nuts to put chairs here. I don't care if someone reads here for four hours. I don't ever want to become too commercialized.
Q: Why do you wear a beard?
Bob: Well it's less of a shave and it goes good with the store.
Q: How do your parents feel about it now bob?
Bob: Immensely pleased, yes, you can say they're immensely pleased. Of course, my father would never praise me to my face.
  **
The Seven Steps at 1430 Stanley later became the Rainbow Bar and Grill, part-owned by sociologist Taylor Buckner. Supposedly there was a police shooting there somewhere around 1970, before the switch but I still haven't tracked down the details of that. Bob is reportedly still alive and living in Val David north of Montreal after several decades in a co-op on Hutchison. He'd be about 81. 

2 comments:

  1. --Comment from Michael Fish who asked me to post it via proxy ----

    Robert Silverman is, was the most generous selfless environmental activist ever known to the City.
    he is the Father of wide scale bicycling as a life style in and around the province. And his example inspired many others to do their own thing to advance the quality of the environment wherever they lived, whatever it was, in the City and or the Province.
    Someone should hold a fine dinner for him and give him the keys to the city.
    I hereby nominate him for an Order of Canada and an Order of Quebec.
    Long life Robert, wherever you are.

    ReplyDelete

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