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Queer literature takes centre stage at new East Vancouver bookstore

If you are looking for a read during Vancouver Pride Week, Nena Rawdah, owner of Cross and Crows Books on Commercial Drive, has some recommendations to get you started.

'It's literally the first section you see when you walk in my door,' says Cross and Crows Books owner

A middle aged woman sits in a red armchair with book shelves behind her. She wears green pants and a grey short-sleeved shirt. Her hair is shoulder-length and a mix of grey and black and she wears black glasses.
Nena Rawdah, owner of Cross and Crows Books is pictured in her new shop on Commercial Drive in Vancouver, B.C. on Aug. 2, 2023. Rawdah's store features many works by queer writers and will host an evening with a longtime queer activist this weekend to mark Pride Week in the city. (Ethan Cairns/CBC)

Nena Rawdah has started a new chapter in her life.

After owning a bookstore south of the borderfor a decade, Rawdah has relocated to Vancouverand opened up shop on Commercial Drive. Called Cross and Crows Books, it's an indie bookstore that sells various genres with a special focus on queer literature.

With Pride Week celebrations currentlytaking place in the city, Rawdah'sshop is brimming with books that celebrate queer excellence.

She will also be hosting her first in-store event on Saturday evening when queer activist Martha Shelley will read from her memoirWe Set the Night on Fire: Igniting the Gay Revolution.

"I'm queer, my entire family is queer, which is amazing to me having come from a childhood in Texas," said Rawdah.

"Sobeing able toprominently feature queer books and queer writers and queer subject matter,it's literally the first section you see when you walk in my door...and I'm really proud of that."

Children's books are shown on a shelf with the titles 'I Am A Rainbow' and 'Pride Puppy'.
Owner Nena Rawdah is pictured going through childrens books in her bookstore Cross and Crows Books in Vancouver, B.C. on August 2, 2023. (Ethan Cairns/CBC)

After growing up in Texas in the 70s and 80s where Rawdah says gay was usually a term thrown around as an insult, she relocated to the Pacific Northwest and opened a book store in Portland. Once there, shefound acceptance, friends and chosen family in the literary community.

She said she also found support after her move to Vancouver inopening a similar store in the city, onewhere people who loved to read could come and hang out in an inclusive space.

"When it sounded like it might be possible for me to have a bookstore again in my new home, people started asking me, well, how can I get you money? How can I help you with this? Have you opened a Go Fund me yet?," said Rawdah.

"With that encouragement, I did and my former community of readers and writers showed up with over $20,000."

The exterior of the store is pictured. It is painted white with large windows trimmed in black paint. A man is passing by the windows and is blurred in the image with the store front in sharp focus.
Cross and Crows Books is located at 2836 Commercial Drive in East Vancouver. (Ethan Cairns/CBC)

Rawdah hopes the seed money will help grow Cross and Crows into another community gathering spot.

"I think a lot of us during the pandemic really noticed the absence of those spaces in our lives and started thinking about where we find them and how important they are," she said.

The pandemic also put apauseon Pride Week events, but the parade returned in 2022 and this year, organizers of the Vancouver Pride Parade and Festival, which began in 1978, have expanded programming to include more entertainment, music and vendors.

Don Wilson is the owner of Vancouver'sLittle Sister's Book & Art Emporium, which opened on Davie Street in 1983 to serve the LGBTQ community.It became know across Canada fora years-long court battle that ended in a landmark decision against the Canada Border Services Agency over rights and freedoms.

Wilson said while the queer literature market in Vancouvermay still be small, it's "good for the whole city" to have bookstores like Cross and Crows.

"With all the younger ... people coming out ... the more [information] that's out there, the easier it is for them," he said.

"Even regular bookstores are getting on to the game plan of having queer sections in their stores. Some of them are just more reluctant to do it."

An employee sorts books at Cross and Crows Books. Image shows the hands of someone wearing thick silver rings stacking books. On the left inner forearm is a tattoo of an exclamation mark.
A Cross and Crows employee sorts books at the shop. (Ethan Cairns/CBC)

Book picks for Pride

And if you are looking to celebrate Pride curled up on the couch or a beach blanket with a book, Rawdah has a few recommendations.

Her picksincludeHijab Butch Blues by Lamya H, a coming-of-age memoir about a Muslim immigrant teen andBetter Living Through Birding: Notes from a Black Man in the Natural World by Christian Cooper.

Cooper made headlines in 2020 when the avid birder and queer author stood up for himself after a white woman accosted him in New York's Central Park because he asked her to leash her dog.

For people with children, Rawdah suggests It's About You Too, by Tracy Whitmore which is an informational read for parents of queer kids.

She also recommendsPride Puppy by Robin Stevenson, which is a rhyming alphabet book about people at a Pride Parade coming together to find a lost dog.

With files from The Early Edition