Bob Lingle, Owner
Good Neighbor Bookstore, 124 Chautauqua Ave. Lakewood, NY 14750
@goodneighborbooks
What kind of reader were you as a child?
What was the first book that made a strong impression on you?
I really struggled with learning how to read. I actually had to go to summer school for reading after second grade. Somewhere along the way something clicked, and I began to devour books. In 5th grade my teacher would give me books to read and review to see if it would be something the class would enjoy. I loved Goosebumps books. Shiloh was the first book to make me cry. But Gary Paulsen's, The River, was a book that I had picked up randomly as a kid and fell in love with (and quickly realized was a sequel after reading it).
What do you love about being able to work around books every day?
I love being surrounded by stories. And connecting those stories with the right person.
A great thing about living in Lakewood is that the community I live in is quaint. The village where my bookstore is located has the feel of a Hallmark movie. The overall community is tight-knit and supportive. We also have the benefit of being a vacation destination. Our community has the Chautauqua Institution, National Comedy Center, Lucille Ball Museum, Robert H Jackson Center, Roger Tory Peterson Institute, among other attractions.
What makes you happy? What are you grateful for?
My kids make me happy (when they aren't driving me crazy). I'm grateful for my family and a supportive community. I also have a strange love for professional wrestling, it brings me great joy.
Tell us about some of your favorite books and writers of all time.
My reading tastes have evolved over time. Chuck Palahniuk and Kurt Vonnegut will always hold a special place in my heart for their absurd social commentary. Ray Robertson and Andre Dubus III are writers that I really got into during the pandemic. Their writing is raw and honest and surprisingly beautiful. Over the last couple of years, I have fallen into the world of "Women's Fiction". Authors like Catherine Newman, Alison Espach, Emily Austin, and Hannah Pittard have become must-read authors for me.
As you reflect on your year of reading, what books have you recently enjoyed? And what books are you looking forward to in 2025?
The Correspondent by Virginia Evans - April 29th (got me out of a months-long reading slump. great character development, all through the form of letters).
Something I Keep Upstairs by JD Barker - May 13th (I've come to learn that no one is ever safe in a JD Barker novel, Something I Keep Upstairs continued to prove that point).
If You Love It Let It Kill You by Hannah Pittard - July 15th (Hannah Pittard has become one of my favorite writers, IYLILIKY is about the power of being a character in someone else's story).
Interviewed by Mia Funk