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The Beguiling

Coordinates: 43°39′52″N 79°24′43″W / 43.664311°N 79.412038°W / 43.664311; -79.412038
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43°39′52″N 79°24′43″W / 43.664311°N 79.412038°W / 43.664311; -79.412038

The Beguiling
Company typePrivate
IndustryRetail
Founded1987
Founder
  • Steve Solomos
  • Sean Scoffield
Headquarters,
Area served
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
ProductsComics
Owner
  • Peter Birkemoe
  • Shane Chung
Subsidiaries
  • Little Island Comics
  • Page & Panel: The TCAF Shop
Website

The Beguiling is a comic shop in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It specializes in underground and alternative comics, classic comic strip reprints, and foreign comics. It has built an international reputation for focusing on and promoting non-superhero comics in the superhero-dominated North American comic book market.

The store has made effort to promote comics culture in Toronto by organizing the annual Toronto Comic Arts Festival (TCAF) in coöperation with the Toronto Public Library, which also hosts Page & Panel, a nonprofit shop to support TCAF. The Beguiling also runs a sister store, Little Island Comics, the first North American comic shop aimed exclusively at children.

History

Joe Matt visits The Beguiling with Seth and Chester Brown (from Matt's Peepshow #3, Drawn & Quarterly, 1992).

Founded in 1987 by Steve Solomos and Sean Scoffield on Harbord Street near the University of Toronto in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, The Beguiling quickly built a reputation for the diversity of its stock, focused on art-oriented, avant-garde, underground and alternative comics—"anything that is even peripherally comic book-oriented", according to current owner Peter Birkemoe. In the earliest days, much of the store's income was made through mail order, as the material it dealt in was not mainstream. It also built a reputation for stocking the works of cartoonists such as Chester Brown and Julie Doucet, whose comics most stores would not handle due to the controversial nature of their contents.[1] Well-known Toronto-based cartoonists such as the trio of Brown, Seth and Joe Matt became associated with the store,[2] and sometimes depicted it in their comics. Others such as Jay Stephens made it their shop of choice.[1]

In 1998, Solomos and Scoffield decided to devote their time to creating art (and later film production), and ownership was passed to Peter Birkemoe and Shane Chung,[1] who expanded operations.[3] In 1992[4] it relocated to a two-floor Victorian building in Mirvish Village in Toronto, and has since branched out into selling to libraries,[3] organizing the Toronto Comic Arts Festival,[5] and running two more locations: Little Island Comics, which caters to children;[6] and the nonprofit Page & Panel in the Toronto Public Library. By 2017, 50% of its sales were to libraries across Canada.[7]

Plans to redevelop Mirvish Village as condominiums pushed The Beguiling to find a new location.[7] It moved 3 January 2017[8] to a 900-square-foot (84 m2) location at 319 College Street, near the University of Toronto.[7] The new location has since grown to about double the floor space of the previous one.[8]

Description and reputation

The Beguiling is "a store with an agenda",[2] according to Birkemoe, and has been derided for some for its perceived elitism, which stems in part from its sponsoring of Crash, a journal of comics criticism that mainly condemned bad comics.[1] Others, such as comics historian Charles Hatfield, have praised the store for its sense of history, saying, "You always leave the shop with a larger sense of what comics are about."[1] The Beguiling is patronized by an international audience.[1] The store has made the top five retailer list in The Comics Journal,[9] and among the awards it has received, it shared the inaugural Eisner Spirit of Retailing Award in 1993,[10] and it won the Joe Shuster Awards' Harry Kremer Retailer Award in 2010.[11]

Toronto Comic Arts Festival

In 2003, Peter Birkemoe and Chris Butcher of The Beguiling first organized the Toronto Comic Arts Festival (TCAF).[5] Unusual in the world of comics conventions,[12] TCAF is a free-admission event. It focuses on alternative and independent comics, but includes other creative arts besides comics.[5] Rather than being like a traditional comics convention, it is patterned after European festivals such as Angoulême, and the American Small Press Expo.

Little Island Comics

Little Island Comics is a spin-off of the Beguiling aimed at children.

As most North American comic shops focus on teenage and adult customers, and The Beguiling itself mainly on adults, the owners wanted to fill a void by opening the first children's comic shop in North America,[6] and possibly the world.[13] Little Island Comics opened 6 September 2011[14] at 742 Bathurst Street[15] in the Annex, close to The Beguiling. The shop was designed with children in mind, with bright colours and shelves at child-height.[3]

When Mirvish Village closed in 2017, so did Little Island; several of the staff moved to Page & Panel.[7] Little Island Comics re-opened at 323 College Street in February 2018, next to The Beguiling's new location there.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Heer, Jeet (17 May 2002). "Beguiled by the Beguiling". National Post. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
  2. ^ a b Bell, John. Invaders from the North: How Canada Conquered the Comic Book Universe, page 148. Dundurn Press, 2006. ISBN 978-1-55002-659-7
  3. ^ a b c Demers, Matt (7 September 2011). "Beguiling the Children". Torontoist. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  4. ^ Riddell, Chris (12 December 2012). "2012 Hero: The Beguiling". Torontoist. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  5. ^ a b c Braga, Matthew (9 May 2011). "Toronto Comics Fest, Ruining Mother's Day Yet Again". Torontoist. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  6. ^ a b "Little Island Comics: North America's first graphic novel store for kids!". School Library Journal. 20 October 2011. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
  7. ^ a b c d Nawotka, Ed (12 May 2017). "Toronto's Beguiling Comics Store Relocates". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
  8. ^ a b c The Comics Journal editors (6 June 2018). "Retail Therapy: The Beguiling". The Comics Journal. Archived from the original on 6 June 2018. Retrieved 17 July 2018. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  9. ^ Brown, Jeffrey A. Black Superheroes, Milestone Comics, and Their Fans, pages 80–81. University Press of Mississippi, 2001. ISBN 978-1-57806-282-9
  10. ^ "Will Eisner Spirit of Comics Retailer Award". Eisner Awards. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  11. ^ "Harry Kremer Retailer Award". Joe Shuster Awards. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  12. ^ "2010 Hero: The Toronto Comic Arts Festival". Torontoist. 23 December 2010. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
  13. ^ Moon, Brad (26 September 2011). "Toronto Comic Book Shop Claims to Be World's First for Kids". Wired. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
  14. ^ Johnston, Rich (5 September 2011). "The Beguiling To Open A Comic Shop, You Know, For Kids". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  15. ^ Irish, Paul (23 September 2011). "New shop offers comic relief for the under 12 set". Toronto Star. Archived from the original on 28 July 2012. Retrieved 2 February 2012.