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Unfiltered Story #320838

| Unfiltered | February 29, 2024

This is a couple of years ago. I had just, the week before, started working in a bookstore.

An author came in and asked me if we had his books so he could sign them (he had not let us know beforehand that he was coming in).

Me: which books have you written?

Him: You don´t recognise me? I´m in here all the time! I´ve signed a lot of books here!

Me: I just started last week, so no, I don´t recognise you.

Turned out he was a reasonably big author. And yes, I´m a big reader. But not of crime fiction. Luckily most authors who would come in would usually look for their books, then come to us and say something like “Hi. I´m (author). Do you have any of my books you´d like me to sign?

Him:

Everybody Poops, Apart From This Woman, Apparently

, , , , , , | Right | February 22, 2024

Sadly, our bookstore is closing forever. My little crew of amazing gals and I are sad to be having our “Everything Must Go” sale, but we’re trying to have fun with it. There are very few rules at this point, but the one rule that is stamped in giant red letters on every receipt is: “ALL SALES FINAL! ABSOLUTELY NO RETURNS.”

A woman stalks up to the counter about three days before our final day. You know that determined walk: slightly bent forward at the waist, stompy gait, lips pressed into a grim non-existent line. My gals fade into the background behind me like Homer Simpson fading into a hedge row.

From her oversized handbag, she slaps this children’s book onto the counter with a pretty impressively loud crack. She uses what I am pretty sure she thinks is a very imperious, important tone and loudly exclaims:

Customer: “I cannot believe you would sell me such an incredibly inappropriate book for children!”

Me: “I am sorry that you found the book inappropriate for the age group. May I ask what is wrong with this particular title?”

Customer: “Don’t you read these things before you sell them to children?”

Me: “No, actually, they are screened by the publishers and they then pass that information on to our company. I have not personally read every book in my store.”

Customer: “This book is for children, but it has the word ‘poop’ in it. Actually, it says ‘poop’ many times. This is not appropriate for my five-year-old granddaughter. You need to be careful what you sell to children!”

Me: “I do apologize that you are unhappy with the word ‘poop’, but generally, I do not sell books to children. I sell books to parents who pre-screen what they wish their children to see or not see.”

Customer: “Do not get snippy with me, young lady! You know perfectly well that this book is inappropriate.”

I am forty-three.

Me: “I am sorry, but I cannot help you. If you wish to return the book, I literally cannot help you. Our registers are programmed by the corporate office, and I no longer even have a return function.”

I indicate the bright red hand-stamped “all sales final” notice on her receipt.

I am making no joke of her choice in grandchild raising. If she does not want the word “poop” used, so be it. Who am I to judge? I AM wondering what exactly she does call a number two in her household.

Customer: “I want to talk to the manager.”

Me: “I am the manager.”

Customer: “Then I want the number to your corporate office!”

I hand her my business card with the corporate number on the front. She pulls out her phone, still standing in my checkout line, and calls the corporate office.

Me: “Ma’am, could you please step to the side so I can wait on the people behind you while you talk on the phone?”

She whips up an imperious, manicured finger and shakes it at me while turning her head away, listening to her phone. Initially, the people behind her are angry, but now we’re staring at her in morbid curiosity. She snaps her phone closed and glares at me.

Customer: “You have to take the book back; they said so.”

Me: “Of course, they did. Ma’am, it is impossible for me to process any kind of return through our registers, and they would know that. I was not lying about not being able to take back the book through the register. However—” *pulls the change out of my pocket and hands her $1.26* “—you can consider this a victory for the poop-free world. Please leave my store.”

Customer: *Shakes my business card at me* “I have your information! I am going to call them back and tell them that I had to force you to help me. And that you are inappropriate, and…”

Honestly, I tune her out completely. I look at her, gesture broadly to my ravaged dream job of a store, and say:

Me: “Be my guest; they don’t care.”

Every customer who had waited through that exchange over a “dollar book that said ‘poop'” laughed with me for some time after, while I helped them with their newfound treasures.

I still have the book.

The Eleventh Commandment Is “Thou Shalt Use The Bathroom”

, , , , , | Right | January 25, 2024

As one of the largest bookstores around, our store frequently had authors visiting on book tours. 

My wife’s favorite was Charlton Heston, who was touring in support of his autobiography, “In The Arena”. To say the line to get a signed copy was long would be an understatement; it went around the store and all the way to the doors. 

My wife’s job that day was to stand next to him and hand him a fresh book to sign for each person in line. Heston was a real gentleman and always took the time to do a little chit-chat with each person, so the line didn’t move quickly.

At one point, my wife leaned over to him and said, quoting “The Agony and the Ecstasy”, “When will you make an end?”

Heston didn’t blink. Without looking up, he said, “When I am finished!” Perfect and on-target response, right out of the movie.

But then, a few minutes later, he quietly informed my wife that he needed the bathroom. She had him stand up, and she pointed; it was across the store and he’d have to cut through over a hundred people to get there. He sighed quietly and sat back down and kept signing for an hour and a half. Never uttered a word of distress or complaint.

Finally, when every single person had gotten their signed copy, he stood up again and quietly but very firmly said:

Charlton: “I need the bathroom.” 

I was assigned the job of clearing the way and leading him directly there. He made good time and headed inside. I stayed outside — give the man some space, and all that. But seconds later, the door opened again and two teenagers came out, looking dumbfounded. 

Teenager #1: “That was Moses!”

Teenager #2: “What’s Moses doing in a Borders?”

Unfiltered Story #319081

, , | Unfiltered | January 25, 2024

My Lhasa Apso Service Dog doesn’t look the part. She is trained for hearing & PTSD. Carried and walking depending on the situation. We were going into a bookstore and the owner shut and locked the door IN OUR FACE. She said only service dogs allowed. I told her she WAS a SD and showed her harness. Then she said her store was at capacity. (Covid) I went back to my car and watched her allow a group of 6 in. When I posted a comment on Facebook she gave me excuses from her son was allergic to dogs to her son was disabled and she would NEVER have turned away a disabled veteran with a service dog…had she known.

They Have To Learn Sometime

, , , | Right | January 18, 2024

I worked at a big box bookstore and there was this girl who would run in the store all the time a minute before closing. She would ALWAYS cause us to wait at least fifteen minutes past closing to wait on her.

The last time I saw her do this I pretended not to know she was in the store, proceeded with the usual announcements and closed on time for once.

She runs up to the counter five minutes after closing:

Me: “Sorry, ma’am. We closed five minutes ago.”

Customer: *Suddenly begging and crying.* “Please! It’s just five minutes!”

I might have felt bad but she had kept us late so many times. Thankfully she must have gotten the hint, as she stopped showing up last minute!