Why Start a "Maker Bookstore" in Mukonosho?
HIRATADAIシェア
Hello, I'm Dai Hirata, owner of "DIY BOOKS," the bookstore where you can create. DIY BOOKS opened on October 27, 2023, in Mukonoso, Amagasaki City, Hyogo Prefecture.
Mukonoso is about 10 minutes by Hankyu train from Umeda, one stop before Nishinomiya-Kitaguchi Station. Although only local trains stop here, it's a vibrant town with one of the highest numbers of passengers on the Hankyu Kobe Line.
Mukomotomachi is about a 20-minute walk from the station, but there have long been housing complexes nearby, and a shopping street continues through the area. There are good independent shops and public baths.
Why did I decide to open a bookstore in Mukonoso, specifically Mukomotomachi? And why "DIY BOOKS," a bookstore where you can create? I've written most of the story in the zine "Living in Mukonoso," which I encourage you to read, but I'd like to tell you again here.
Why I'm doing this
Tired of remote work and digital life
I, Dai Hirata, have been an independent web editor and writer for about five years, and my company has been incorporated for about three years. I've primarily worked with companies on content marketing, SEO (search engine optimization), and interviews.
However, since becoming independent, and even before the pandemic, I've been working remotely. I began to feel exhausted by constantly being connected to digital devices, screens, and distant people every day (and sometimes ending the day without talking to anyone). Furthermore, I love books and literature, and I came into this field because of that (though I also liked the web), but text communication like chat would wear down my emotions. I started to think I wanted a more analog life.
I also strongly felt that I wasn't helping people with what I was creating. I was sacrificing time with my children for work, and I wondered what and for whom I was working.
Wanted to connect more with the local community
Amidst all this, the COVID-19 pandemic began, remote work became widespread, and I had even fewer opportunities to go out. On the other hand, I spent more time in Mukonoso, my nearest station. As I spent more time with people I hadn't deeply spoken to before—cafe staff, curry shop owners, farmers—I started to think, "I want to do work that helps these people and the people in this town."
If I could do work that benefits the town, I might also be able to help improve the town where my family lives.
Inspiration after inspiration
I've always wanted to create a place like 'Brooklyn Superhero Supply Co.' in Brooklyn.
There, while selling fictional superhero merchandise, they also teach writing to children behind a secret door in the shop. And they publish and sell the works written by these children.
In the midst of this, visiting wonderful bookstores like Kobayashi Shoten in Tachibana, Amagasaki; Shoten Seikatsu Tsudzurikata in Myorenji, Yokohama; the used bookstore World's End Garden in Oji Koen; Jiyuuko Shoten in Suma Kaihin Park; and THANKS BOOKS in Seoul, Korea... my feelings gradually shifted towards wanting to open a bookstore. I was greatly influenced by people from Amagasaki University, "Nigoten," a used bookstore in Kuise Nakaichiba, Amagasaki, and Mitsuzumi Shobo in Itami.
It's true that we live in an era where bookstores are said to be unprofitable, closing down, and suffering from a publishing recession. It might seem reckless to open a bookstore in such a time.
However, many bookstores operate with side jobs. They engage in publishing or writing, or pursue entirely different livelihoods.
Influenced by the book "Stay Small" (which is on my second floor), I had adopted the philosophy that management should be as small as possible, so I believed there was no need to overexert myself. I would have multiple income streams. And eventually, I would scale down.
Plus, I could use a Risograph machine with customers, doing things like 'Brooklyn Superhero Supply Co.' and Shoten Seikatsu Tsudzurikata. The second floor could be used for (mostly) analog work, reading, and workshops, and I might even be able to hold exhibitions with artist and illustrator friends.
These fantasies expanded, and before I knew it, I had leased a nagaya (traditional row house) in Mukomotomachi and decided to create a shop with Ebisu Komuten in Suita, Osaka, Zero Kobo in Tsukaguchi, Amagasaki, and Gasaki Base, a DIY pioneer in Tonouchi, Amagasaki.
It turned out to be quite a long story, but that's the motivation behind this bookstore.
Currently, we are only open during events and workshops,
but please do come visit us. We look forward to seeing you.


![[インタビュー]ジョー・キーリー、The1975のZINEをつくるNZの「Coup De Main」](http://diybooks.jp/cdn/shop/articles/cdm1.jpg?v=1775779505&width=170)






















