At Vietnamese coffee shop in the Cedars neighborhood, customers on Saturday morning made their way to the walk-up window to order pastries and coffee.
In the middle of the cozy outdoor patio with overhead string lights, book lovers gathered at a large picnic table for a meeting of a new book club. One person munched on a Pride-themed doughnut while others sipped milky-brown iced coffee from mason jars.
Book club leader Haewon Park invited each person to answer an icebreaker question from cue cards they made. Amber Alvarez went first, answering the question: 鈥淲here do you like to read?鈥
鈥淚 really like to read in my car at lunch. I have a setup where I have, like, a blanket and a pillow. Even now, I brought a cooler because it鈥檚 getting hot and I put blankets on my window,鈥 she said.
Club members laughed as Alvarez described her makeshift setup.
Going around the table, each attendee introduced themselves and shared what books they brought, which included everything from a manga 鈥淟ibrary Wars鈥 to bell hooks鈥 鈥淎ll About Love: New Visions.鈥
Saturday morning was the second gathering of the book club at ChimLanh. Even though it recently launched, it鈥檚 clear that the book club is quickly becoming a haven for bibliophiles.
鈥淚 think I want them to feel like how I first felt walking into Sandwich Hag, which is, like, this is a place where you can relax and feel welcome and you can just nerd out,鈥 Park said. 鈥淵ou can be as passionate as you want about whatever you enjoy, and it's like a safe space for that.鈥
The idea for the book club first came from chef Reyna Duong of ChimLanh and Dallas staple Sandwich Hag. She reached out to Park to see if they鈥檇 be willing to host the book club. Park has worked at bookshops such as Deep Vellum and previously worked as a literacy tutor.
鈥淲e both believe in community building and trying to make Dallas like home, because I grew up in Dallas, but I never really felt like it was home,鈥 Park said.
For much of their life growing up in North Texas, Park felt like they were on the margins as a Korean American with immigrant parents who moved from Hawaii.
鈥淚 think the main thing I felt growing up here is that the only safe space was the public library and Half-Price Books,鈥 they said. 鈥淚've always searched for spaces where I feel invited, and they're always bookstores.鈥
They have started to see more bookish spaces created for people of color, like . However, Park said there鈥檚 still a need to bridge that gap in North Texas, as they鈥檝e never seen an Asian book club.
鈥Even, like, five years ago pre-pandemic, I was like, 鈥榃here do you go if you don't want to just be surrounded by what you imagine Texas to be, which is a lot of white-dominated spaces, which I'm used to.鈥 So I usually would just stay home,鈥 they said.
That鈥檚 why Park is making such an effort to foster community around a picnic table at ChimLanh with people laughing and stacks of books scattered around.
They said there鈥檚 no specific format, so anyone can jump in. For the first meeting, Park read from Michelle Zauner鈥檚 鈥淐rying in H Mart.鈥 Today, everyone was invited to bring some of their own books.
Kiharrah Johnson teaches at a Montessori school and said it鈥檚 her second time at the book club. She said she loves coming to ChimLanh for a coffee and bite to eat, so it鈥檚 a 鈥渨in-win.鈥
鈥I brought a children's book. I brought a poetry book. I brought some books around Black liberation,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 really love children's books. I'm a teacher. I love reading books 鈥 that's my favorite time of the day.鈥
Stephanie Grace brought 鈥淟one Women,鈥 a historical novel about a Black homesteader woman in Montana. It was a deviation from Grace鈥檚 go-to genres, but she ended up loving the book.
鈥淚 really wasn't expecting it to be so cool, but it talks a lot about the experience for women back then, like making it on their own and then looking at it through the lens of race and gender and sexuality,鈥 Grace said.
For Park, the club is about freeing people from this idea of what it looks like to be a true reader.
鈥I'm just excited to introduce people to an array of different genres and just be excited about reading in a way that doesn't feel like, 鈥極h, this is like a guilty pleasure.鈥 Like, 鈥極h, I shouldn't be reading this. This is for younger people.鈥 I read picture books, like whatever sparks joy is OK. I want people to feel validated.鈥
In the future, Park aims to host the book club every week, hopes to do a book swap and continue doing more live readings.
Want to join the book club? Follow on Instagram for the latest updates. ChimLanh, which is nestled inside Sandwich Hag, is open from Wednesday through Sunday from 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.
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