New chapter for former politician

Alice Hutchinson”™s former life as a politician may have ended in defeat, but that hasn”™t stopped her from turning the page to another lifelong passion: books.

“E-books are here to stay, no one is denying that,” said Hutchinson, former first selectman of Bethel. “But people still want books for themselves and for their children.”

Opening up a small bookstore on the second floor of a coffee shop in Bethel, Hutchinson has been testing the town”™s appetite for books. And after nearly two years, the results are in.

“A bookstore is a component of community that people still value,” Hutchinson said. “It promotes literacy and gives a platform for local authors.”

Alice Hutchinson in the new Byrd”™s Books in Bethel.
Alice Hutchinson in the new Byrd”™s Books in Bethel.

An active civic resident of Bethel, Hutchinson ended her term as first selectman in 2005 and later made a run as the underdog candidate for the state Senate race in 2010 to represent Bethel, Danbury, New Fairfield and Sherman.

She wasn”™t elected but Hutchinson said the experience was still of great value, especially as a local business owner now.

“I stepped back from politics to do this, but it”™s still a relationship with people and the community,” she said. “My life really hasn”™t changed ”¦ I got to know a lot of people and the pulse of the community pretty well. I wouldn”™t open a business anywhere else. I”™m very happy to open a store in Bethel.”

Just last month, Hutchinson moved the store, named Byrd”™s Books after her maiden name Byrd, onto the main drive of Bethel and into a larger storefront. With three times the space, she”™s expanded the store”™s selection ”” which caters to customers”™ interest in local authors and children”™s books ”” and she has started to hold more writers”™ workshops, poetry workshops and teacher talks.

At a time when national retailers and used-book stores have been closing, Hutchinson said she felt the key to her store”™s success will be her involvement in the community, fresh inventory and close attention customers”™ interests.

“(National) book sales are still growing,” she said. “Not at the rate it was. But small, independent bookstores on a whole are doing well, if not better than a lot of retail stores.”

Hutchinson”™s mother also ran a bookstore, in Westport, for roughly 20 years, which is where Hutchinson got her first taste for running a store. She also worked at the Barnes & Noble in Danbury when it first opened.

“The bookstore itself is really an adventure to see if enough people still want books in their lives,” Hutchinson said. “I would encourage people, no matter what town they”™re from, to shop in their towns and support the local businesses. They give back to the community far better than large businesses do.”