Howard was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in early 2010. He was circumspect about his chances. “There’s nothing to say. People die. We all die. Businesses end,” he told the local news website, Berkeleyside.com, in April of 2010. Before he went, however, members of the trade had the foresight to arrange their thoughts and admirations in print. Coordinated by Stephen J. Gertz, Booktryst.com ran them as a five-part series titled A Wake for the Still Alive. The series was later issued in a pamphlet of the same name. It features tributes by more than a dozen booksellers and collectors. It is gratifying to think that he knew, in detail, what regard his peers had for him, their recognition of his impact on the bookselling business.
When Howard died on March 31, 2011, at the age of seventy-two, the future prospects of the store were unclear. He had not groomed a successor, and his two daughters, both nurses, have no desire to take up bookselling. In September, Serendipity closed. It had proven impossible to sell the building and inventory as a unit.
Late last fall estate attorney Gary Lepper finalized terms with Bonhams auction house in Los Angeles to divest Serendipity’s inventory. Catherine Williamson, director of fine books and manuscripts at Bonhams, has been working on the collection ever since, because, as she put it, the scope is “overwhelming.”
There are hundreds of thousands of volumes at all price points. In modern literature and poetry—two of Howard’s specialties—there is Faulkner, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Kerouac, and Bay-related writers. Some of the finer items, including Steinbeck’s manuscript of “The Pearl of the World” (published as The Pearl) and a rare Joyce broadside, will go to auction on February 12, 2012. Williamson said there are other, more obscure collections too, such as Fitzgerald’s college scripts and Thurber’s college juvenilia, which are “off the radar for a lot of collectors,” she added.
Photography, paintings, and the bulk of Serendipity’s film scripts will sell in appropriate subject sales later in the year, Williamson said. Common stock will be offered at shelf sales at the store beginning in early February. It may take a year (or more) to dissolve Serendipity’s extensive inventory.