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Rosette can hardly be accused of having entered the trade while secretly scripting his Sundance acceptance speech. Rather, after graduation from NYU, he wound up unemployed, living with a junkie roommate and one valuable asset: a huge book collection that could readily be turned into cash. On an impulse, he decided to sell his books--on the stretch of Manhattan's West Fourth Street in front of the NYU library--and made enough money that he decided to pursue this "career" for three years.
Soon, Rosette began turning a video camera on his customers and fellow vendors. To the extent that he most often served as his own cameraman, Rosette is rarely onscreen, instead expressing his recollections through a voice-over. But this does not change the subjective nature of this bookseller's insights. Filmmakers as different as Nick Broomfield, Elia Suleiman, Ross McElwee and Nanni Moretti have challenged the authoritarian "objectivity" implicit in the concept of cinema verité with adamantly first-person films, often mingling fiction and documentary and portraying themselves as characters to do justice to their experiences. BookWars transcends navel-gazing by virtue of tackling one of the documentary field's most valuable tasks: speaking about a subculture from the inside.
The vendors described by Rosette have been ignored by the media and driven into the shadows through the police harassment that has been concomitant with Manhattan's gentrification. That makes meeting Rosette's colleagues, as we do in the film's first ten minutes, an inherently interesting prospect. Among the most colorful characters are Rick, a Timothy Leary/Robert Anton Wilson devotee and Kevin Corrigan look-alike whose main hobby is magic tricks, and Boris, a Russian who mysteriously disappears while Rosette is shooting the film. While a few of the hardcore bibliophiles have a troubled background--Al, a recovering addict who sports a mesh fedora, gives an impassioned description of the spiritual epiphany that led him to swear off substance abuse--most are bohemians who simply prefer this life to the nine-to-five office grind. In addition to documenting their interactions with customers and one another, Rosette also takes us along with some of the vendors as they prowl the suburbs for hidden treasures. As it turns out, very few are homeless, and most acquire their books from private collections and small-town thrift stores and library sales rather than theft. Although marred by Rosette's glib voiceover-- describing his initial desperation, he remarks, "I ended up broke in the big city; it's not a good feeling"--BookWars at its best manages to capture the texture and nuance of keen sociology.