A woman stares at candy in a display case
A customer, Esther Park, looks at handmade artisan chocolate from Grumpy Chocolatier during "Sunday Funday."

Nestled between Historic Filipinotown and Echo Park is a bookstore turned artisan craft space turned food market, all within 900 square feet. Every Sunday, A Good Used Book on Glendale Boulevard transforms from a retail bookstore into what they call “Sunday Funday Market.”

Founders Jenny Yang and Chris Capizzi spent seven years operating as a pop-up without a brick-and-mortar location. Opening their doors to local vendors pays homage to their own roots selling at Los Angeles markets, from the Melrose Trading Post to the Pasadena Rose Bowl Flea Market.

“Mega giant online sellers have the scale and the resources and the patience and the reach to capture most people,” Capizzi said. “Whereas for us, I think we have to be really creative — we have to band together.”

A man an woman stand in a store
Chris Capizzi and Jenny Yang in their store, A Good Used Book. (Nick Ducassi/For The LA Local)

Yang and Capizzi’s long history of vending at markets taught them how isolating running a small business can be. At their market, they aim to build connections with each vendor and strategize the best timing and layout so everyone can succeed.

“[Amazon and Barnes & Noble] are Goliath, and we’re not even David — we’re just the ant underneath David’s foot,” Capizzi said. “I think we can do what we do and try to get as many people, at our level or even smaller, to get together.”

Weekly markets at A Good Used Book have captivated the neighborhood since its opening in October 2023, with charming names like “Sunday Funday,” “Saturday School” and “Hi-Fi Friday Night,” plus hand-drawn flyers by well-known artist Noah Harmon. Now, it’s become a weekly occurrence where LA pop-ups can display their own crafts, allowing local readers to indulge in a little more than a pocket paperback.

Each week holds a Pandora’s box of niche snacks, crafts or trinkets you didn’t know you needed, ranging from Southeast Asian-inspired trail mix to natural incense sticks to vintage Japanese audio equipment. One week you might be enticed to adopt a kitten from a rescue booth outside, another week you might impulsively get a stick-and-poke tattoo in the back of the store.

You can find treats like French crullers from Nyletta at “Sunday Funday” at A Good Used Book store. (Nick Ducassi/For The LA Local)

On one sunny Sunday afternoon, Brandon Stanciell hand-tossed fresh pizza dough on the sidewalk outside the bookstore. His 2-year-old pop-up, Pizza Ananda, which he named after his daughter, is an homage to her and to Italian cooking, a hobby he started during paternity leave. An hour before the market closed, Stanciell had already sold out and garnished his last pepperoni-and-hot-honey pie for one lucky customer.

“I love that places like this allow us all to meet at once to share what we have and give it to the community around us,” Stanciell said.

Two women smiling, flipping through a book.
Mel Gomez and Tatum Sanchez browse for books during “Sunday Funday” at A Good Used Book. (Nick Ducassi/For The LA Local)

For the owners, building a community market is about deepening relationships with the people who walk through their doors. In an increasingly digital landscape, it is also a reciprocal partnership among local businesses.

“A lot of people talk about community building nowadays as a marketing strategy,” Capizzi said. “But I think the actual community building comes from talking to each vendor and each customer and being a consistent presence in the neighborhood.”

A man tattoos a woman's right arm
Tattoo artist Dutch tats up Tatiana Iglesias at “Sunday Funday” at A Good Used Book. (Nick Ducassi/For The LA Local)

While customers browsed for unique titles, Gerin del Carmen worked her booth of ceramic dishware, oyster-shaped trinket holders and vases resembling miniature boxes. As a ceramicist, del Carmen draws from her Filipino heritage, including the Balikbayan boxes that represent immigrants sending gifts to family in the Philippines.

“Sharing the community and your space is such a big deal. This is not a huge, gigantic Barnes & Noble store,” del Carmen said. “It has so much foot traffic, and the fact that [the owners] are setting up and sharing the space once or twice a week with other vendors and other artists is huge.”

Yang and Capizzi may think of themselves as an “ant underneath David’s foot,” but A Good Used Book is building a colony of vendors, rooted in community.

  • Meat skewers on a grill over a fire.
  • A man writing down an food order
  • A woman browsing through books
  • A woman stares at candy in a display case
  • items for sale
  • A vendor setting up his booth
  • A store front sign says "Yes we are open"
  • A man an woman stand outside a store
  • A book is on display for sale.
  • A man looks for books
  • Chocolate in a display case
  • A decal of a book mascot with arms and legs
  • A woman looks for books in a store
  • Books on a large table
  • Customers in a crowded store
  • Customers in a crowded store
  • Used books in bins
  • A display of sticks and scones
  • Customers in a crowded store
  • Vendors stand in a booth
  • A man with sunglasses stands in a crowded store.
  • A display of books
  • A man tattoos a woman with glasses
  • Two women thumb through bins of used books

This story is by a guest contributor. Got a story to contribute? Send us your pitch to pitches@localnewsforla.org.

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