On Sunday Rachelle and I wandered up to Dupont Street with the aim of going to People\u2019s Diner for brunch. However, before we did this we stopped into Ezra\u2019s Pound to pick-up a coffee. The literary pretentions of the name give you a pretty fair indication of what to expect. You know, it\u2019s the sort of place where somebody has spent a fair amount of money to make it look like they spent very little. Impeccably art designed, but intending to suggest a casual, almost accidental arrangement of lost and found beauty, a distant, uncompromising hipster ethos presides. The whole operation groans just a bit beneath the weight of its holier than thou aesthetic.<\/p>\n
Coffee pedants with laptops sit at the cramped tables and servers who pretend to be more interested in maintaining the integrity of their craft than in customer service, work the bar. As Rachelle and I passed through I noticed a table inhabited by a university-aged couple. Serious and hunched over in distant concentration, they both read thin and difficult paperback books in defiance of the populist culture they so clearly abhorred.<\/p>\n
<\/a><\/p>\n \u201cThose things, those things you\u2019re holding in your hands,\u201d I said, as if astonished, \u201cwhat are they?\u201d<\/p>\n What I\u2019d hoped might result in some whimsical banter instead produced a short, somewhat prickly conversation about the integrity of books, and as Rachelle and I left with our high-end coffees, I was happy to be heading to People\u2019s, an old school diner that served slutty, speedy breakfasts to people with hangovers.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n People\u2019s, an iconic Toronto institution, has been around for 50 years and is run by a candid Greek family. They don\u2019t look like the sorts who are transitioning through the service industry into something else. No, they come in all shapes, sizes and ages, and the women who work the floor are good at their jobs, have large arms that will never see a Spin class and seem generally concerned, even offended, if you don\u2019t finish all your eggs. At each booth there\u2019s a barely functioning little jukebox and a huge laminated menu with all the things you expect, in fact need, to find at a diner. It\u2019s a gem, and Rachelle and I have been going there for as long as we\u2019ve known one another.<\/p>\n Well, on Sunday we found out that it had closed.<\/p>\n