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Owner of Lyneham business Book Lore hit by thieves - again - and vows to not leave but get better

Book Lore, the little second-hand book shop that could in Lyneham, has been through some tumultuous times.

The global financial crisis, rise of Kindle, so-called (premature?) death of the book.

But the most galling of all set-backs are the ones that should never have happened at all: malicious break-ins that seemed designed as much to wrought maximum damage as to steal.

The latest break-in happened early on Monday morning - the second in three weeks.

The thieves again smashed the glass front door creating a distressing sight for locals passing by the high-profile location next to Tilley's cafe in Wattle Street.

The intruders also used an angle grinder to bust open a safe, brought a can of paint along to deliberately spill over the carpet and smashed shelves and cupboards.

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It is the last thing owner Mike Johnson needs. He is also the primary carer for his two sons and his terminally ill wife who has end-stage breast cancer.

And all that destruction for what? Not much.

"A local bookshop is not a big money spinner. It's there because you love it and you want that kind of business in your community," Mr Johnson said.

"It's a real violation actually. It's a horrible feeling."

The shop has been a feature on the street for more than 30 years. Mr Johnson has owned it for 10 years and runs it with long-time employee Jane Edwards.

But in a telling sign of its significance to the local community, Book Lore has been inundated with offers of help, from a suggestion to crowdfund to pay for the damage to a sweet letter penned by a young customer who also offered a dollar towards the clean-up.

Mr Johnson respectfully declined the offers to crowdfund, saying the damage would be covered by insurance but said he was determined to turn a negative into a positive.

He is going to replace the glass door with a solid wooden one and is asking all local artists to submit ideas for a book-themed mural across the door and the shopfront.

"I thought if we have to fortify, we'll do it in a positive way," he said.

Mr Johnson is asking artists to come forward with ideas for the mural - be it book characters to quotes from books - and contact him through the shop on 6247 6450 or the Book Lore Facebook page.

"It's going to be a big canvas and seen by thousands of people every day," he said.

Mr Johnson will be soon releasing more details about a community event at which the mural will be painted, another act of defiance against vandals more interested in ugliness than beauty.