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Spooky reading lounge Libros mysteriously vanishes from San Antonio

Libros Book Club has mysteriously vanished from San Antonio's nightlife scene.
The story is over for one of San Antonio's most original businesses. The owner of Libros Book Club's property confirms that the gothy reading room and lounge has moved out of 607 W. Hildebrand Ave.
The closure appears to have been abrupt. A "For Lease" sign suddenly popped up at the address and the founders, who also run Cream II, quickly wiped the Libros Instagram page. Social media requests for more information were not returned in time for publication.
Although it carved out a quiet space in Alamo City’s otherwise rowdy nightlife scene, Libros was always niche. Since opening in late January 2024, it catered to a crowd that may keep vampiric hours, but were hardly looking for a rager. Although bookworms could bring in a bottle of wine with their Bram Stoker, the focus was on the joys of just chilling.
The dark academia atmosphere did a lot of the heavy lifting. The walls and ceilings were dipped in an inky black, offset with blood red lights, ornamental gilded mirrors, and a menacing portrait of Vlad the Impaler. Bookshelves were lined with the spookier side of genre fiction.
Libros' ownership group has been frenetically opening concepts since debuting their flagship darkwave dance club in 2022. In fall 2024, they took over the former home of Squeezebox on the St. Mary's Strip to open Neon Moon, described at the time as San Antonio's "No. 1 y'allternative bar and music venue," despite its frequent emo and nu-metal soundtrack.
The foray into yeehaw vibes proved to be short-lived. After barely two months, the owners tossed out the cowhide and rebranded the spot into Cream II, which attracts more Doc Martens than Ropers.
While all that was happening, the original Cream nightclub shuttered. The partners also abandoned plans to renovate a multi-story building at 102 Heiman St. in the heart of St. Paul Square, an ambitious project that would have included goth and techno dance floors on two levels and a music venue on the rooftop.
"This could’ve been special but we got screwed," wrote the owners on their since-deleted Instagram account. "Lesson[s] were learned and this is an example of doing your homework on a property."
It's unclear whether the similarly dark-sided Libros was forced out of its home or whether the team decided the donation-based business was unsustainable. We will update this article should the owners provide any further comments.
