As a character Many accounts of Stanley Rose's personality were published, perhaps the most vivid of which is that provided by his longtime friend and associate,
Carey McWilliams: Stanley was a superb storyteller and a very funny man whose generosity was proverbial. In the late afternoons, as he began to warm up for the evening with a few drinks, he would hold court in the store, entertaining whoever happened to drop in, and the performance would invariably continue into the early morning hours in the back room at Musso’s. ... Uneducated but of great native charm, he was forever being lured on expensive hunting and fishing trips by wealthy actors, writers, and directors on their promises to buy large libraries of books, which of course they never did; they merely wanted him along as court jester. Stanley dressed like a Hollywood swell, spoke like the Texas farm boy he never ceased to be, and carried on as Hollywood’s unrivaled entertainer and easiest touch until his death in 1954. Although a convivial companion, Rose, by the accounts of McWilliams and many others, was not an especially savvy businessman. Budd Schulberg reported that Rose once told an inquisitive writer that he only ran a bookstore "cause I like to keep a joint where my pals c’n hang out." He was prone to letting his many friends have books “on account”, and was extremely lax in the collection of monies owed him. Actor
William Bakewell remembered that Rose's "generosity and easygoing approach to merchandising stimulated a kind of
mañana attitude on the part of many of his customers, resulting in a host of long-overdue accounts, which finally put him out of business."
In literature Rose and his bookshop make cameo appearances in several prominent literary works in the "
Hollywood novel" genre, including
What Makes Sammy Run? by
Budd Schulberg (1941) and
The Day of the Locust by
Nathanael West (1939). The protagonist of
John O'Hara's 1938 novel
Hope of Heaven has an affair with a bookstore clerk; although the fictionalized shop is located in
Beverly Hills, the character of the clerk is a thinly disguised portrait of Betty Anderson, a Rose employee with whom O’Hara had been briefly infatuated. Some critics of
Raymond Chandler's work have identified the Rose shop as the model (or at least the inspiration) for the bookstore "Geiger's" in Chandler's
The Big Sleep, published in 1939.
William Saroyan, generally regarded as Rose's best friend among the writers, wrote various short pieces about Rose and the bookshop, and anecdotes about "Stanley the bookseller" pop up in many of his published works. The bookshop and its proprietor also figure in numerous writers’ memoirs, including those by
John Bright,
Lester Cole,
John Sanford, Budd Schulberg, and others. ==Later life and death==