Source: http://www.nola.com/books/index.ssf/2014/11/mary_stuart_kellogg_co-founder.html

Mary Stuart Kellogg, co-founder of Maple Street Book Shop, dies at 89

Mary Stuart Kellogg, who founded the Maple Street Book Shop with her sister in 1964, died Nov. 11 in her daughter's San Francisco home of complications of Alzheimer's disease. She was 89.

A native of Monroe, Ms. Kellogg moved to New Orleans to attend Newcomb College, where she earned an undergraduate degree.

She and Rhoda Kellogg Norman established the bookstore in a former house, where towering shelves of books dominate room after room after room. Over the years, the independent bookshop at 7529 Maple St. in the Carrollton neighborhood has been the site of signings by authors such asWalker Percy, William Styron and Willie Morris.

Its best-known bit of advertising is a bumper sticker with this inscription: “Fight the Stupids.”

Ms. Kellogg also volunteered at Kingsley House and the Milton Latter Memorial Library.

In the 1970s, she moved to Eugene, Ore. She earned a master's degree in library science at the University of Oregon there and founded the Book and Tea Shop, which became a West Coast counterpart of the Maple Street Book Shop.

Ms. Kellogg moved to San Francisco in 1981 and became active in causes such as feminism and the nuclear-freeze movement.

Her marriage to Dr. Richard Faust ended in divorce.

Survivors include two sons, Richard Alan Faust Jr. of Los Angeles and Robert Kellogg Faust of Toronto; two daughters, Rhoda Kellogg Faust of New Orleans and Consuelo Abaunza Faust-Anderson of San Francisco; her sister, Rhoda Kellogg Norman of San Francisco; four grandchildren; and a great-grandchild.

A memorial service will be held at a later date.