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Another independent shuts down: Acres of Books in Long Beach, CA
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The Little Bookstore That Could, and Will | The New York Observer |
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Three Pct has a piece up on nonprofit bookstores (not to be confused with unprofitable ones, though the NPR piece may belie that).
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The Christian Science Monitor's bookblog on bookstore hall of fame points to Robert Teeter's compilation and 10best's list. (via bookforum.com)
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Another indepedent, in the hometown of Rodney Welch: The Blog: Another trophy for Amazon.com
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I have been assured by apologists for 'The Market' that I'm just being a book snob; that choice has not reduced because we have Amazon and that, if people in general really cared about such things as small, independent bookshops, they'd use them. Oh well ... perhaps they'll feel happy when the whole world has become homogenised, with every street having exactly the same shops, selling exactly the same products. More cheerfully – this is my local bookshop, which opened within the last five years. It's a tiny space, with a small but interesting selection of books. |
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I don't have any problem with 'The Market' which is an abstraction anyway and I do understand people who shop amazon or big chains because it's cheaper, but I personally try to buy as much as possible in local businesses. I really have no solution for the crisis they seem to be in but I tend to note that those who remain in business and are going strong are the ones offering a real added value -- ie service, choice, knowledge, identity. To be quite honest, a lot of local shops do a terrible job: they sell the same things big chains do, only with less stocks and more expensive. Those ones I'm not sad to see go (and actually they usually are the first to go). The real sad thing is when good bookshop go bust -- because you don't only have to know what you are doing, you also have to know how you need doing it and basic business sense seems to be lacking from people animated with passion.
As for an homogene world, it's a fear and I think it's what it will remain to be. Your friends are right when they say there is more choice than before (because it's true, you can buy a wider variety of books now than twenty years ago) but they're missing the point entirely: bookshopping is not only about choice. Regarding funding, I think there are more important things out there to subsidize than bookshops. Without even thinking about society as a whole, if we limit ourselves to literature, help for writers, translators or publisher seems more urgent. |
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As a translator, I am very aware of the money in your bank account and where it comes from. And also that one of the principal reasons that there are so few translations in Britain is because publishers claim that translation costs so much. This is something of a myth, given the existence of national book promotion organisations.
But at the other end, the bookshop, I do have a lot of sympathy for the type of bookshop that Sybarite refers to. The added value that Fausto mentions includes knowledgeable people behind the counter. But the physical space, as I mentioned, is just as important. This is especially true of second-hand bookshops, where you can often find more unusual things. There may be more important things to fund than bookshops (given the world economic climate over the past week!), but bookshops are exceptionally vulnerable, when the Arts Council or the EU decides to give more to ballet, opera and other performance art, which tends to be expensive, and reduce funding for literature, publishing, bookselling, translation, etc., which are all part of book culture. |
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I'm not convinced by the idea of funding bookshops – do we also, in the UK, want to fund independent food shops that stock good quality (often local) food but get pushed out of business by supermarkets? I don't think that that really deals with the problem.
It never fails to hit me, when I'm on the Continent, how supermarkets and chains have taken over cities and towns far less than in the UK. Barcelona is a good example. Of course supermarkets exist, but everywhere you walk, there are also lots of little bakeries, delis, cafes etc – never mind the four markets (including the divine La Boqueria) that I know are within easy reach of where I've stayed in the city. Same goes for Paris and Berlin and Amsterdam. Yes, McDonalds exists – but not on ever street corner. What's happening in the UK is a rampant homogenisation of shopping areas, with such chains having the financial clout to buy up any leases/land etc, leaving small businesses (including bookshops) struggling. The end of the Net Book Agreement also meant that a lot of small bookshops in the UK were essentially unable to get the big titles to sell, because they were being undercut by the big chains and the supermarkets (many newsagents have gone out of business because of supermarkets too). So I'd be interested to know how Paris, Barcelona etc manage to avoid a Starbucks on every corner and a McDonalds on every road and many local shops wiped out by vast supermarkets. How does that happen? Is it legislation? Is it that – I think that this is the case in France – it's very difficult, in terms of the paperwork etc, to change the site of a business to a different sort of business. So, for example, McDonalds can't just buy any shop and convert it to sell their brand of crap. Surely the way forward is to be friendly to small businesses – not just obsessed with the biggest businesses around? |
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Thanks, nnyhav. This is very helpful for future trips cross country and cross genre. |
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One of the wonderful things about many of the bookstores mentioned above is that they don't destroy grand old buildings to put up some cookie cutter shop. They often choose wonderfully eccentric, already existing digs and fill them with rows of books. The chains--primarily American--tend not to inhabit already existing and marvelous buildings. There should be a kind of "recycling" mentality in play. But it's all too rare. |
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Argentinean writer Manguel: Our intelligence is being threatened
“The Library at Night,” the 2008 book by Argentine-born writer-editor Alberto Manguel, in which he chronicles the history of libraries -- meshed with his own adventure as a bookworm -- has just been published in Turkish under the title “Geceleyin Kütüphane.” via Literary Saloon |
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I don't know if this link was posted before, but it's definitely on topic: European Bookstoreguide.
__________________
The ice in her drink melts quicker than everyone else's. |
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NY Times has an article on a lending library in Columbia. 4800 book lending library transported on Donkey's back. Interesting read, and inspirational.
Here is the link http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/20/wo...ll&oref=slogin |
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