Notes: Berenstain Dies; Cyber Monday Hot
Stan Berenstain, who with his wife, Jan, created the Berenstain Bears,
died on Saturday, according to press reports. He was 82 and had lived
in Doylestown, Pa.
The Berenstains' first Bears book was The Big Honey Hunt, published in 1962. Eventually the Berenstains' sons, Leo and Michael, joined the family enterprise. Over the years, the Berenstains created more than 250 Berenstain Bear books, which have sold nearly 300 million copies.
---
National Book Warehouse is closing as many as 17 stores and may lay off some Knoxville, Tenn., headquarters staff, according to Bargain Book News. (The company has some 130 Book Warehouse stores, which are usually permanent, and about the same number of Book Market stores, which are temporary.) "With Katrina and the rising cost of gasoline prices, the stores have simply not attracted as many shoppers as they have the past," Bargain Book News wrote. "This, coupled with the eroding perceived value offered by 'outlet' type stores, has severely affected the travel and resort shopping atmosphere."
---
The Libreria Martinez Books and Art Gallery store in Lynwood, Calif., is celebrating its grand re-opening, beginning tomorrow, December 1. (The other Libreria Martinez store is in Santa Ana.) Events scheduled through the weekend designed to "reacquaint" customers with the store include several author signings; interactive cartooning and storytelling with Los Kitos cartoonist Martha Montoya; and an open mic evening for students to read poetry and essays.
Last year owner Rueben Martinez won a $500,000 MacArthur "genius" grant.
---
The Sundance Bookstore, Reno, Nev., had "a very nice, steady weekend," co-owner Christine Kelly told the Reno Gazette-Journal. "Everything's selling. It's amazing what you see cross the counter that you forgot you had." She added that worries about rising energy costs and "other inflationary trends" so far have proven unwarranted.
---
Cyber Monday lived up to its name. VisaUSA said online buying on Monday rose 26% this year; an estimated 15 million workers shopped online on Monday compared to 11.1 million a year ago, the New York Times reported. Still, perhaps helped by more widespread broadband access at home, online sales on Thursday through Sunday rose 24%, according to ComScore Networks.
---
On Cyber Monday, B&N.com's 10 bestselling books included cookbooks such as Rachael Ray 365: No Repeats: A Year of Deliciously Different Dinners and The Silver Spoon. Other top titles were Oprah's recent pick, A Million Little Pieces by James Frey, and James Patterson's latest latest, Mary, Mary.
Some of B&N.com's bestselling films were based on books (The Polar Express) or had solid tie-ins (March of the Penguins).
---
This year Hanukkah begins on Christmas, the first time this has happened since 1959. Retailers are happy about the late arrival of the festival of lights, according to today's Wall Street Journal. The timing should boost the recent trend of the biggest holiday shopping days occurring right after Thanksgiving and just before Christmas.
---
Books-A-Million is opening a 16,500-sq.-ft. store in the Muncie Mall in Muncie, Ind., next summer, according to the Muncie Star Press. When the store opens, a Bookland (also owned by BAM) in the mall will close.
---
Mainly because of Internet use, Seattle is the nation's most literate city, according to the third annual America's Most Literate Cities survey, as reported in USA Today.
The survey uses six criteria: newspaper circulation, number of bookstores, library resources, periodical publishing resources, educational attainment and, new this year, Internet resources. This last criterion includes the number of library connections, commercial and public wireless access points per capita, online book orders and percentage of adults who have read a newspaper online. And perhaps headquarters of major online retailers?
---
The San Francisco Chronicle looks at the development of the San Francisco Locally Owned Merchants Alliance and two national coordinating groups for buy-local organizations. Neal Sofman, president of A Clean Well-Lighted Place for Books, got the San Francisco organization going; one of its first events is a Shop Local First Week that starts on December 5 and ends on December 10, Shop Local First Day.
---
The Portsmouth Herald does a Q&A with Tom Holbrook, owner of RiverRun Bookstore, Portsmouth, N.H., a man who usually reads five books at a time and keeps a dictionary in his car "in case of an emergency."
---
The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle celebrates the 35th anniversary of the Yankee Peddler Bookshop, Volume II, in Rochester, N.Y., owned by John Westerberg. His view of the zeitgeist: "People aren't reading. It's a shame. They're finding other ways to take up their time, but they're not learning anything."
The Berenstains' first Bears book was The Big Honey Hunt, published in 1962. Eventually the Berenstains' sons, Leo and Michael, joined the family enterprise. Over the years, the Berenstains created more than 250 Berenstain Bear books, which have sold nearly 300 million copies.
---
National Book Warehouse is closing as many as 17 stores and may lay off some Knoxville, Tenn., headquarters staff, according to Bargain Book News. (The company has some 130 Book Warehouse stores, which are usually permanent, and about the same number of Book Market stores, which are temporary.) "With Katrina and the rising cost of gasoline prices, the stores have simply not attracted as many shoppers as they have the past," Bargain Book News wrote. "This, coupled with the eroding perceived value offered by 'outlet' type stores, has severely affected the travel and resort shopping atmosphere."
---
The Libreria Martinez Books and Art Gallery store in Lynwood, Calif., is celebrating its grand re-opening, beginning tomorrow, December 1. (The other Libreria Martinez store is in Santa Ana.) Events scheduled through the weekend designed to "reacquaint" customers with the store include several author signings; interactive cartooning and storytelling with Los Kitos cartoonist Martha Montoya; and an open mic evening for students to read poetry and essays.
Last year owner Rueben Martinez won a $500,000 MacArthur "genius" grant.
---
The Sundance Bookstore, Reno, Nev., had "a very nice, steady weekend," co-owner Christine Kelly told the Reno Gazette-Journal. "Everything's selling. It's amazing what you see cross the counter that you forgot you had." She added that worries about rising energy costs and "other inflationary trends" so far have proven unwarranted.
---
Cyber Monday lived up to its name. VisaUSA said online buying on Monday rose 26% this year; an estimated 15 million workers shopped online on Monday compared to 11.1 million a year ago, the New York Times reported. Still, perhaps helped by more widespread broadband access at home, online sales on Thursday through Sunday rose 24%, according to ComScore Networks.
---
On Cyber Monday, B&N.com's 10 bestselling books included cookbooks such as Rachael Ray 365: No Repeats: A Year of Deliciously Different Dinners and The Silver Spoon. Other top titles were Oprah's recent pick, A Million Little Pieces by James Frey, and James Patterson's latest latest, Mary, Mary.
Some of B&N.com's bestselling films were based on books (The Polar Express) or had solid tie-ins (March of the Penguins).
---
This year Hanukkah begins on Christmas, the first time this has happened since 1959. Retailers are happy about the late arrival of the festival of lights, according to today's Wall Street Journal. The timing should boost the recent trend of the biggest holiday shopping days occurring right after Thanksgiving and just before Christmas.
---
Books-A-Million is opening a 16,500-sq.-ft. store in the Muncie Mall in Muncie, Ind., next summer, according to the Muncie Star Press. When the store opens, a Bookland (also owned by BAM) in the mall will close.
---
Mainly because of Internet use, Seattle is the nation's most literate city, according to the third annual America's Most Literate Cities survey, as reported in USA Today.
The survey uses six criteria: newspaper circulation, number of bookstores, library resources, periodical publishing resources, educational attainment and, new this year, Internet resources. This last criterion includes the number of library connections, commercial and public wireless access points per capita, online book orders and percentage of adults who have read a newspaper online. And perhaps headquarters of major online retailers?
---
The San Francisco Chronicle looks at the development of the San Francisco Locally Owned Merchants Alliance and two national coordinating groups for buy-local organizations. Neal Sofman, president of A Clean Well-Lighted Place for Books, got the San Francisco organization going; one of its first events is a Shop Local First Week that starts on December 5 and ends on December 10, Shop Local First Day.
---
The Portsmouth Herald does a Q&A with Tom Holbrook, owner of RiverRun Bookstore, Portsmouth, N.H., a man who usually reads five books at a time and keeps a dictionary in his car "in case of an emergency."
---
The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle celebrates the 35th anniversary of the Yankee Peddler Bookshop, Volume II, in Rochester, N.Y., owned by John Westerberg. His view of the zeitgeist: "People aren't reading. It's a shame. They're finding other ways to take up their time, but they're not learning anything."