SEBA Sets Sights on Winston-Salem
The Southeast Booksellers Association Trade Show takes place Fri.-Sun.,
Sept. 16-18, in the Benton Convention & Civic Center in
Winston-Salem, N.C. The trade show floor is open most of Saturday and
Sunday until 1 p.m.
On Thursday, SEBA is sponsoring an all-day Bookseller School led by Miriam Fleischmann that focuses on co-op; participants will learn about opportunities like the Reader's Edge newsletter and Booksense.com's co-op programs.
For the first time, Friday morning's breakfast and annual meeting will feature a speaker: book-lusting librarian Nancy Pearl. Friday's educational seminars discuss how to merchandise and sell graphic novels; working with other independent retailers in the community; payroll issues; putting on authorless events; business-to-business programs; and how to help mystery fans cross over to other categories. SEBA is also sponsoring three author panels.
Six authors are scheduled to read at the first-ever Sunday morning Readings Breakfast. Another inaugural event is the Spoken Word reading room. Every half hour from 9 a.m.-5 p.m., an author will read for about 20 minutes, be recorded for the Spoken Word radio show (produced by Public Radio South, sponsored by SEBA and broadcast on public radio in the Southeast) and then sign copies of his or her book.
Other events include a team spelling bee, the Friday SEBA Book Awards authors luncheon, several other author meals and the Moveable Feast of Authors, the last of which stars 45 authors. "It'll be crazy," SEBA executive director Wanda Jewell told Shelf Awareness, who predicted that this SEBA will be the biggest in at least four years.
For more information, go to SEBA's Web site.
On Thursday, SEBA is sponsoring an all-day Bookseller School led by Miriam Fleischmann that focuses on co-op; participants will learn about opportunities like the Reader's Edge newsletter and Booksense.com's co-op programs.
For the first time, Friday morning's breakfast and annual meeting will feature a speaker: book-lusting librarian Nancy Pearl. Friday's educational seminars discuss how to merchandise and sell graphic novels; working with other independent retailers in the community; payroll issues; putting on authorless events; business-to-business programs; and how to help mystery fans cross over to other categories. SEBA is also sponsoring three author panels.
Six authors are scheduled to read at the first-ever Sunday morning Readings Breakfast. Another inaugural event is the Spoken Word reading room. Every half hour from 9 a.m.-5 p.m., an author will read for about 20 minutes, be recorded for the Spoken Word radio show (produced by Public Radio South, sponsored by SEBA and broadcast on public radio in the Southeast) and then sign copies of his or her book.
Other events include a team spelling bee, the Friday SEBA Book Awards authors luncheon, several other author meals and the Moveable Feast of Authors, the last of which stars 45 authors. "It'll be crazy," SEBA executive director Wanda Jewell told Shelf Awareness, who predicted that this SEBA will be the biggest in at least four years.
For more information, go to SEBA's Web site.