In honor of Changing Hands Bookstore winning the Spirit of Enterprise Award (mentioned here last Friday), the
Arizona Republic offers
a long story about the Tempe, Ariz., bookstore, which it says "survived
not only because of its charm but because it used textbook techniques
for finding a market niche. . . . Its secret has been focusing on
making the store a great place to gather. "
The latest challenge, according to co-owner Gayle Shanks, is dealing
with demands on customers' time, including electronic games, music,
longer working hours and longer commuting times. The store has a task
force looking at ways to reach people under 30. "We won't have another
30 years unless we build another reader base," she told the paper.
"We're never going to have the younger market convert to only reading
books. I just want them to do both."
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Playwright August Wilson died yesterday of liver cancer in Seattle, Wash.. He was 60.
Wilson chronicled the black experience in a 10-play series.
Fences and
The Piano Lesson won the Pulitzer Prize. His breakthrough play was
Ma Rainey's Black Bottom.
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Patti Wyatt, children's librarian at Mitchell Community Public Library,
Mitchell, Ind., for 15 years, has bought the inventory of H&H
Bookstore, Bedford, Ind., and is setting up a store called Lazy Days
Books in the back of her house, near the library. Lazy Days will open
October 15. Wyatt told the
Times-Mail that she will "carry on" H&H owner Velva Hutton's approach at the used bookstore.
In other Bedford, Ind., book news, Joe Glasbow and his wife, Marina
Guba, who have run JoNa Books publishing for 10 years, have opened JoNa
Books, a discount bookstore carrying mostly remainders and bargain
books (we hope not JoNa publishing's books!). JoNa Books, the store, is located at 1611 J St., Bedford, Ind.
47421.
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A group of corporations, nonprofits and universities led by Yahoo plan
today to unveil the Open Content Alliance, which will digitize hundreds
of thousands of books and make them available to anyone online,
according to today's
New York Times. The project hopes to avoid
the Google Library program's most controversial aspect by focusing at
first on works in the public domain.
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The
Daily Freeman
profiles a book retailer that has reversed the usual trend: Mezzanine,
a bookstore and café in Kingston, N.Y., started as Used Book
Trader.com, an Internet-only business. In its bricks-and-mortar
incarnation, Mezzanine offers mostly used titles (20% are new) and
specializes in SF/fantasy and horror, detective stories, spy novels and
thrillers as well as erotica. Since opening in May, the store's café
has out gobbled up more sales than the bookstore section. Owners Larry
Zalinsky and B.C. Gee still sell online. The store is located at 79
Broadway, Kingston, N.Y. 12401; 845-339-6925.
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Nice touch: the
Holy Cross Bookstore at
the College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, Mass., is selling T-shirts
that read simply "Stand Bayou" for $12. Of that amount, $8.75 goes to
the Chaplains' Office campaign to support the victims of Hurricane
Katrina.
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The Constant Reader will be interrupted: the Albert Lea, Minn., bookstore is closing. Owner Grace Haukoos told the
Albert Lea Tribune that
she opened the store in 1988 intending it to be a "fun, five-year
project. . . . I'm past retirement age so it's time to do something
else." The store may stay open through Christmas, depending on sales.
After closing, the first thing Haukoos said she wants to do is read.
"Everyone thinks if you run a bookstore you read books all day, but
that's not true," she said.
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En garde! Samurai Comics, which is owned by Mike and Moryha Banks and
has a store in Phoenix, Ariz., opened a branch in nearby Avondale on
Saturday. According to the
Arizona Republic, Samurai celebrated having giving away thousands of books.
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Marilyn and Carlos Benemann are consolidating their book operations
into their Eureka Books store, Eureka, Calif., and will close their
Ferndale Books store in Ferndale after 23 years. The main reason:
Carlos has a new career as a court interpreter. According to the
Times-Standard,
Marilyn will focus on Internet sales. The stores specialize in used and
out-of-print books on California, the West, archeology, exploration and
Argentina, Carlos Benemann's birthplace.
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Congratulations! The Brown Bookstore at Brown University, Providence,
R.I., is celebrating its 35th anniversary with a sale that started on
Friday and lasts through tomorrow and a series of author signing and
raffles. Among the authors:
Bancroft Prize-winning historian and Brown University professor emeritus James T. Patterson, whose newest book is
Restless Giant: The United States from Watergate to Bush vs. Gore (Oxford).
Alumnus Michael Chorost, whose new book is
Rebuilt: How Becoming Part Computer Made Me More Human (Houghton Mifflin).
Alumna Jennifer Miller, author of
Inheriting the Holy Land: An American's Search for Hope in the Middle East (Ballantine).
Alumna Kirstin Allio, whose debut novel is
Garner (Coffee House Press).
Brown professor Forrest Gander, author of
A Faithful Existence: Reading, Memory & Transcendence (Shoemaker & Hoard, Publishers).
Sam White, author of
The Goddess of the Hunt Is Not Herself: Poems (Slope Editions).