Updike's Uplifting Elements of Fiction
"You imagine a reader and try to keep the reader interested. That's
storytelling. You also hope to reward the reader with a sense of a
completed design, that somebody is in charge, and that while life is
pointless, the book isn't pointless. The author knows where he is
going. That's form. As to style, you find words that will deliver the
image without stopping the action entirely. Writing ficiton is like
music. You have to keep it moving. You can have slow movements but
there has to be a sense of momentum, of going someplace. You hear a
snatch of Beethoven and it has a sense of momentum that is unmistakably
his. That's a nice quality if you can do it in fiction."--John Updike
in a Q&A with Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg in last weekend's Wall Street Journal.
Updike's Uplifting Elements of Fiction
Building Retrofit Forces Builders Booksource Out
Builders Booksource, whose main store is in Berkeley, Calif., is
closing its San Francisco store, which is located in Ghirardelli
Square, at the end of the month. The store's building is being
retrofitted for earthquakes and will reopen as a hotel. Builders
Booksource has had the store in San Francisco nearly 10 years; its
Berkeley store was founded in 1982. Builders Booksource sells books,
reference material and software for contractors, designers,
do-it-yourselfers and others with an interest in building,
architecture, engineering, construction, etc.
---
The
Scott County Times
welcomes Gary and Linda Wyatt, who recently moved to Sebastopol, Miss.,
and last week opened the Well Christian Bookstore, which sells Bibles,
books, music, children's items, church supplies and gifts. Linda told
the paper: "People are just now learning about us. There are a lot of
churches and Christian people in the community, so if they support us,
we'll be fine."
---
Los Angeles Weekly takes
a tour of five new and used stores, including Creation (the former
AMOK), Libros Revolucion, the Vedanta Center's bookstore, the Iliad and
Harmony Gallery/Counterpoint Records & Books.
Building Retrofit Forces Builders Booksource Out
NBA Finalists Feature a Few Familiar Figures
With a flourish--John Grisham making the announcements at William
Faulkner's Rowan Oak home in Oxford, Miss.--finalists for the National
Book Awards were named yesterday. The winners will be honored November
16 at a dinner hosted by Garrison Keillor in New York City.
The finalists:
Fiction:
-
E.L. Doctorow for The March (Random House)
-
Mary Gaitskill for Veronica (Pantheon)
-
Christopher Sorrentino for Trance (FSG)
-
Renè Steinke for Holy Skirts (Morrow)
-
William T. Vollmann for Europe Central (Viking)
Nonfiction:
-
Alan Burdick for Out of Eden: An Odyssey of Ecological Invasion (FSG)
-
Leo Damrosch for Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Restless Genius (Houghton Mifflin)
-
Joan Didion for The Year of Magical Thinking (Knopf)
-
Jim Dwyer and Kevin Flynn for 102 Minutes: The Untold Story of the Fight to Survive Inside the Twin Towers (Times Books)
-
Adam Hochschild for Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empire's Slaves (Houghton Mifflin)
Poetry:
-
John Ashbery for Where Shall I Wander (Ecco)
-
Frank Bidart for Star Dust: Poems (FSG)
-
Brendan Galvin for Habitat: New and Selected Poems, 1965-2005 (Louisiana State University Press)
-
W.S. Merwin for Migration: New and Selected Poems (Copper Canyon Press)
-
Vern Rutsala for The Moment's Equation (Ashland Poetry Press)
Young People's Literature
-
Jeanne Birdsall for The Penderwicks (Knopf)
-
Adele Griffin for Where I Want to Be (Putnam)
-
Chris Lynch for Inexcusable (Atheneum)
-
Walter Dean Myers for Autobiography of My Dead Brother (HarperTempest)
-
Deborah Wiles for Each Little Bird That Sings (Harcourt)
And later today: the somewhat delayed Nobel Prize in Literature. . .
NBA Finalists Feature a Few Familiar Figures
Media Heat: Oates, Rendell
Today on the Today Show:
-
Peter Manseau discusses his book about his unusual family, Vows: The Story
of a Priest, a Nun, and Their Son
(Free Press, $25, 0743249070).
-
Elizabeth Marquardt laments on the conditions of children in divorce in
her new book, Between Two Worlds: The Inner Lives of Children of
Divorce (Crown, $24.95, 0307237109).
-
Bob Pletka, author and compiler of My So-Called Digital Life: 2,000
Teenagers, 300 Cameras, and 30 Days to Document Their World (Santa
Monica Press, distributed by IPG, $24.95, 1595800050), is joined by
some of the students who participated in the project he organized.
---
Today on WAMU's Diane Rehm Show,
Carole Radziwill, author of
What
Remains: A Memoir of Fate, Friendship, and Love (Scribner, $25.95,
0743276949).
---
Today on the Bookworm:
Joyce Carol Oates, author of
Missing Mom (Ecco,
$25.95, 006081621X). As the show describes it: "Oates says this novel
was written as a tribute to her mother, who died last year. Clearer,
simpler, less literary than Oates' other books, it was meant to be a
novel her mother would have enjoyed. Oates intended to publish it under
a pseudonym. Her editor loved the book, and Oates agreed to let him
publish it under her own name--which provokes this conversation about
naive and sophisticated readers."
---
Yesterday Fresh Air spoke with
Ruth Rendell, who talked up her latest book,
13 Steps Down (Crown, $25, 1400098424).
Media Heat: Oates, Rendell
This Weekend on Book TV: Families, Race, Fallujah
Book TV airs on C-Span 2 from 8 a.m. Saturday to 8 a.m. Monday and
focuses on political and historical books as well as the book industry.
The following are highlights for this coming weekend. For more
information, go to Book TV's
Web site.
Saturday, October 15
12 p.m. History on Book TV. At an event hosted by the Women's National Democratic Club in Washington, D.C.,
Bonnie Angelo discussed family life at the White House, the subject of her latest book,
First Families: The Impact of the White House on Their Lives (Morrow, $25.95, 0060563567).
7 p.m. Encore Booknotes. In a segment first aired in 2002, law professor
Frank Wu talked about racial identity, which he explored in
Yellow: Race in America Beyond Black and White (Basic Books, $16, 046500640X).
8 p.m. After Words.
Bing West, former Assistant Secretary of Defense under President Reagan, discussed his book
No True Glory: A Frontline Account of the Battle for Fallujah
(Bantam, $25, 0553804022). He is interviewed by Mark Mazzetti, defense
correspondent for the
Los Angeles Times. (Re-airs Sunday at 6 p.m. and
9 p.m.)
This Weekend on Book TV: Families, Race, Fallujah
Shelf Maker Talk: Indies, Others Show Durability
Ted Baylis has one of the most unusual but reliable perspectives on new
book retailers of all kinds. As the head of Franklin Fixtures, the main
supplier of book display fixtures, he's one of the first people to be
contacted by prospective booksellers or booksellers planning to expand. Because
the company has branched into "any place that sells books," Baylis has
a fix on trends and growth in everything from traditional bookstores
and libraries to visitor center stores in the National Park Service,
educational toy stores and gift shops, for example.
Franklin Fixtures was founded 30 years ago to work with the old
Paperback Booksmith chain and for a time, most of its clients were
independents. But, of course, in the 1990s, indies were hurt badly by
the expansion of bookstore chains and the growth of online retailing.
The people who got into bookselling then were often unprepared, Baylis
said. "In the 1990s, we got calls all the time from people who just got
downsized and had kids in college who wanted to open 1,500-sq.-ft.
stores in strip malls." For the most part, "they were killed."
But these days new independents booksellers are stronger. The booksellers
now opening stores are "better financed, better organized and better
business people" than many of their predecessors, Baylis said. "B&N
and Borders are basically aircraft carriers and can't move too
quickly," while the newer indies "are creative and move like PT boats
or destroyers. They find niches where the demographics aren't right for
big stores but support modest stores. It's a lot harder for those who
want to do it, but it's doable." The newer booksellers also have been
able to bring "a lot more personality" to their stores.
Some college bookstores carry few or no trade books and have a range of
non-book products, but they are an important market for the company.
For college stores, Franklin Fixtures makes general book fixtures,
tables and cash registers and outsources some of the more unusual
fixtures such as steel shelving for textbooks, glass displays and
trendy clothing display fixtures.
Franklin Fixtures has been blessed by the Christian market, which
Baylis characterized as "very active for us," even as the independents
are being squeezed by secular chains that carry many more religion
titles than in the past and by big evangelical churches that have
opened their own stores. "They're having to reinvent themselves."
He added that in one key way Christian bookstores are different from
their secular brethren. "For many, they don't care about making money
because it's a mission," he explained. "Some are very business-like and
organized, but some put themselves in the hands of the Lord--that's how
they see it."
Libraries have been a strong market for the company because "many
libraries are using retail display techniques in ways to make them more
user friendly and fun." At one library recently, he said, the company
converted "a lot of shelving into display fixtures, and their
circulation numbers went through the ceiling." Many libraries want new
arrivals, fiction, CDs, DVDs and audios--"all the stuff the patrons
don't remember they have"--put in front. Adopting certain bookstore
approaches and "using some retail techniques and display signage" also
makes a big difference, Baylis said.
Museum gift shops tend to be about 2,000 square feet and offer a
different merchandising mix from some of Franklin Fixtures's other
clients. To museum stores, "we preach the concept of doing more little
kiosks--in effect, setting up mini stores around the museum in the way
the Metropolitan Museum of Art has." At these mobile fixtures, museums
display a variety of merchandise, many related to nearby shows or
exhibitions.
"Some museums have been reluctant to be what they consider crassly
commercial," Baylis continued, "but now many not-for-profits are
recognizing the value of having a profitable store. Good store design,
good fixturing, good visual merchandising and good cross merchandising
can help make a profit. For a long time, it was a cute little thing in
the corner."
Gift stores sell "a little bit" of books. By contrast, national park stores "have a lot of books."
One longtime Franklin Fixture market appears to have gone the way of the
horseless carriage. "We used to love the music world"--Franklin Fixtures made display
fixtures variously for LPs, 8-tracks, cassettes and CDs, Baylis said.
"We've been rooting for mini CDs, but I think they'll all go away."
Shelf Maker Talk: Indies, Others Show Durability