Notes: Bookstore Wanted; Indigo's Black Ink
Shades of the effort on the south side of San Antonio, Tex., to lure a Waldenbooks:
Officials in Lawrence, Mass., birthplace of yours truly, lament that the city of 72,000 "on the verge of an economic turnaround" has no "large retail bookstore." The mayor told the Boston Globe that finding a store for the predominately Latino city is "the next phase in the city's rebirth," following the opening of many new businesses and two colleges. Barnes & Noble told the paper that Lawrence is "on its radar." Literacy advocates also want a bookstore.
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Effective today, Google is offering thousands of books it has scanned to be searched, read and cut and pasted. It is also allowing limited printing. The books are not protected by copyright and come from the four libraries that have been participating in the controversial Print Library Project.
No need to google Google. For more information, go to print.google.com.
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Barnes & Noble has signed a lease for a new store in Williamsburg, Va., that should open in August 2006. It will be located in the New Town Shopping Center at Ironbound Road and Monticello Avenue and stock close to 200,000 book, music, DVD and magazine titles.
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Chip Kidd, cover designer extraordinaire at Knopf, is the subject of a glowing article in the House & Home section of today's New York Times. (His partner calls his apartment "the Bat Cave.") Chip Kidd, Book One: Work: 1986-2006 (Rizzoli, $65, 0847827488) is now out, and a retrospective of his work, related to what is in the book, opens November 17 at the Cooper Union in New York City.
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In the quarter ended October 1, sales at Indigo Books & Music, Canada's largest bookseller, rose 10.8% to C$186.7 million (about US$158.5 million) and the company had a profit of C$1.1 million ($930,000) compared to a loss of C$7.8 million ($6.6 million) in the same period a year ago.
Sales at the company's superstores rose 12.9% to C$129 million ($109.5 million) while sales at mall stores increased 4.8% to C$34 million ($28.9 million). Sales at Indigo's online operations rose 40.3% to C$19.5 million ($16.5 million).
CEO Heather Reisman commented: "Clearly supply chain improvements, a continued focus on customer service and in-store merchandising combined to improve performance overall."
Officials in Lawrence, Mass., birthplace of yours truly, lament that the city of 72,000 "on the verge of an economic turnaround" has no "large retail bookstore." The mayor told the Boston Globe that finding a store for the predominately Latino city is "the next phase in the city's rebirth," following the opening of many new businesses and two colleges. Barnes & Noble told the paper that Lawrence is "on its radar." Literacy advocates also want a bookstore.
---
Effective today, Google is offering thousands of books it has scanned to be searched, read and cut and pasted. It is also allowing limited printing. The books are not protected by copyright and come from the four libraries that have been participating in the controversial Print Library Project.
No need to google Google. For more information, go to print.google.com.
---
Barnes & Noble has signed a lease for a new store in Williamsburg, Va., that should open in August 2006. It will be located in the New Town Shopping Center at Ironbound Road and Monticello Avenue and stock close to 200,000 book, music, DVD and magazine titles.
---
Chip Kidd, cover designer extraordinaire at Knopf, is the subject of a glowing article in the House & Home section of today's New York Times. (His partner calls his apartment "the Bat Cave.") Chip Kidd, Book One: Work: 1986-2006 (Rizzoli, $65, 0847827488) is now out, and a retrospective of his work, related to what is in the book, opens November 17 at the Cooper Union in New York City.
---
In the quarter ended October 1, sales at Indigo Books & Music, Canada's largest bookseller, rose 10.8% to C$186.7 million (about US$158.5 million) and the company had a profit of C$1.1 million ($930,000) compared to a loss of C$7.8 million ($6.6 million) in the same period a year ago.
Sales at the company's superstores rose 12.9% to C$129 million ($109.5 million) while sales at mall stores increased 4.8% to C$34 million ($28.9 million). Sales at Indigo's online operations rose 40.3% to C$19.5 million ($16.5 million).
CEO Heather Reisman commented: "Clearly supply chain improvements, a continued focus on customer service and in-store merchandising combined to improve performance overall."