Concerns that Harry Potter movies might lose audiences because of a PG
rating or an aging base of fans were dispelled, as it were, over the
weekend.
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire grossed $101.4
million, the highest opening weekend for a Potter movie yet and one of
the top five for any movie. Even Warner Bros. was pleasantly surprised.
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Martha Stewart fans began lining up at 3 a.m. on Saturday for her noon
appearance at a B&N in Minneapolis, Minn., according to the
Pioneer Press.
After someone on line recommended Terrace Horticultural Books, which
specializes in used and antiquarian gardening books, Stewart headed
over to the store and bought 20 books on Japanese and Chinese
gardening, garden ornaments and landscape architecture in Europe.
Kent Petterson, who owns the store with his wife, Abby L.
Farr-Petterson, told the paper: "She was very kind and just the kind of
person I like to have in the store. A good buyer, too. She really
cleaned up."
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After eight years of holding sales at a downtown mall, Friends of the
Bristol Public Library in Bristol, Conn., prepares to move into new
space in the expanded library, the
Bristol Press reported. The group wants to have a little more time before it checks out of the mall.
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Speaking of friends of library organizations, since opening a bookstore
in 1991, the Friends of the San Antonio Public Library in Texas has
donated more than $450,000 to the library from its Book Cellar.
San Antonio Express-News columnist Paula Allen provides a history of the store and organization.
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Nancy Greene and Patricia McElreath are giving up Greene's Books and
Beans, the coffeehouse and bookstore in New London, Conn., that they
founded nine years ago, the
New London Day
reported. In January, Greene's daughter, Kate Greene, will take over
the shop, which has benefited from an improving neighborhood. In the
early days, according to the story, some people thought Greene's Books
and Beans was a brothel or a front for drug sales.
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Under the headline "Books Are the Focus of This 25 Year Old," the
Portsmouth Herald
profiles Kristin Hays, who works at a B&N in Newington, N.H., where
she is "a lead bookseller in charge of the audio, humor, games and
travel sections of the store. She's also the employee who heads up the
'staff recommends' shelf."
Hays, who wants to be a professional photographer, has recommended the photo-essay book
Tree: A New Vision of the American Forest by James Balog and
Tooth and Claw, a collection of short stories by T. C. Boyle.
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Speaking of young booksellers, check out
The Written Nerd: Confessions of an Independent Bookseller and Unrepentant Book Nerd, a
new blog written by Jessica Stockton, manager of Labyrinth Books in New York City.
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The
Anchorage Daily News
offers a roundup of stores in the suburban Valley near Anchorage,
Alaska, including Alaskana Books, Fireside Books, Annabel's and Shalom
Books.
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A sudoku seminar at a B&N in Fort Myers, Fla., drew more than 200 people, according to the
News-Press. One participant called sudoku "like a math class, but more fun than studying math in a classroom."