The resurrection of the book shop?
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
Daunt is a somewhat divisive character, who certainly knows his own mind, and isn’t t afraid to voice controversial opinions. He was a vocal opponent of high street lockdowns, for example.
The article is quite right about promotional spend, which is the curse of many hight street establishments ( ask yourself why your average big Tesco stocks so many brands of Olive oil). Promotional marketing spend utterly distorts markets in all kinds of damaging ways. The so called top 50 in WHS is the top 50 by publisher marketing spend , not sales. And massive marketing spend and huge returns of books that don’t sell are in nobody’s interest.
Re Waterstones / B and N/ Foyles/ Blackwell, it has to be said that the big 5 or six publishers still get better representation than perhaps they ought to. But also true to say that equal-footing access for all publishers does allow for a reasonable level of stock on their shelves for smaller publishers. And it is also the case that success for his chains is good for most publishers , allowing Waterstones etc to invest in the more niche titles that make their shops interesting and attractive.
Edit: Daunt does rather overplay the power that individual stores have in terms of range. Most buying and ranging is done centrally .But if they want a book, they can stock it. And they do.Last edited by teamsaint; 28-12-22, 22:28.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Very interesting article, thank you for posting it.
For anyone within striking distance of Wimbledon, may I recommend Wimbledon Books. An independent bookshop run on similar principles. A small shop with an excellent selection of recently published fiction and non-fiction on display. Very efficient ordering for books not in stock. I always find it a pleasure to browse there. I am very lucky in having this shop within one minute's walk of my office.
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Originally posted by David-G View PostVery interesting article, thank you for posting it.
For anyone within striking distance of Wimbledon, may I recommend Wimbledon Books. An independent bookshop run on similar principles. A small shop with an excellent selection of recently published fiction and non-fiction on display. Very efficient ordering for books not in stock. I always find it a pleasure to browse there. I am very lucky in having this shop within one minute's walk of my office.Last edited by Old Grumpy; 29-12-22, 12:21.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostAs ever, I left book buying for presents until Christmas Eve, too late for our independent bookshop which closed, thus losing business, whilst Waterstones remained open.
Several of the smaller shops in town have chosen to have a longer shutdown, and certainly judging by how quiet it was on Christmas Eve there would have been little for them to gain by being open then - just more energy costs!
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Special orders in indie bookshops are the lifeblood of those businesses.
They can usually order any book in stock at Gardners before 5.00 pm, and have it the next day. They get a reasonable discount ( usually) and no stockholding, so it is an easy win. You can also help your local indie by ordering online from Hive Books ( part of Gardners) and nominating your favourite indie to receive part of the profit, whilst having the book delivered to either you or the shop, I think.
Gardners is a very impressive business, and they do a fantastic job of fulfilling demand across the entire industry.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by JasonPalmer View PostMy research is that second hand bookshops in seaside towns are a treasure trove, no doubt because a lot of bookish people retire to the seaside and when they die their books are cleared out to the second hand bookshops.
Where I work there is a a bookshop run by volunteers, which despite having to close for the winter, and much of the stock being fiction at 50p makes several thousand pounds a year. For regular visitors/pass holders it's part of their visit - with children's books always going well - and for the out of area visitors they stock up with reading matter either for their stay or to take home. Donations are sometimes of the house clearance type as you say, but the shop has been there for so many years it's become local habit to bring surplus books. In recent years several of the local charity shops either stopped or reduced their book selling so we benefited then, but even now that some have started selling again we're not short of donations. Staff on site bring in books as well, and bring back the books they've bought and read - it's a bit like having a subscription library on site!
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Yes, I've found NT bookshops wonderful.
One thing second-hand books bring with them is a little of their former owner's life. 'The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church' presented to a young priest on his ordination by a congregation in 1959 at 70shillings (quite an expensive book then) , still in its pale blue paper dust cover, faded on the spine and almost worn away where it was repeatedly grasped to pull it off a shelf to consult during many years of his ministry, then , presumably, after his death, left to the NT .
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Originally posted by smittims View PostYes, I've found NT bookshops wonderful.
One thing second-hand books bring with them is a little of their former owner's life. 'The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church' presented to a young priest on his ordination by a congregation in 1959 at 70shillings (quite an expensive book then) , still in its pale blue paper dust cover, faded on the spine and almost worn away where it was repeatedly grasped to pull it off a shelf to consult during many years of his ministry, then , presumably, after his death, left to the NT .
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Indeed, second hand bookshops are lovely to browse and find bargains. You can see when someone has had a clear out when their are several books around the same subject. I even found some 80s eagle comics in a second hand bookshop at the seaside this year. Ahhh the memories, comics and a crunchie.Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
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