I want indie bookstores to survive.
Actually, fuck that. I want indie bookstores to thrive.
And I don’t think that’s impossible. Honestly.
Okay, yeah, the Internet has changed everything — it was a lightning strike that set the whole forest ablaze, and out of the fire and ash came the snorfling hell-beast known as Amazon and that monster tromped everything with its big hooves while also delivering packages crazy fast using Prime delivery (“RAAAR SMASH FIRE RAZE THE LANDSCAPE oh hey here’s your copy of The Cuckoo’s Calling, a weed-whacker, a bulk order of Lapsang Souchong tea sachets, seven smoke alarms, and an inflatable radio-controlled talking moon-buggy, all for 40% off and swift two-day delivery thanks for using Amazon RAAAAR STOMPY STOMPY STOMPY”).
Despite all that, I think indie bookstores are gonna rock the next century. I think we’re veering back away from Big Bulk One-Size-Fits-All services and we’re finding folks returning to The Niche — whether that’s a niche filled with artisanal gin, farm-fresh eggs, hand-painted clit-ticklers, whatever. I think as capitalists we have an unhealthy fear of the niche, as if it suggests marginalization of product. But hey, fuck that. I’m an author. The niche is my wheelhouse, whatever the hell a “wheelhouse” is. I live in the niche. This is where I lay my head at night.
Art grows stronger under the pressure of a niche.
Hell, if the Barnesandnoblepocalypse happens, I think indie bookstores will rise up — hot and shrieky like a fire-winged phoenix! — and fill the void with love and passion and probably lava.
Still. Still. That’s easier said that done. And it’s not going to be a guarantee that bookstores will automagically survive — the Internet has forced everybody to up their game, to evolve or die, to embrace the Jurassic Park ethos of life will find a way.
I’ve got some ideas for indie bookstores. These aren’t genius recommendations and, frankly, many great indie bookstores already do them. These are suggestions from an amateur hour pontificator — a guy whose job is writing shit down, not running bookstores.
Just the same, here I am, writing some shit down.
Some thoughts, then, on how indie bookstores survive, then thrive.
Can’t Be All About Selling Books
You’ll never really beat Amazon on price. Nobody will beat Amazon on price. Maybe, maybe you can match them. But you’re trying to beat the 800-lb mecha-gorilla at the game of being an 800-lb mecha-gorilla. Bookstores that try to exist solely on the basis of “just selling books” are the bookstores that I think you see quietly wither on the branch like a sun-crushed plum.
Be The Bridge Between Author And Audience
Blah blah blah, social media, Faceyspace and Twatter and AnonymousHumpFinder-dot-com, yes, I know, authors and their readers are able to interact all the time any time on the weird wide web of the Internet.
Still, meatspace has enormous value for authors — and not just because it’s a space filled with meat. Fostering real world connections — signing books, meeting fans, having drinks, hunting non-readers for sport — is way more memorable for both author and audience.
Newsflash: one of the best places for this to happen is at bookstores. Indie bookstores in particular! An indie bookstore feels like a comfortable neighborhood bar where the drug of choice is words on pages instead of boozes in glasses.
True fact: not all bookstores grok this. I’ve spoken with a few indie bookstores that treated me like I was, I dunno, bugging them. Like, “Oh, you’re… an author? Ew.” As if authors were not the people who helped fill that bookstore with crazy wonder. I assume it was because I wasn’t a bestselling author? They acted like I was a grungy raccoon begging at the back door for food scraps. And other bookstores don’t prefer to have anything to do with authors at all. Which, you know, is their prerogative. I’m just saying:
Help authors be awesome, and authors will help bookstores be the same.
Symbiosis, baby.
Cover Charge
Charge for events. I know, this is controversial — how much will you charge? Do authors get a cut? If someone runs a book club there, do they get a cut? I’m not saying you need to make readers break the bank just to get into an author signing, and I’m not saying every author signing needs to be a pay-to-get-in dealy-o.
But here’s the thing: I pay money for something, it has value to me. More than if I don’t. And I think you deserve something for putting on a great event and, ostensibly, money paid into an event will be paid back out to make events double-awesomer.
And the cover charge is easy and perfectly palatable when you frame it like this:
One book minimum.
Like, if I go to a comedy club, there’s a drink minimum. I gotta buy a fucking drink to stay inside the club. Well, same goes for the bookstore except here it’s, if you’re at the event, you better buy a book. Just one. The author’s book? Maybe, sure, that’d be nice, but if not — really, seriously, any book. That’s your cover charge. You know what I’d think about that price? I’d think, fuck yeah. I’d think, excuse to buy a new book! Then I’d vibrate quietly, because I love the idea of being forced to buy new books. IT GIVES ME A SEXUAL THRILL SHUT UP.
Safe Space For Readers Of All Genres
Don’t be a bookstore that looks down on readers of any book (I mean, unless it’s a book by Adolf Hitler or something, then I guess you can put on your judgey face). In having a chat with the fine feathered folks of Word Bookstore in Brooklyn, it was refreshing to see people open to books and authors of any stripe. It’s not literary folks looking down on genre. It’s not genre writers looking down on romance. Everybody gets to play in the pool. Books on shelves. Events in-house. Lots of authors. Lots of genres and age ranges. Very refreshing.
More to the point, indie bookstores are already niche. Don’t decrease the size of your capitalist cubbyhole by focusing purely on, say, hoity-toity lit-fic, because first: dick move. And second: can you actually afford to restrict your market so completely?
Value-Add: Physical Product
No reason that an author/publisher and a bookstore cannot partner together to offer unique swag: this could be anything, really. Bookmarks. Postcards. A Lulu-produced short story. A variant-cover limited edition book (think what Forbidden Planet does with Angry Robot’s Adam Christopher novels). A life-size RealDoll of the author? (Okay, ew, maybe not. Nobody wants to see a rubber version of me with my bearded mouth open in a hungry, seductive ‘O.’ … OR DO THEY? Gimme a call, bookstores. We can make this happen.)
Value-Add: Digital Product
Same thing as above, except this time, the added value happens to be digital product. I’m not just talking about offering a Kobo version (though, hey, that’s good, too). I mean, if you buy my book from XYZ indie store, you get an additional short story e-mailed to you. Or you can buy my new novella only through indie bookstores, and they’ll hand your ass a USB key shaped like my beard. Or buying my book through one particular store earns you a seat in a cool Google Hangout where I answer questions about the book or do a reading from the unpublished sequel or do a slovenly striptease while eating a drippy cheesesteak. *licks fingers*
Make Friends With Indie Authors
I don’t know how this works. I really don’t. But indie authors and indie bookstores are a match made in theoretical heaven. Maybe this is a thing that really takes off with like, Espresso book printing machines, I dunno. Maybe it comes through the Kobo connection. But bookstores will be served well by making room for strong indie authors (and in this sense bookstores could be the new gatekeepers amongst a seething mass of new self-published authors whose audience is increasingly in need of a few kept gates now and again). But it also comes from indie authors, too, who have to stop hitching their wagons to Amazon. (Seriously, if I see one more self-published author go on a rant against Big Corporate Publishing while also singing the holy praises of giant kaiju Amazon, I will kill a pony on YouTube.)
Ahem
Very quick shout-outs to some indie bookstores I love and I know others love, too:
Mysterious Galaxy
Word Bookstore
Riverrun Bookstore
Doylestown Bookshop
Moravian Bookshop
High-five to all of them.
Feel free to shout out your own favorite bookstores in the comments — and also to suggest how you think indie bookstores are rocking or could rock harder.
ashleycapes says:
Awesome post, Chuck – I saw this the other day and found the stats toward the bottom very interesting, and, for me in Oz, very heartening:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-07-17/newton-would-an-author-by-any-other-name-sell-as-sweetly/4825304
My fav is ‘Collected Works’ in Melbourne, Australia – one of the greatest poetry-dedicated stores in the country 🙂
July 24, 2013 — 6:53 AM
terribleminds says:
Related:
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-07-23/why-amazon-should-play-nice-with-local-bookstores
— c.
July 24, 2013 — 7:03 AM
Alison DeLuca (@AlisonDeLuca) says:
Alas, we don’t have a local Indie bookshop. I have to travel many miles to get to one. But I miss them so – especially the ones with a large black cat sleeping in the front window.
July 24, 2013 — 7:20 AM
Gaye Weekes says:
Well – not many bookstores big or small in my patch of rural Snowdonia, N Wales, UK – BUT, only 10 miles away in Porthmadog we have a brilliant indie called Browsers Bookshop, 73 High St. Only small but they have a very fast ordering service. Also sells the only art materials I know of round here… and Browsers bookmarks (in every book purchased – so I have a nice collection coming along) are a real treat – each with a thought-provoking quotation. Just wish it was big enough for a comfy reading corner and coffee machine (and maybe a cat or two)!
July 24, 2013 — 7:36 AM
terribleminds says:
Right, and the great thing is when indie bookstores don’t always require you to do into the store. You can order books online from some of the great indies.
July 24, 2013 — 7:43 AM
delilah says:
Shout-out to Foxtale Book Shoppe in Woodstock, GA. Authors, come meet the Foxes! They’ll treat you like a prince! Or princess! Or freaky nutjob who shows up dressed like a fox because they don’t understand metaphor!
July 24, 2013 — 8:00 AM
Mary Lindsey says:
I adore Blue Willow Bookshop, Murder by the Book (both in Houston, TX) and a newcomer to the scene, The Book Spot (Round Rock). Great article, Chuck.
July 24, 2013 — 8:05 AM
Wanderer says:
Just as I was wondering where Houston was hiding their indie stores. I know where I’m going on my next bookstore adventure! Thanks, Mary!
July 24, 2013 — 9:51 AM
Mathew Paust says:
Good ideas.
July 24, 2013 — 8:27 AM
David Eccles (@Vikingbeard) says:
A great blog, Chuck. Thanks for your wisdom and your entertainment.
I’d like to give a shout-out to Webberlys Bookshop in Stoke-on-Trent, England, which is 100 years old this year! It’s a great place not only for books, but for art materials and some delicious fountain pens too! Take a look at the pic of the outside of the building itself on their website. Beautiful Victorian architecture!
http://www.webberleys.co.uk/
July 24, 2013 — 8:28 AM
pooks says:
As a writer in Texas, thanks for these recs, Mary Lindsay!
July 24, 2013 — 8:31 AM
Shecky says:
Another value-add: The big brick bookstores have always had some sort of member-extra stuff. B&N membership pays for itself quickly through discounted prices, for example. Some kind of loyalty card or membership thingie, say for a small percentage of your purchase going towards store credit or in-store wi-fi privileges something, is a nice way to add just that extra little bit of draw.
Something else I remember from my favorite bookshops: comfort. Most of the big-box bookstores have a few little nooks with some armchairs or some such, maybe a coffee shop in a corner, wi-fi password with purchase, that kind of thing. Those are certainly good, yes, but what I’m talking about is a comfortable-FEELING place. Something that doesn’t just feel like “here’s a big space with lots of dull shelving designed to pack as many books into as small a space as possible and SELL SELL SELL” but like “Oh, hey, glad you came; make yourself at home, pet the cat, look at this weird but funny little fingerpainting the owner’s niece did, help yourself to some of that coffee over there, etc.” Customers like to feel as though they’re hanging with someone, not being power-sidewalked through a purchasing buffet.
I love bookstores. Always have. But my favorites, the ones that get my loyalty instead of just my return business because it’s convenient, are the ones where it’s nice to be there and everybody knows your name (“NORM!” “Would you like the new Cherk Wendig book, Mr. Peterson?” “Isn’t it a little early, Woody?” “For a book?” “No, for stupid questions. Gimme the damn book.”)
July 24, 2013 — 8:33 AM
Liz Blocker (@lizblocker) says:
YES. Totally with you on the comfort, vibe, and welcome of the great indie stores.
July 24, 2013 — 9:02 AM
Shecky says:
For a perfect example, my favorite bookshop of all time is a little place in Lafayette, Louisiana, called Alexander Books: http://www.alexanderbooks.net/ It’s a comfy place that, yes, specializes in used books, but the atmosphere really makes it my kind of place. I still hang on to my last surviving bookmark from there (15 years ago!) like grim death. It’s where a reader feels at *home*.
July 24, 2013 — 10:34 AM
Paul Weimer (@PrinceJvstin) says:
Uncle Hugo’s (and its twin, Uncle Edgar’s) here in Minneapolis.
As a more zombie (sorry, no offense), Dreamhaven also in Minneapolis sort of still exists, almost only as an “occasional” bookstore than anything else.
July 24, 2013 — 8:39 AM
Adam Christopher (@ghostfinder) says:
Thanks for the mention Chuck!
The point about being a “Safe space for readers of all genres” is so important – and it also applies to WRITERS of all genres. Unfortunately, like you (and a few other author friends of mine), I’ve met a few indie store booksellers who have been pretty rude and unwelcoming, while the staff down the street at the national chain bookstore have been enthusiastic and even excited about having an author in. I suspect it’s down to genre snobbery, but it’s not particularly encouraging. Oddly enough, I haven’t had a bad experience in a large chain store – perhaps because they value every department and category they sell, because they understand that selling books is what its all about.
I’m a supporter of indie bookstores, no question about it. I’m also a big supporter of good bookstores and good booksellers, whether they are/work in a chain store or not.
And when an indie bookstore really GETS it, then the magic happens, and there is no book-buying experience like it.
July 24, 2013 — 8:53 AM
delilah says:
Word. My previously favorite indie bookstore treated me so badly that I haven’t been back since. No author should feel shame in a bookstore. Nor should any reader.
July 24, 2013 — 9:39 AM
Liz Blocker (@lizblocker) says:
Love this whole idea/post/meme. I, too, get some kind of weird thrill from shopping for actual, physical books – and if someone MAKES me do it, well, let’s just say I may or may not have some rich little fantasies involving that scenario.
Um. Moving on.
I love books – I mean the real, physical books that I hold in my hot little hand – and I love indie bookstores, where I can sit and read and people-watch and pet cats and relax without time constraint or fear of judgement. Massachusetts is chock full of amazing indie bookstores, and not just in the greater Boston area. I just discovered THREE of them in Shelburne Falls, a tiny village of about 2,000 people, and two of those three stores sold not only books, but all sorts of weird crazy items that walk that fine line between antique and pure junk. I have no idea how all three are surviving, but I’m so glad they are.
My fave closest to where I live is the grand Brookline Booksmith (www.brooklinebooksmith.com), which DOES sell books online, still has a whole basement full of gently used (and highly discounted) books, and a ton of great events. I got to listen to, meet, and get a book signed by the ridiculously talented and articulate Jeannette Winterson there, which thrilled my writer-ly soul so much that I would have gone even if there was a TWENTY book minimum (Which there wasn’t. Not even a one-book minimum. And I love that idea, by the way.)
And, of course, there is the always kick-ass Trident Booksellers (tridentbookscafe.com) in downtown Boston.
July 24, 2013 — 8:59 AM
Wanderer says:
My move to Boston just got so much happier! I can’t wait to check out all the indie stores there. Trident is going on the list. I’m moving to Cambridge—it seems like they have a lot of smaller bookshops there I can’t wait to visit. I’m hoping at least one will have a cozy corner and some snacks where I can camp out while I write.
July 24, 2013 — 10:00 AM
Just this guy, you know? says:
Porter Square Books in (natch) Porter Square has just that!
July 24, 2013 — 11:16 AM
Wanderer says:
I absolutely cannot wait to visit! Thanks!
July 24, 2013 — 11:33 AM
Liz Blocker (@lizblocker) says:
Cambridge is indie bookstore central 🙂 There are a ton – just do a Yelp search for independent bookstores in Cambridge and you’ll get a nice long list of places to check out!
July 24, 2013 — 12:53 PM
Wanderer says:
Wonderful!
July 24, 2013 — 12:56 PM
jakebible says:
Great post. I wish my local “indie” bookstore would take this advice. They lump small press with self-pubbed and will only carry on consignment. With plenty of fees added in there. For a horror writer this poses a problem since basically all horror publishers are small press! So even though I am now “legit” I’m not really legit legit because I have not been published by the MegaCorporate Publishers (there’s like two of them now, right?). And this is Asheville, man. The city that lives and breathes Art and prides itself on its Buy Local organization. A real bummer.
July 24, 2013 — 9:16 AM
betsydornbusch says:
I like the one book minimum.
There’s a new bookshop in Denver called The Book Bar. You got it, alckyhol with your books! Woot! Can’t wait to go. (They even have story time happy hour for the kids…)
July 24, 2013 — 9:37 AM
ergeller57 says:
Busboy’s and Poets in DC epitomizes the new paradigm: Great books, great food, lots of alcohol. Browse/buy books while waiting for table or couch to free up, read book during brunch, buy another book on the way out. The combination of bookstore + sustenance + alcohol will defeat the literary industrial complex into submission. I hope.
July 24, 2013 — 9:39 AM
Terri-Lynne DeFino says:
Best thing I’ve ever read concerning indie-bookstores and the market in general. You’ve inspired me. Thanks!
July 24, 2013 — 9:51 AM
emilywenstrom says:
Shout out for DC’s Politics and Prose http://www.politics-prose.com/
July 24, 2013 — 10:00 AM
Sean Cummings says:
McNally Robinson Booksellers, Saskatoon Canada. They are huge supporters of local talent.
July 24, 2013 — 10:00 AM
thesexiestwriter says:
Joseph-Beth bookstore in Lexington, KY is a joy to visit. Anyone in town for a basketball game or horse race should stop in. They took the entire atrium of a mall that was failing and turned it into a bookstore/restaurant/coffee shop/meeting place/batcave
July 24, 2013 — 10:08 AM
Simon says:
You know, it’s funny, I was just saying earlier this week that the best way for B&N to avoid a catastrophic meltdown was to become more LIKE small, independent bookstores.
Of course what I’d really like to see is just more small, independent bookstores. Interesting suggestions. One book cover…
July 24, 2013 — 10:23 AM
Joel Arnold says:
Great article! One of my favorite bookstores is The Haunted Bookshop in Iowa City.
July 24, 2013 — 10:34 AM
K. (@ScrivK) says:
Great post and I could not agree more. Indie bookstores will never beat Amazon on price. They can try but they will fail because they do not have the deep pockets Amazon has at its disposal. They could operate at a loss until every damn indie bookstore closes shop if they had to.
Indie bookstores need to shift their strategy to differentiation. Meaning, what can they offer that Amazon cannot, they find that and they’ll find their bread and butter.
July 24, 2013 — 10:35 AM
terribleminds says:
Yep. Amazon has things it will never do well, and that is the space that indie bookstores must fill.
One thing I didn’t mention in the post — Amazon is at present a piss-poor curator of content. Terrible recommendation engine. But booksellers (and librarians, of course) are *excellent* human recommendation engines. 🙂
— c.
July 24, 2013 — 10:49 AM
Alecia Miller says:
I have to give a shout out to Chester County Book Company in West Chester PA. They are in the process of moving to a slightly smaller location at the moment, but they are a fantastic group. Very community friendly, hosting both local and global authors for signings, as well as reading by local writing groups.
July 24, 2013 — 10:58 AM
terribleminds says:
They ARE a great store. Where are they moving? I had heard they were just plain closing, so this is very exciting news.
July 24, 2013 — 10:58 AM
Tia Kalla (@tiakall) says:
I like the one book minimum, I just wish it didn’t have to be spelled out. Same as when I have a writing group meeting in a local bookstore or coffee shop, I make it a point to buy something. It’s only polite when you’re making use of their facilities. And if I was going with someone who absolutely couldn’t make the minimum because they’ve got to pay rent or something, I’d buy the book for them.
Indies also have something that B&Ns and Amazon can’t offer: ambiance. The indies I’ve been in have been cozy and inviting, as well as a little quirky.
(My dream once I become a fabulously wealthy bestselling author is to snatch up one of these Victorian-style turn of the century homes here or downtown and turn it into a cafe/bookstore. You can’t beat the charm of the old home turned store!)
July 24, 2013 — 10:59 AM
Robin Tidwell says:
THAT was awesome! As a bookstore owner, publisher, and author, I get totally get it. And, just for the record, our store SPECIALIZES in local authors – or non-local, we’re not picky. We have authors in the store for events every Saturday, 1-3. Our local and small-press (includes self-pubbed) section is right up front. THESE authors come to the store as customers, too. And speaking of the EBM, as soon as the money fairy pays me a visit, I’m totally getting one and putting it right in the front window!
July 24, 2013 — 11:00 AM
trkravtin says:
I will just jump in here and say that as a book selling professional, there are many aspects of the indie bookstore business model that many people would never have any reason to understand, unless you were an independent bookstore owner slogging it out everyday to make a buck. It is an extremely difficult business in which to thrive, and I do my very best to help all the independent bookstores I do business with survive and thrive. Independent bookstores have so many inherent challenges and a deck so unfairly stacked against them in the market you wouldn’t believe it. I cringe at ANY business alienating any customer for any reason whatsoever, and unfortunately sometimes that happens in bookstores. However, seek out the stores that will engage with you either as an author or as a reader and develop a relationship with them, and I’m sure that they will benefit as a business from your efforts. And that doesn’t mean just buying books. Buying books is of the utmost importance, and, go out of your way to let them get to know you. Invest yourself in their success. Who knows where that will take you both? They need all the help and support they can get.
July 24, 2013 — 11:00 AM
Tymber Dalton says:
Haslam’s Book Store in St. Pete, Florida. Love that store. They’ve been a local fixture for years. Staff is super-nice.
And I’ve had (not with Haslam’s, but with another) a negative experience with an indie bookstore as an author. They looked at me like I was infected with the plague when I told them my books are also available in e-book format. I wanted to do a local book signing for one of my contemporary romances (probably less graphic than a lot of the romances they were already selling) which was SET LOCALLY. Nope. Hell, I even got the local county library system to carry it, that’s how tame it was, but when the owner looked it up in the system, she saw that my publisher does POD and wouldn’t touch it. Even when I offered to do it on consignment. Nope.
So listen up, indie bookstores. If you want to stay in business, remember that authors are people, too. And we’re also READERS. As a reader, I refused to go back into that bookstore. And I told my friends what they’d done, the attitude that is (it was the owner, and she was damned RUDE, to be honest), and they stayed away from that bookstore.
If you don’t want to carry a book, you can smile and simply say sorry, you don’t think that book would be a good fit for your store. No problem. That’s business. But the owner ranted and railed that books “like mine” (digital first, and then POD and sold by Amazon) were RUINING the world. And how dare I ask to do a signing there. (They did signings on a regular basis.)
At the time, my husband worked for county government and had a lot of friends and contacts. I could have FILLED that bookstore with people for a signing. Instead, they got a shit-ton of bad word-of-mouth press because the owner was rude. And I later heard from other local authors that I wasn’t the only author she was rude to. If you weren’t a NY author, she wanted nothing to do with you.
July 24, 2013 — 11:05 AM
Timothy Lewis says:
My wife’s bookstore has been featured on Angry Robot Books website after one of our loyal customers contacted them and we continue to have book clubs monthly. Even read one of yours last month. (Blackbirds).
July 24, 2013 — 11:06 AM
Timothy Lewis says:
http://angryrobotbooks.com/2013/05/robots-rogues-bookstore/
July 24, 2013 — 11:17 AM
Cynthia says:
Chuck: Signed up for your blog two weeks ago–first comment. I LOVE you. Okay, maybe not YOU, but your rants click with me buddy. You rock.
July 24, 2013 — 11:39 AM
Samantha says:
I wish that there were some indie bookstores that I had found in this area that were nice. The staff haven’t been very friendly. I haven’t ventured further than the two towns within fifteen-twenty minutes of me though, and have yet to see others. I’d love some recommendations on bookstores in the Napa/Sonoma area if anyone knows.
July 24, 2013 — 11:41 AM
mittensmorgul says:
Agree. Every time I go to an author event, I ALWAYS buy at least one book from the hosting bookstore (and usually buy several). The sad bit is the distance I have to go to shop somewhere other than B&N. I would happily buy books at an independent store on a regular basis if the closest one wasn’t an hour’s drive away.
July 24, 2013 — 11:42 AM
Dale T. Phillips says:
Chuck, wish you’d send this to every indie bookstore in the country, as a start. So many just don’t get it, and blame their ebbing sales on Amazon, ebooks, and “people not reading as much,” rather than their own crappy business practices. I send polite inquiries about the possibility for book-stocking (pubbed by small presses) and author appearances, backed up with a press kit and creds, and many places don’t even respond! I could fill your little bookstore with readers and buyers, and you won’t bother to talk to me?
Screw ya, then- I don’t care if you fail- maybe the folks that buy you out will be more responsive. Actually have had the equivalent of “come back and talk to us when you’re famous.” Oh, yeah, you did nothing to help me get there, so let me come benefit you. Thanks for nothing! When you offer to help someone, and they act like you’re the problem, it really turns you off.
So let’s hear it for the ones who get it! Be the meeting place for author and reader, which Amazon doesn’t yet offer.
July 24, 2013 — 11:43 AM
Paula says:
Once Upon a Time bookstore in Montrose, CA. Awesome store. They specialize in children’s books but have plenty to offer adults, too.
July 24, 2013 — 11:45 AM
thependemon says:
The Last Bookstore in Los Angeles is my favorite local haunt: http://lastbookstorela.com/
And by haunt I mean I literally wandering the upstairs labyrinth of used books covered in a sheet like a homeless Moaning Myrtle.
July 24, 2013 — 12:17 PM
Heather Ormsby says:
Tattered Cover bookstores in Denver, CO. Wonderful stores.
July 24, 2013 — 12:19 PM
J Kenton Pierce says:
Good stuff here, as usual. And I loved the bit about not looking down on certain types of readers. My town has (or had, I’m not sure if it’s still around.) a book store like that. The owner was very pleasant until I asked if he had a sci-fi/fantasy section. He got this look like he’d tried to sneak a fart and it got stuck haflway and he didn’t quite know what to do about that. “They’re back there. I don’t bother organizing them.” A few shelves, with sci-fi, fantasy, and horror all thrown together. He kept coming back and checking on my like he thought I was going to pee in the corner, tapping his foot like I was using up valuable gravity. I don’t even know if the still exists.
July 24, 2013 — 12:31 PM
jkflickinger says:
Brilliant article that makes complete sense but until the writing world comes around, please don’t kill a pony. A cat maybe. I really hate cats.
July 24, 2013 — 12:35 PM
thetitularauthor says:
Mysterious Books in Los Angeles is doing this, and doing it well. They run an amazing event called Noir At The Bar, where they set up a freaking bookstore in the back of a little bar, run an amazing reading with cool projections on the back wall, and EVERYBODY THERE IS EFFING AMAZING. Actually, the manager rang me up and then joined me for a drink later, all the while telling me that I *MUST* buy Chuck Wendig’s latest book, haha.
July 24, 2013 — 12:58 PM
Niki B says:
You know what goes great with books? Booze. I think Denver’s BookBar is on to something here:
http://denver.eater.com/archives/2013/05/29/bookbar.php
July 24, 2013 — 1:50 PM
Rachel says:
Love this. Yes yes yes. Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh is wonderful. So is Diane’s Books in Greenwich, CT. I’ve got this fond little dream of opening an indie bookstore/bakery/bar when I get old and crotchety. And of course we’ll have authors nights! Maybe even a writing group!
July 24, 2013 — 4:07 PM
Page says:
I have always loved Indie bookstores. Always patronized Indie bookstores. But they are going the way of the dinosaurs, Chuck. There are no more where I live. So what am I to do? I buy discount books at the local library to help them stay open. The books I buy on Amazon I buy from small booksellers. What else? Tell me.
July 24, 2013 — 4:15 PM
Roberta King says:
Great post and I think the one book minimum is spot on. People who hang out in bookstores need to pay the piper for the the privilege of meeting and talking with an author. Shout out to Schuler Books and Music in Grand Rapids and Lansing, Michigan. http://www.schulerbooks.com/
July 24, 2013 — 4:16 PM
Pob says:
An indie, well, two indie bookstores really, getting it very right in the UK. They’re bricks and mortar, and don’t sell online, but do understand the importance of a strong online presence, for events and building up a mailing list. Knowledgeable staff, free coffee and, importantly, a well chosen and varied range of books. http://www.toppingbooks.co.uk/
July 24, 2013 — 4:23 PM
Linda Rodriguez says:
First of all, great post, as usual, Chuck!
In the Kansas City area, we’re lucky. Rainy Day Books is one of the great, old indie bookstores and going stronger than ever (with a programming schedule of author events you wouldn’t believe). Mysteryscape, one year old and specializing in crime fiction, fantasy, YA and kids lit, has a great coffee shop and is super author-supportive with tons of events, also. Reading Reptile, one of the great kids’ bookstores, does lots of programming, as well. The Raven Book Store in nearby Lawrence, KS, is another super indie bookstore with lots of author events
July 24, 2013 — 4:25 PM
Erica says:
I wish we had a good indy bookstore here. There are a couple of used bookstores in my city, which are cool, but not really helpful to authors except in a general sense of making their out of print work available to the masses. The only one that sell new books, though, is run by a surly snarler who makes customers feel like they’re mangy raccoons begging for scraps if they ask about something to do with (eeeewwww) the store’s paltry GENRE fiction collection. Sadly, this has colored my perception of used bookstores, though I drool with envy when I hear about cities that have good general independent bookstores (like Powell’s in Portland), and most especially good genre-focused stores that specialize in science fiction and fantasy. I really, really miss being able to go to a store and spend an hour or two browsing titles. We still have a Barnes and Noble in town, but it’s rapidly becoming a light and airy place, not much encumbered by shelves (but with lots of calendars, tote bags, games and puzzles).
July 24, 2013 — 4:28 PM
Nicole says:
I’ve also had the “You’re an author; therefore, you must have cooties” moment when booking signings for my novel. You’d have sworn I suggested setting a bag of poop on fire on the doorstep. I love Doylestown Bookshop, Farley’s (New Hope), and two indie book stores that went out of business this year–The Wise Owl (West Reading) and Between Books (Claymont, DE). These are the shops that go out of their way to promote local authors, especially those with books out from small publishers. As a result, I have real loyalty to them, and when my agent sells a manuscript to a bigger press, these are the bookstores (at least the ones still in business) where I’ll do my signings.
July 24, 2013 — 4:45 PM
Elizabeth says:
I love Indies.
Ideas:
Keeping an online inventory system would sure help me patronize the smaller-sized Independent Booksellers, because it’s a drive, and there’s time seeking out parking—it’s not convenient, and it costs me more than money, it costs time to get out and go look.
Being told “Oh, but we can order that for you” after I’ve spent an hour is depressing. I can order all by myself, you see, and it’ll come quickly and straight to my door.
When I want a paper book, it’s because it’s something I want to keep and highlight and mark, or gift to a friend, so the electronic order doesn’t satisfy. It’s a matter of urgency, or the whim of the moment.
Places which can offer somewhat secluded meeting spaces for groups (Not just writing or reading groups, but others like business leads groups, which meet all over our city) are very helpful, and I’m more likely to browse (and buy) because I’m there, I’m grateful for the room being offered.
Also, for books I buy as “keepers” I love good covers. Not dust-covers, mind you, but fancy printed covers with leather-ish bindings and gold printing and so forth. These make classy gifts and supplement my electronic versions with a beautiful eye-candy to share what I read with pride.
For the must-have-instant shoppers—and I’m thinking future-innovations-wise— an on-site print-it-for-you-instantly book (perhaps with a shop-specific stock cover— room for the title and author on the spine, or something like that) would be terrific enough not to want to wait even two days for a delivery. Then there’s no inventory until it’s created. Note also that every store in the U.S. is taxed every year based on inventory on hand, so no one can expect EVERYTHING to linger in one store, just waiting to be purchased.
July 24, 2013 — 5:03 PM