In the Shadow of the Giants
Suzanne Mantell Utne Reader
In the Shadow of the Giants, endangered booksellers are struggling
to master the art of survival. Forget the issue of whether people
are actually reading more. The real question is this: Where do you
buy your books? When
Nation publisher Victor Navasky
admitted a few years ago in the pages of
The New York Times
that he got most of his at Barnes & Noble, he caused an uproar
among the literati that raged for weeks. An intellectual
patronizing a bookstore chain? The debate has shifted slightly in
the short time since he wrote, if only because the superstore
chains in one guise or another (Barnes & Noble, Borders, Crown
Books, Books-A-Million) have proliferated since then, and
traditional bookselling venues--independently owned bookshops--have
become less numerous. Fierce jostling for store space characterizes
the retail end of the business, and this despite a dropoff in book
sales since last year, following four years of rapid growth.
Though liking the superstores is still a dirty secret in many
circles, finding other places to shop becomes harder and harder to
do. Sales at large chains now account for 25.6 percent of the books
sold in this country, with 18.6 percent credited to the
independents and small chains, according to the Book Industry Study
Group. The shift has been so steady and precipitous that the little
guys have lately earned the epithet 'endangered.'
For bibliophiles, of course, there should be nothing more
appealing than coming across a bookstore every few blocks. But this
is not the case. People are anxious about the superstores
fulfilling their 'category killer' designation. They are concerned
about the biggest chains fighting each other to the death, until
only one is left and just a scant handful of powerful buyers will
prevail, deciding from one central location what books will be
stocked each season on bookstore shelves throughout the country.
The stores will be filled only with best-sellers (a category
description rather than an indication of sales), celebrity bios,
and self-improvement books. Any semblance of literature will be a
thing of the past.
Will the future really be as bleak as this worst-case scenario?
It's a picture that pops up in conversation after conversation with
independent booksellers around the country. The possiblity that
this could happen is palpable to them, as it is to the larger
community that continues to read books and celebrate the diversity
that has been the hallmark of America's publishing history. The
fear is so real that a few communities thus far untouched by
Borders, Barnes & Noble, and the other chains have risen up to
fight back the uninvited giants. On the surface, the protests have
been about other issues--traffic congestion, historic preservation,
environmental endangerment--but the subtext in each case is about
what is seen as a frightening trend toward cultural homogenization
and intellectual impoverishment, and the losses that follow in
their wake.
In an ongoing struggle, three thousand people in the beach town
of Capitola, California, outside Santa Cruz, protested a
developer's intention to sign up the Michigan-based Borders chain
(with 157 stores in the U.S.) for a creekside shopping mall. They
cited environmental and traffic worries. In Davis, California,
concerned residents formed Friends of Davis when it became known
earlier this year that Borders had signed a 15-year lease for a
22,000-square-foot store in a new development on university-owned
land at the entrance to town. The project, they say, jeopardizes
traffic flow and, inevitably, the economic stability of the town's
10 established bookstores. According to John Hamilton, who
immediately announced his intention to move his 3,000-square foot
Next Chapter out of town to another location, 'Superstores look for
markets that are already there and then eat them up. Borders opens
up in college towns, indoctrinates students as to what a bookstore
is so they won't know what an independent can be..'
In Lawrence, Kansas, where an unwanted outpost of the Wild Oats
Community Market market was beaten out of town in 1996, residents
fought against Borders as well when the chain signed a lease to
move to a genteel stretch of the downtown area.The group, Citizens
for Our Historic Downtown, has joined forces with the protestors in
Davis and the Philadelphia branch of the Industrial Workers of the
World, which had its own much-publicized run-in with Borders last
year, to form the Borders Patrol. The coalition wants Borders to
respect the right of employees to organize and bargain
collectively; respect community wishes and standards; and carry
more titles from small, independent presses without asking the
presses to pay for returns when returns are forthcoming. The third
item reflects the group's long-range desire to protect books and
writers.
'Certainly we're concerned about community concerns as we're
coming in, but, we're concerned about everybody in the community,'
says Borders spokesperson Jody Kohn. 'There are lots of people who
can't wait for us to get there.'
The real fight for independents--to keep customers once the
competition moves in--is much, much tougher than the individual
battles to keep the stores out. 'As soon as we come up with a
successful innovation, the chains copy it,' says the veteran
independent Larry Robin, of Robin's in Philadelphia. A bookshop
owner in the same center city location for 36 years (the store has
been there for 60), Robin has been forced to add a decaying city
core to his business problems. And yet, he says, there's nothing
he'd rather be doing than selling books. 'We're dealing with ideas.
It's not socks. What we do is important, even if it's not
appreciated.' Passions like this go a long way toward explaining
why independent booksellers are seen as front-line warriors not
only against the superstore barbarians, but also against price-club
discounters, home shopping channel purveyers, niche outlets ranging
from hardware to cookware to housewares to pets, and now online
pie-in-the-skyers who promise any book any time on just about any
subject at discounts that have even Barnes & Noble scrambling.
Many booksellers simply don't survive. The American Booksellers
Association's tally of member stores that folded from mid-1993
through early 1997 stands at close to 200. The names are mostly
quaint and dreamy: Book Nook, Books First, Novel Futures, Volume
One, Shakespeare & Co., Books & Co., Salt of the Earth,
Once Upon a Mind, Really Neat Books.
To survive in this climate takes nerve and skill, and those who
do it--Powell's in Portland; Tattered Cover in Denver; Book
Passages in Corte Madera, California; Elliot Bay Books in Seattle;
Just Books in Greenwich,Connecticut; The Hungry Mind in St. Paul,
Minnesota--do it with a vengeance, giving their customers what
bookseller William Kramer of the Washington, D.C., independent
Kramer Books & Afterwords terms life experiences, not just
consumer experiences.
Hungry Mind owner David Unowsky, who says he built his business
in preparation for this sort of competition, includes among his
offensive tactics more service, more author events, more bargains.
'We do specialized market niches, community outreach, out-of-store
events, author series, discounts,' Unowsky says. 'When a Barnes
&Noble moved in two blocks away, we picked 25 books each month,
called them The Hungry Mind 25, discounted them at 25 percent.
Trying to be like the chains, we'll lose, because they can
out-discount and out-advertise us. The chains are better at
celebrity events. We do literary authors. No one has a poetry
section like ours. We specialize in books for the helping
professions, selling at conferences on death and dying, social
work. This is a very important part of our business. We do two
conferences a week, send someone with books. It results in solid
sales plus publicity that money can't buy. We cement ties with the
community that chains can't do.'
Elsewhere, storeowners cite newsletters, signings, performances,
children's events, reading groups, community centers, greater depth
of inventory, a focus on regional authors, smarter staff, anything
that will make them indispensable without distorting their first
mission--getting books into people's hands.
Many of the forward-thinking independents are giving the online
world a shot. (See sidebar.) At this point, many view online
selling as a way to expand service to existing customers rather
than as a way to attract new ones. Here too passion may be a
survival tool. The San Francisco based Booksmith, a
4,000-square-foot store insulated from the brunt of superstore
competition by its location in the strongly individualistic
Haight-Ashbury district, admits to deriving good value from its
cyberstore. Web manager Thomas Gladysz spends full time on the
site, posting information about the business and devising
interest-group clusters that catch his fancy. Of the hundred or so
pages he has devised, one is devoted to Polish fiction, another to
signed books, and another to 'flapper fiction.' Gladysz cultivates
alliances with other Web sites as well, providing book resources
for elder care and child care groups and for writer Kathy Acker,
who lives in the neighborhood. 'People come to the store and say,
'I saw it on your Web site.' That means they're using the Web to
preshop. I wouldn't have expected that,' he says. 'You don't make a
ton of money, but it helps with sales, publicity, and
marketing.'
The rare newcomer is greeted by gratitude mixed with
incredulity. Kerry Slattery, manager of the fledgling Skylight
Books, a 2,000-square-foot literary store in the Los Feliz section
of LosAngeles, says customers ask, 'You're just selling books?' The
store is owned by a group of 10, including some actors and an
acting teacher who owns the building. 'We don't want to be all
things to all people,' Slattery says. 'We want to make our
departments deeper and smarter.'
How to translate that commitment into retail terms is the task
that the independents face every day of their work lives. Dan
Cullen, editor of the trade magazine American Bookseller, recently
advised indies to consider themselves personal information managers
rather than tradespeople. In his view, the true role for the
bookstore of the future, and the key to its survival, is as a
source of continuous, in-depth, one-on-one dialogue with its
customers. In this vision of bookseller as social director, stores
must reach out via e-mail, the Web, customer databases, and
whatever other resources they can cultivate to discover what valued
customers want to read and whether they'd like to meet other people
interested in the same subjects. With 50,000 titles published
annually in the United States, we need help moving through the
thicket from a partner who cares enough to keep our intellectual
and other needs in mind, someone whose job is to serve us. We have
money managers for our money--why not information managers for our
minds? Stranger things have been dreamed of.
INDEPENDENTS ONLINE A Clean Well-Lighted Place for
Books
www.bookstore.com
Inventory search option, staff favorites, guest reviews, and
featured sections on travel guides and romance titles.
Booksmith
www.booksmith.com
Strong niche areas are fiction, backlist fiction, cookbooks,
science fiction, mystery, cyberpunk, poetry, film, children's
books. Also signed books.
Cody's
www.codysbooks.com
Large selection of academic and technical books. Searchable
database of 140,000 titles.
Davis-Kidd
www.daviskidd.com
Large general bookstore. Site includes calendar of events, book
reviews, interviews, bestseller lists.
Hawley-Cooke
www.hawley-cooke.com
100,000 book titles, 20,000 music titles, 2,000 multimedia
titles.
Kepler's
www.keplers.com
Literary fiction, children's books including some in Spanish,
magazines and newspapers from home and abroad, computer books. Also
staff recommendations, book reviews, and an events calendar.
Liberties Fine Books, Music & Cafe
www.liberties.com
One-million-title searchable database. Signed copies, e-mail
notification service.
Midnight Special
www2.msbooks.com/msbooks/
Cultural, social, and political books.
Powell's
www.powells.com
One million new and used books in all subject areas. Out-of-print
title searches.
Tattered Cover
www.tattered
cover.com
Large, iconic, all-purpose bookstore. Site covers services and
events as well.
Wellington's
www.wellingtons.com
Specializes in Southern writers and children's literature.
Also see:
BookWire
www.bookwire.com
Very useful index to general booksellers.
American Booksellers Association
www.bookweb.org
Members' home page has links to stores with online services.
Northern California Independent Booksellers Association
www.nciba.com
Lists 48 member operations including those with online book sites
connected to real stores.
To survive in this climate takes nerve and skill, and those who
do it--Powell's in Portland; Tattered Cover in Denver; Book
Passages in Corte Madera, California; Elliot Bay Books in Seattle;
Just Books in Greenwich,Connecticut; The Hungry Mind in St. Paul,
Minnesota--do it with a vengeance, giving their customers what
bookseller William Kramer of the Washington, D.C., independent
Kramer Books & Afterwords terms life experiences, not just
consumer experiences.
Hungry Mind owner David Unowsky, who says he built his business
in preparation for this sort of competition, includes among his
offensive tactics more service, more author events, more bargains.
'We do specialized market niches, community outreach, out-of-store
events, author series, discounts,' Unowsky says. 'When a Barnes
&Noble moved in two blocks away, we picked 25 books each month,
called them The Hungry Mind 25, discounted them at 25 percent.
Trying to be like the chains, we'll lose, because they can
out-discount and out-advertise us. The chains are better at
celebrity events. We do literary authors. No one has a poetry
section like ours. We specialize in books for the helping
professions, selling at conferences on death and dying, social
work. This is a very important part of our business. We do two
conferences a week, send someone with books. It results in solid
sales plus publicity that money can't buy. We cement ties with the
community that chains can't do.'
Elsewhere, storeowners cite newsletters, signings, performances,
children's events, reading groups, community centers, greater depth
of inventory, a focus on regional authors, smarter staff, anything
that will make them indispensable without distorting their first
mission--getting books into people's hands.
Many of the forward-thinking independents are giving the online
world a shot. (See sidebar.) At this point, many view online
selling as a way to expand service to existing customers rather
than as a way to attract new ones. Here too passion may be a
survival tool. The San Francisco based Booksmith, a
4,000-square-foot store insulated from the brunt of superstore
competition by its location in the strongly individualistic
Haight-Ashbury district, admits to deriving good value from its
cyberstore. Web manager Thomas Gladysz spends full time on the
site, posting information about the business and devising
interest-group clusters that catch his fancy. Of the hundred or so
pages he has devised, one is devoted to Polish fiction, another to
signed books, and another to 'flapper fiction.' Gladysz cultivates
alliances with other Web sites as well, providing book resources
for elder care and child care groups and for writer Kathy Acker,
who lives in the neighborhood. 'People come to the store and say,
'I saw it on your Web site.' That means they're using the Web to
preshop. I wouldn't have expected that,' he says. 'You don't make a
ton of money, but it helps with sales, publicity, and
marketing.'
The rare newcomer is greeted by gratitude mixed with
incredulity. Kerry Slattery, manager of the fledgling Skylight
Books, a 2,000-square-foot literary store in the Los Feliz section
of LosAngeles, says customers ask, 'You're just selling books?' The
store is owned by a group of 10, including some actors and an
acting teacher who owns the building. 'We don't want to be all
things to all people,' Slattery says. 'We want to make our
departments deeper and smarter.'
How to translate that commitment into retail terms is the task
that the independents face every day of their work lives. Dan
Cullen, editor of the trade magazine American Bookseller, recently
advised indies to consider themselves personal information managers
rather than tradespeople. In his view, the true role for the
bookstore of the future, and the key to its survival, is as a
source of continuous, in-depth, one-on-one dialogue with its
customers. In this vision of bookseller as social director, stores
must reach out via e-mail, the Web, customer databases, and
whatever other resources they can cultivate to discover what valued
customers want to read and whether they'd like to meet other people
interested in the same subjects. With 50,000 titles published
annually in the United States, we need help moving through the
thicket from a partner who cares enough to keep our intellectual
and other needs in mind, someone whose job is to serve us. We have
money managers for our money--why not information managers for our
minds? Stranger things have been dreamed of.
INDEPENDENTS ONLINE A Clean Well-Lighted Place for
Books
www.bookstore.com
Inventory search option, staff favorites, guest reviews, and
featured sections on travel guides and romance titles.
Booksmith
www.booksmith.com
Strong niche areas are fiction, backlist fiction, cookbooks,
science fiction, mystery, cyberpunk, poetry, film, children's
books. Also signed books.
Cody's
www.codysbooks.com
Large selection of academic and technical books. Searchable
database of 140,000 titles.
Davis-Kidd
www.daviskidd.com
Large general bookstore. Site includes calendar of events, book
reviews, interviews, bestseller lists.
Hawley-Cooke
www.hawley-cooke.com
100,000 book titles, 20,000 music titles, 2,000 multimedia
titles.
Kepler's
www.keplers.com
Literary fiction, children's books including some in Spanish,
magazines and newspapers from home and abroad, computer books. Also
staff recommendations, book reviews, and an events calendar.
Liberties Fine Books, Music & Cafe
www.liberties.com
One-million-title searchable database. Signed copies, e-mail
notification service.
Midnight Special
www2.msbooks.com/msbooks/
Cultural, social, and political books.
Powell's
www.powells.com
One million new and used books in all subject areas. Out-of-print
title searches.
Tattered Cover
www.tattered
cover.com
Large, iconic, all-purpose bookstore. Site covers services and
events as well.
Wellington's
www.wellingtons.com
Specializes in Southern writers and children's literature.
Also see:
BookWire
www.bookwire.com
Very useful index to general booksellers.
American Booksellers Association
www.bookweb.org
Members' home page has links to stores with online services.
Northern California Independent Booksellers Association
www.nciba.com
Lists 48 member operations including those with online book sites
connected to real stores.
How to translate that commitment into retail terms is the task
that the independents face every day of their work lives. Dan
Cullen, editor of the trade magazine American Bookseller, recently
advised indies to consider themselves personal information managers
rather than tradespeople. In his view, the true role for the
bookstore of the future, and the key to its survival, is as a
source of continuous, in-depth, one-on-one dialogue with its
customers. In this vision of bookseller as social director, stores
must reach out via e-mail, the Web, customer databases, and
whatever other resources they can cultivate to discover what valued
customers want to read and whether they'd like to meet other people
interested in the same subjects. With 50,000 titles published
annually in the United States, we need help moving through the
thicket from a partner who cares enough to keep our intellectual
and other needs in mind, someone whose job is to serve us. We have
money managers for our money--why not information managers for our
minds? Stranger things have been dreamed of.
INDEPENDENTS ONLINE A Clean Well-Lighted Place for
Books
www.bookstore.com
Inventory search option, staff favorites, guest reviews, and
featured sections on travel guides and romance titles.
Booksmith
www.booksmith.com
Strong niche areas are fiction, backlist fiction, cookbooks,
science fiction, mystery, cyberpunk, poetry, film, children's
books. Also signed books.
Cody's
www.codysbooks.com
Large selection of academic and technical books. Searchable
database of 140,000 titles.
Davis-Kidd
www.daviskidd.com
Large general bookstore. Site includes calendar of events, book
reviews, interviews, bestseller lists.
Hawley-Cooke
www.hawley-cooke.com
100,000 book titles, 20,000 music titles, 2,000 multimedia
titles.
Kepler's
www.keplers.com
Literary fiction, children's books including some in Spanish,
magazines and newspapers from home and abroad, computer books. Also
staff recommendations, book reviews, and an events calendar.
Liberties Fine Books, Music & Cafe
www.liberties.com
One-million-title searchable database. Signed copies, e-mail
notification service.
Midnight Special
www2.msbooks.com/msbooks/
Cultural, social, and political books.
Powell's
www.powells.com
One million new and used books in all subject areas. Out-of-print
title searches.
Tattered Cover
www.tattered
cover.com
Large, iconic, all-purpose bookstore. Site covers services and
events as well.
Wellington's
www.wellingtons.com
Specializes in Southern writers and children's literature.
Also see:
BookWire
www.bookwire.com
Very useful index to general booksellers.
American Booksellers Association
www.bookweb.org
Members' home page has links to stores with online services.
Northern California Independent Booksellers Association
www.nciba.com
Lists 48 member operations including those with online book sites
connected to real stores.
Suzanne Mantell, a contributing editor of
Publishers Weekly, has been an editor at the New York
Observer, and Harper's.