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Queen Anne Holds Court in Seattle
March 30, 2005
Cindy Mitchell and Patti McCall's habit started out innocently enough. Both
were working as nurses and both were book club regulars at their local independent
bookstore, Square One Books, in Seattle. McCall, who chose the titles for the
book group, was steadily increasing the amount of time she spent at Square One
and discovered that "she loved everything about books." Her next step
was to get a part-time position at the store, and she encouraged Mitchell to
join her. After about two years of part-time bookselling, McCall and Mitchell
left their nursing careers, went hard core, and bought their own store -- Queen
Anne Books in the Queen Anne neighborhood of Seattle.
"I'm not sure how it ended up that we thought we could buy and run our
own bookshop," said McCall. "But in our naivete, we didn't know what
we didn't know." The duo had the advantage of starting with an existing
store, which they bought in 1998 from Randy Brownlee and Alice Osborne, who
established the business in 1989. Queen Anne Books is thriving and, last year,
it moved up the street half a block, almost doubling its space to 2,400 square
feet. "Our sales per square foot were really great in the old store, but
now our customers say they don't have to leave to make room for someone else
to fit," said McCall.
The move was actually prompted by the invitation of the owner of a nearby Cuban
coffee shop who wanted Queen Anne Books for a neighbor, and who talked her landlord
into building to suit the bookstore. The end result was that Mitchell and
McCall got to design their store from the ground up. "I have to say, it's
a beautiful store," said McCall. "It's a very soft palette of, primarily,
sage green. The fixtures have oak facings and for lighting we use small, multicolored
halogen lights. It creates a very festive atmosphere."
There are brick patios in the front and the back of the store, where there's
also a garden, which is used for author events and book clubs. Authors who have
appeared recently include Carmela and Steve D'Amico (Ella the Elegant Elephant,
Arthur A. Levine Books). This July, Queen Anne will hold its Harry Potter
party on both patios and will team up with the coffee shop, which will serve
the requisite butter beer.
Queen Anne Books, McCall said, "takes advantage of all the Book Sense
marketing programs." Mitchell and McCall maintain a rotating display of
Book Sense Picks and signed on for the Book Sense gift card program as soon
as it became available. The store has used the gift cards for the past two holiday
seasons, and, McCall reported, "Customers
love them." She added, "They're easy to use and sales are up significantly
over paper certificates -- 20 percent this past December."
Queen Anne was the perfect location for a bookstore, said McCall. "It's
five minutes from downtown Seattle. It's a very urban, upper middle-class neighborhood,
and the people are packed in. One reason we do so well is people walk everywhere
-- to the grocery store, the clothing store, the bookstore. There are a lot
of families and a lot of kids. So the first thing we did was quadruple the children's
section." The store devotes about a quarter of its space to children's
literature. They also specialize in fiction and stock about 14,000 titles total.
While McCall notes that their location affords plenty of foot traffic, she
attributes some of the bookstore's good health to Queen Anne's heavy involvement
in neighborhood causes. "Our community involvement helps us not only stay
successful but stand out. We've sponsored [various organizations] as soon as
we could afford to, like Little League. We're involved in school bookfairs and
our book club is huge -- we had to split it into two nights. Our community considers
us a resource. That's important." --Karen
Schechner
Topics: Book Sense, About Bookstores,
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