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Greetings & Readings: Books Plus an Array of Specialty Merchandise
October 31, 2007
In
1969, the Baum family opened Greetings
& Readings book and card shop in a 1,800-square-foot space in a Towson,
Maryland, strip mall. Over the years, the business has grown to fill a 30,000-square-foot
space with books and cards, sports memorabilia, Crocs shoes, custom balloon
designs, Lenox tableware, Lladro porcelain, Swarovski crystal, Vera Bradley
fashions, Webkinz, Yixing Chinese teapots, Book Sense Gift Cards, and more.
Greetings &
Readings, which moved to the Hunt Valley Towne Centre in Baltimore County, Maryland,
two-and-a-half years ago, is now co-owned by the founders' son, Steven Baum,
and his brother-in-law, Stephen Spund.
Baum told BTW that Greetings & Readings is the largest independent
bookstore in Maryland. The store's array of specialty departments feature merchandise
selections that have been refined over the years. Many new products have been
stocked at one time or another, some are still sold, others aren't, but books
have remained a constant.
Baum
recalled merchandising efforts that did not endure. "We once sold microwaves,
computers, and other electronics," he told BTW. "We also had
a restaurant, with all homemade food and baked goods, for about 12 years. The
headaches from that outnumbered those from every other department combined.
Now we have a cafe with free WiFi, and great coffee and desserts, and it works
extremely well."
Each of the 100 plus employees of the store works in a specific department.
According to Baum, staff members who sell handbags don't blow up balloons, the
cafe servers don't fit Crocs, and only booksellers sell books.
"What makes our bookstore distinctive," Baum said, "is our staff.
They know books, they care about books, and they care about the customers."
He has high praise for the manager, buyers, and dozen or so booksellers. "They
make the bookstore happen," he said.
Greetings
& Readings is always full of activity -- trunk shows for women's fashions,
balloon deliveries, twice-weekly story times, weekly author appearances, and
more.
"We like to feature local authors, and we are involved in other events,
such as the Book Bash on November 5," Baum said. Book Bash, he explained,
is an annual benefit for Literacy Works. This year, headlining the group of
50 authors is actor Michael Tucker, whose book of travel essays, Living in
a Foreign Language: A Memoir of Food, Wine, and Love in Italy, is a July
2007 Book Sense Pick.
The
store's array of diverse and intriguing products, Baum said, requires approximately
an hour to peruse, and then an additional hour is needed for the book section.
The Greetings & Readings website, which provides details to facilitate in-store
shopping, is undergoing a complete redesign. The new site will contain more
information for shoppers, including increased content from Book Sense.
"We already post the Book Sense Bestsellers Lists," Baum noted. "We
also want to post the [Book Sense] Picks lists and other content. One great
thing about being an independent store is that we can change things all the
time -- and we do. --Nomi Schwartz
Topics: Book Sense, About Bookstores,
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