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Independent Bookstores Make Good Copy
February 10, 2005
Independent bookstores in New York State's
Hudson Valley were featured in the December issue of Chronogram: A Mid-Hudson
Magazine of Events and Ideas, a widely distributed free publication. Nina
Shengold, author of the piece, entitled "Best-Sellers" focused on
two of the region's bookstores -- Ariel Booksellers in New Paltz and Oblong
Books & Music in Millerton and Rhinebeck, and, in a sidebar to the article
listed an impressive 11 Book Sense bookstores located in the region, several
with multiple locations.

Ariel Booksellers in New Paltz, NY |
Ariel co-owner Susan Avery was very pleased with the article and reported that
many customers have mentioned seeing it, commenting that they were happy to
see Ariel and the other stores get some publicity. "Nina [Shengold] spent
a lot of time here," Avery said, "hanging around the bookstore, talking
to us about being independent booksellers and what that means. Like many people,
she was surprised by some of the things I said -- about what's involved in running
a store and how things are done."
Shengold talked to BTW about the development of the story. "The
article was my idea, and my editor-in-chief, Brian Mahoney, an avid book-lover,
agreed readily. I write or assign a literary feature for the magazine every
month. It's usually an author profile, but I want to cover other aspects of
the book business as well." She added, "Though I've often walked into a bookstore
hoping to find the right book, I had no idea how the other half of the equation
works: how a book gets into a store, hoping to find the right reader."
Next month in Chronogram, Shengold will be profiling Ann Patty, an executive
editor at Harcourt.
"What appealed to me most, both as a journalist and a soon-to-be-published
first novelist, was the 'behind the scenes' view of how an independent bookstore
operates, and the Christmas rush season seemed like a natural angle," Shengold
continued. "Ariel is one of my favorite bookstores in the Hudson Valley,
if not the world. I'm also a regular customer of Golden Notebook in Woodstock,
Oblong Books in Rhinebeck, and Inquiring Mind/Raising Children Bookstore in
Saugerties, and, generally speaking, I'm an inveterate browser of independent
bookstores. I like talking to salesclerks who read and being around other booklovers."
Shengold began the piece with, "Books
make sensational gifts ... some will scoop up a bestseller or two at Wal-Mart
or the grocery store; others will type furtive Internet orders at three in the
morning. But many -- the ones who like holding a book in their hands and seeing
what else might be on the same shelf -- will head to their neighborhood bookstores."
In her article, Shengold described booksellers
such as Oblong and Ariel as performing "a prodigious matchmaking service,
which intensifies during the high-pressure holiday season." Dick Hermans,
owner of Oblong Books told Shengold that the last six weeks of the year can
provide 20 percent of annual sales, "so we can be a little more reckless
about what we order. " Both Hermans and Avery described the hectic time
also as the most fun.
Furthermore, Shengold posed the question, "With
hundreds of thousands of titles published each year, how do booksellers decide
which to order and where in the store they should go?"Avery gave Shengold
a backstage tour of the piles of publisher's catalogues, trade publications,
and both the advance reader copies (ARCs) and bookseller picks, many provided
by the Book Sense program. Chronogram posts the Book Sense Bestseller
List on its Web site, because Shengold
said, "We're an arts and culture monthly, with what I'd describe as an
alternative philosophy and a distinctly regional flavor. [The Book Sense Bestseller
List] seems to reflect the types of books that our readers would buy."
Hermans and Avery also mentioned the importance
of knowledgeable sales reps, such as Rebecca Fitting, a five-year veteran with
Random House -- covering the Hudson Valley, the Berkshires, and parts of Vermont.
Working exclusively with independent stores, Fitting describes herself as "the
eyes and ears" of her marketplace, acting as a liaison between stores and
publishers.
Once the books are ordered and in the store,
Avery noted how shelving the books properly is critical as is up-to-the-minute
inventory control. Shengold described the unique ability of booksellers to promote
books through handselling and word-of-mouth. Avery is quoted as saying, "Books
have the shelf life of yogurt now. The media conglomerates don't care about
literary fiction. It's all bottom line. But we're not selling meatballs here."
"We're one of the links in people's community
chain," Oblong's Hermans said.
One book that will likely be a handselling favorite at these and other independent
stores is Shengold's debut novel, Clearcut, to be published by Anchor
Books in August. She is also the co-editor of 11 theater anthologies for Viking
Penguin and Vintage Books.
The Chronogram
article also featured a sidebar that provided readers with a listing of
independent bookstores in New York State's mid-Hudson valley region, including:
The Book Cove in Pawling; The Bookstore Notes & Letters in Warwick; The
Chatham Bookstore in Chatham; Hope Farm Press & Bookshop, Saugerties; Hudson
Valley Book Stop, Kingston; Merritt Books in Millbrook, Red Hook, and Cold Spring;
and The Three Arts in Poughkeepsie. -- Nomi
Schwartz
Topics: Book Sense, News - Books, People,
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