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A Talk With ABA Board Candidate Beth Puffer
March 23, 2006

Beth Puffer
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American Booksellers Association Board of Directors ballots, which must be
received by accountant KPMG no later than April 24, feature the names of two
new candidates for Board Directors: Beth Puffer of Bank Street Bookstore in
New York City and Becky Anderson of Anderson's Bookshops in Naperville and Downers
Grove, Illinois. Their names appear along with those of Gayle Shanks of Changing
Hands Bookstore in Tempe, Arizona, who is up for a second three-year term as
a Director and a one-year term as Vice-President/Secretary, and Russ Lawrence
of Chapter One Book Store in Hamilton, Montana, for a first term as ABA President.
BTW recently had a chance to talk to Puffer about Bank Street and her focus
if elected to the ABA Board.
Beth Puffer joined the staff of Bank Street Bookstore in New York City in 1986,
when it was in a 500-square-foot space on West 112 Street. Currently Bank Street's
manager and buyer, she has seen the store through several expansions and a move
to its present two-story, 4,000-square-foot building on Broadway. Puffer originally
visited Bank Street as a sales rep, discovered their children's book buyer was
leaving, and took the job. Since then she's served as the "manager, buyer,
chief cook, and bottle washer," she said.
Puffer's first bookselling position was in college. "It was the best job
I ever had," she said, but she took a hiatus from bookselling to become
a teacher. On a holiday break, 33 years ago, she picked up a temporary job at
Brentano's on Fifth Avenue and never left bookselling. "I was very lucky
because I had really good managers," she explained. "They taught me
and inspired me. They were a large part of why I stayed in the business."
Bank Street Bookstore, which celebrated its 35 anniversary last fall, is owned
by the Bank Street College. Serving both the college and the neighboring community,
the store stocks children's and adult titles, teacher supplies and curriculum
guides, games and plush gifts, but no textbooks. "We have great collections
of picture books for children of all races and religions," Puffer said.
Bank Street is involved with various community organizations. The bookstore
serves as a drop-off point for books to be donated to a New Orleans school.
Bank Street also helps to provide books to "Room to Grow," a New York
organization that provides extensive support for mothers who live in poverty.
Puffer has served as a past Board member of the New Atlantic Independent Booksellers
Association and on ABA's Booksellers Advisory Council. She was a founding member
of the New York/New Jersey Booksellers Association and is the outgoing treasurer
of the Association of Booksellers for Children.
If elected to the Board, Puffer would like to focus on growing the relationship
between booksellers and publishers. "Our regional association had a meeting
to focus on issues we'd like to discuss with publishers," she said. "The
next thing I knew [ABA organized] publisher focus groups were announced. I was
delighted someone else had the same thought. I know that on both sides everyone
was pleased. I would like to continue that discussion."
"Another vital issue," said Puffer, "is educating the public
about independent bookstores. I think we have a long way to go. We usually do
that one on one, but I think we need to do it on a much grander scale. It's
vital to our survival." --Karen Schechner
Topics: About ABA, News - Bookselling, People,
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