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Emerging Leaders Get Together for NYC Night Out
November 30, 2006

Book industry professionals packed Under the Volcano, a midtown Manhattan
bar, for an Emerging Leaders Night Out.
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Last night, about 100 book industry professionals packed Under the Volcano, a
midtown Manhattan bar, for an Emerging Leaders Night Out (ELNO) networking event.
Organized by Steve Colca, marketing coordinator at W.W. Norton; Amanda Lydon,
manager of Good Yarns Bookstore in Hastings-on-Hudson; and Jessica Stockton, events
coordinator at New York City's McNally Robinson Booksellers, it was the third
quarterly event hosted by Emerging Leaders - NYC and was timed to coincide with
the Small
Press Book Fair.

Jessica Stockton and Amanda Lydon
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"[ELNO] gives us a chance to get together, in a casual way, with people
in the book industry who we don't often get the chance to see," said Colca.
"It also allows us to build bonds that will become useful later in our
careers."
The Emerging Leaders - NYC events, which have been held at informal venues,
and tied to New York literary fairs, are organized to "create an informal
networking opportunity for young people in the book industry to trade ideas,
information, and gossip, and come up with new partnerships," Stockton said
on the Emerging Leaders
- NYC blog.

Steve Colca and Ashley Tucker.
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For Penguin Junior Designer Ashley Tucker, the crowded bar (named for Malcolm
Lowry's novel), where booksellers and staff from a number of New York publishing
houses socialized for several hours, provided a way to get to know more people
in the industry she joined in June. "I've been able to meet a lot of people,"
she said. "Publishing is a close-knit community."
Stacy Leigh, director of PEN American Center's Open Book Program, came to talk
with booksellers and publishers to promote diversity in literature, to discuss
and stress that independent publishers "not be driven by the marketplace,
but by literature and creativity," she said. "We're concerned about
keeping the big discussions alive."
A part-time bookseller at McNally Robinson, Tom Roberge had previously attended
the Brooklyn ELNO. He told BTW that he appreciated the networking opportunities,
but noted the imbalance in the representation of members of the publishing and
bookselling communities at last night's event. "There are not enough booksellers
here," he said, adding that he was hoping for more bookseller-focused events
in the future.
Organizers acknowledged the disproportion. "We're trying to balance the
ratio of publishers to booksellers so it's 50/50," said Colca. "Right
now we're at about 85/15." Stockton mentioned that current planning for
the spring ELNO included possibly holding a specific bookseller-focused event
instead of, or in addition to, the typical ELNO.
But most at the event were just happy to have the chance to talk with and meet
others in the book industry more than once a year at BookExpo America. "I've
been getting a lot of e-mails that say, 'Thank you so much for organizing this,'"
said Colca. "People have been saying it's really rad." He added that
the group has "grown very organically" via e-mail and word of mouth.
Noting that ELNO events have tripled in attendance, Stockton said, "We're
reaching a critical mass. More people are aware of us and hearing about us.
I walked to the other end of the bar, and was disappointed for a moment that
I didn't know anyone. But then I realized, that's a good thing, we're getting
lots of new people." --Karen Schechner
Topics: News - Bookselling,
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