Pacific Palisades

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Independent Bookstores are Dependent on Community Support

Last month, a New York Times article noted that for an independent bookstore to survive, it had to offer more than books and have community buy-in.  Most successful independent bookstores, “whether explicitly or implicitly, have managed to get across the message that we need you, but you need us: A community that wants a vibrant downtown with a local bookstore that’s about books, and about something more as well, needs to support it.”  Keying off this article, I wrote about unique activities I’ve noticed in bookstores.  (Last week, Stories Bookstore and Cafe in LA announced that they have a bibliophile knitting group meeting there on Fridays.)  But, I also found several communities and bookstores working together to support the stores that enhance the community:

  • Capitola Book Cafein Capitola, CA started “Friends of Book Cafe,” a membership program with levels from $25 to over $200, each level receiving various benefits such as discounts on books, free coffee and tickets to events.  In a recent Central Coast article, co-owner Mayer-Lochtefeld said “if we can’t really rally our customers around us, then the store is absolutely at risk.”
  • Devoted fans of Village Books in Pacific Palisades, CA founded “Palisades Village Book Friends,” a non-profit to help the bookstore provide weekly author readings, act as host for other literary events and as a liaison with the local schools. 
  • Forest City, NC bent over backwards to make Fireside Books and Gifts welcome.  Shelf Awareness reported that the city closed an alleyway and redirected traffic from a drive thru pharmacy so the store can have an outdoor patio and event space, then provided an underground power line, utility hook ups, tax incentives and free advertising in the local tourism brochures.
  • Communication!  Linda Ramsdell of Galaxy Bookshop in Hardwich, VT informed her customers in an e-mail newsletter of her stocking strategy before she sent back a large number of returns.  She wanted her customers to know that she was going to survive and how.  As odd as it seems, not all customers fully understand the implications of buying on Amazon or at a big box. 
  • In an effort to get the message out, Indiebound encourages independent business of all types, but especially bookstores, to band together and help each other out.  Several independent bookstores have joined with other businesses to offer joint coupons and discounts to encourage shopping from neighbors.
  • Local citizens rallied to keep Clear Creek Books of Golden, CO open.  After hearing it was having trouble paying the rent, several local residents gave the owner, Craig Johnson, money to survive.  One resident wrote a check for $20,000.

On our Unique page, we’ve noted instances and practices of bookstores we’ve reviewed that benefit the community.  I almost always ask any independent bookstore I’m visiting how business is going.  Many times, it’s going just fine and when I ask how, the universal answer is “our community supports us.”

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Just in case we’ve been too subtle, the primary purpose of this blog is to support independent bookstores by reviewing them where we find them and discussing books and literary topics to encourage people to buy from them.  Independent bookstores are part of a community, but they need the community to survive.  Most people love the idea of a local bookstore, but more people need to act on that idea and buy from them.

Claire and I are encouraged by the way the Pacific Palisades community rallies around its local bookstore, Village Books.  A blockbuster event is scheduled for Wednesday December 17, 2008 at 7pm, when Tom Hanks will make a special appearance at Village Books to raise funds to help the bookstore stay in business.  We applaud Mr. Hanks for jumping in to help Village Books, we’re sure it’s out of love for the store rather than guilt over portraying that chain bookstore owner in “You’ve Got Mail.”  Read the rest of this entry »

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Oh, To Be a Giggly Girl Again
Oh, To Be a Giggly Girl Again

If you have a daughter between the ages of ten and eighteen, you’ve heard of the Twilight series by Stephenie Meyer. The fourth book in the series, Breaking Dawn, is released today, August 2nd, but the true fans stayed up last night to buy the book at midnight on the dot. Release parties were held all over the country. We arrived at our local bookstore, Village Books, at just after 11PM to find a spirited but paltry crowd, maybe ten girls. But the yummy cookies and cupcakes kept us company until more girls (only girls and all of them teens and pre-teens) showed up. Soon the employees started games, including a trivia game with questions so detailed I’m sure I wouldn’t have been able to answer them if they were about my own life. My daughter’s team won because her girlfriend knew all the answers, always nice to have an expert on your side! At a minute to midnight, the countdown began. I tripped up counting backwards from 60 to 1 at midnight, but all of the girls were so excited when the doors finally opened that I was a giggly girl all over again.

As we walked back to the car, I heard one mother yell “no walking and reading, wait until you get to the car.” My daughter and her girlfriend were on page 20 by the time we arrived home, were reading past 1AM and again first thing in the morning when I woke up. It’s going to be a quiet day.

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I’m a homebody.  My family would say that’s the understatement of the year.   I don’t mind traveling–so long as I have my entire family with me and our hotel room is dark and luxurious–but I’m happiest at home and most of my stress in life centers on trying to get everyone home by dinner time with no reason to leave the house again until the next morning.   Or never.   So it’s not surprising that my favorite bookstore is within a couple of miles of my own house.  Read the rest of this entry »

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