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Making Ends Meet: New Jersey Booksellers Promote, Partner, and Publish
May 02, 2005
When
Pat and Walter Boyer bought Bookends in 2002, the Ridgewood, New Jersey, store
was already on the map. The 21-year-old store's suburban location, less than
25 miles and under 40 minutes from mid-town Manhattan, is a convenient stop
for major authors after a morning television appearance or an afternoon public
radio interview. The store's previous owners, Dana and Walter Gilligan, had
made the most of this proximity to develop the store's reputation as a top venue
for book signings by nationally and internationally known writers and celebrities.
When the Boyers, who settled in Ridgewood after years of working in corporate
jobs in Manhattan, took over the store, they committed to continue the heavy
schedule of special events and signings. They also expanded inventory, and,
in May 2004, launched their own print-on-demand operation, BooksByBookends.
Ridgewood, an affluent town of 25,000, is home
to five chain bookstores including the tri-state's largest Barnes & Noble.
Acknowledging the fierce competition, the Boyers, both with strong marketing
backgrounds, felt they needed to reinvent and expand the business with innovations
and improvements.
After only a few years, the Boyers can demonstrate
considerable success with their pioneering POD operation. They have remodeled
the store, opening up 3,000 additional square feet downstairs for events and
for BooksByBookends. They have also made more appealing and comfortable surroundings
for children; added graphic novels for high school students; and filled counter
space with tempting sideline items. In their first few weeks of ownership, the
Boyers increased the store's inventory by almost 50 percent. Recently they have
experimented with off-site author appearances in partnership with community
organizations, and have greatly expanded their Web-based communications.
The Boyers have created a BookSense.com site
-- www.book-ends.com -- that is tailored
to the store's specific needs. "We have so many authors coming -- three
or four a week. Goldie Hawn is here this week, and a lot of people want to get
a signed book. We've set it up so customers just click on the book jacket and
that generates an e-mail to me. Most of the time I hold the books here, and
people pick them up. About 25 percent of our sales at events are done on the
Web," said Walter Boyer.
The store's lineup of author appearances includes
Christine Todd Whitman, Lisa Scottoline, Mary and Carol Higgins Clark, Dick
Morris, Hillary Clinton, Mario Cuomo, Rudolph Guiliani, Donna Hanover, Pamela
Anderson, and Tommy Lee. Mega-seller Harlan Coben is a local resident and makes
frequent appearances. Sports writers and athletes are popular guests -- Walter
handles those, and is the store's main buyer and operations manager, while Pat
tends to all the other author appearances, most of the publicity, and the website.
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More than 800 fans waited in line outside Bookends to
see Phil Lesh, former Grateful Dead bass player and author of Searching
for the Sound: My Life With the Grateful Dead (Little, Brown).
Photo: Blair Relyea

Lesh and Bookends owner Walter Boyer. Photo:
Blair Relyea
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Phil Lesh of the late Grateful Dead recently appeared at the store, and the
crowd spilled out into the street. The atmosphere was festive, according to
Boyer, who had arranged with the Ben and Jerry's store to come by with a cart
loaded with 'Cherry Garcia' ice cream samples. "We work with other businesses
as much as possible," Boyer told BTW. "We have a few hundred
people come for a reading, and I want them to have dinner in town, stay for
coffee afterward."
In April, the Friends of the Ridgewood Library Luncheon at The Venetian, a
crystal- chandeliered catering hall, was the site of one of Bookends' best-attended
author events yet. Khaled Hosseini, author of The Kite Runner, spoke to
an audience of approximately 800, to whom the Boyers were selling copies of
the book.
Both Boyers are pleased with Bookends' progress, and the business clearly suits
them. "We've just begun to scratch the surface of offsite author appearances,"
Walter Boyer told BTW. The same seems to be true for the POD operation:
"BooksByBookends has really taken off on its own," Boyer said. "Every
book brings more referrals in. We've printed about 200 authors in less than
a year and hired a separate staff to run it -- it takes up just about 500 square
feet downstairs. By offering thousands of classics POD, we are greatly expanding
our selection without adding any more inventory. We can offer anyone the chance
to get a trade paperback in print faster and less expensively than ever before.
Prices begin at $175 for the first 10 copies and go down to $125 for the next
10. Other features may add to the cost."
Boyer said that BooksByBookends has actually
produced books for customers within 48 hours, but more frequently, it takes
a few weeks. He sees unlimited potential in the low cost POD books, "memoirs,
genealogies, poetry, family recipes."
A recent article in New York Newsday, "MAMA
-- Accomplished cook unsuspecting author: How one family turned its matriarch's
kitchen prowess into a book," detailed the journey of 87-year-old Grace
Catapano's instructions for meatballs with two raisins to the pages of Macaroni
With Gravy, a very limited edition trade paperback containing her wisdom
and recipes along with photographs, essays
by family members, and other lists. Granddaughter Katie Catapano had heard a
radio report on self-publishing and ended up at BooksByBookends.
Like a good cook, the Boyers are constantly tweaking their product -- to make
it more efficient, more profitable, and more useful to the community. "I
can't imagine a more interesting job," Boyer concluded. --Nomi
Schwartz
Topics: News - Bookselling, Book Sense, About Bookstores,
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