|
Around Indie Bookstores
June 25, 2008
Hooray for a New Kids' Bookstore
This week, the Small
Business Blog on WashingtonPost.com reported on the opening of Hooray
for Books! by Trish Brown and Ellen Klein, two former staffers of A Likely
Story, which closed in November 2007. Brown and Klein have taken over A Likely
Story's old space and have hired three part-timers, also veterans of the old
store.
The Washington Post reported that the new store will feature morning
story hours on Friday and Saturday; child safety-seat inspections from a licensed
inspector; a summer camp; and a career camp showcasing people with different
professions, such as a canine police officer, firefighter, photographer and
restaurateur.
New Bookstore to Open in Salem, Oregon
JoAnne Kohler will open Tea Party Bookshop in downtown Salem, Oregon, by the
end of July, about two blocks from the former home of Jackson's, according Footnotes,
the newsletter of the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association. The store will
feature strong fiction, mystery, children's, green living, and metaphysical
sections, plus sidelines in about 1,400 square feet of retail space on the ground
floor. There will also be about 1,000 square feet on an upper floor to be used
as an event space. "
Kohler told Footnotes that the name for the
store came to her while she was reading Stacy Mitchell's Big-Box Swindle
on the way back from the last ABA Winter Institute. It was Mitchell's reference
to the Boston Tea Party as being the first instance of Americans rebelling against
a corporation controlling their buying options that inspired Kohler.
Maine's SoBo Book & Bean Has a New Owner
Seacoastonline.com
reported that as of June 1 South Berwick, Maine's SoBo
Book & Bean has a new owner -- Marie MacDonald, a full-time editor and
writer. MacDonald's plans for the "iconic stop for gently pre-read books,
conversation, and snacks and beverages" include restoring the bookstore's
special order capabilities, carrying select new books, expanding the existing
menu with a whole-foods/vegetarian focus, and hosing an active calendar of special
events and community gatherings.
A grand opening celebration is still in the works, but already on the store's
schedule for June and July are a knitting circle, a collage workshop, and monthly
art exhibits.
Amazon Bookstore Cooperative Saved From Closing
Last week, the Minneapolis
St. Paul Star Tribune reported that Amazon Bookstore Cooperative, the
nation's longest-operating feminist bookseller, had been saved from closing
by a supporter who bought the local landmark with her IRA money.
The store's savior is Ruta Skujins, a St. Paul native, who had worked for 33
years in the corporate world, but always dreamed of owning a bookstore, according
to the Star Tribune, which noted that the purchase made her the first
sole owner of the store that was founded in 1970 as a workers' cooperative.
The Amazon Bookstore Cooperative
website features a letter to customers that explains that, as details for
the transfer of ownership were being worked out, the bookstore was beginning
to restock the store and was once again taking special orders.
Topics: News - Bookselling, About Bookstores,
Printer friendly version
Email this article to a friend
ABA Booksellers: Discuss this article online
|