Monday, February 6, 2012

Bookstores on the Endangered List

It is my dream job to own a bookstore with a little coffee shop. I want nothing more than to surround myself with books and coffee. Sadly this is has been my life for the past 8 years; surrounding myself with textbook and inserting a coffee IV to stay awake. I guess I should have been really careful what I wished for and clarify next time that I want leisure books and not textbooks surrounding me. However, with the explosion of ebooks (and I am guilty on this account); the relevance of bookstores may become part of our literary history. The most primary example of this is Borders going out of business recently. Borders never came out with an eReader; whereas, Barnes and Noble has the Nook and Amazon has the Kindle. Although I cannot imagine my right hand without holding my Nook on a rainy day or when I am procrastinating doing my homework; I do not want bookstores or books to become extinct. At this moment bookstores are on the endangered store species list. There is no better sound in my opinion then the breaking of a spine of a paperback book, and you can always tell how loved a book is by the condition it is; an ebook does not possess these things. Therefore, I found it comforting and amusing to find the following blog from a former lawyer turned used bookstore owner. Here is a list of her "25 Things I Learned From Opening a Bookstore." Are you guilty of any of these as a customer?


1.  People are getting rid of bookshelves.  Treat the money you budgeted for shelving as found money.  Go to garage sales and cruise the curbs.


2.  While you're drafting that business plan, cut your projected profits in half.  People are getting rid of bookshelves.
3.  If someone comes in and asks where to find the historical fiction, they're not looking for classics, they want the romance section.
4.  If someone comes in and says they read a little of everything, they also want the romance section.
5. If someone comes in and asks for a recommendation and you ask for the name of a book that they liked and they can't think of one, the person is not really a reader.  Recommend Nicholas Sparks.
6.  Kids will stop by your store on their way home from school if you have a free bucket of kids books.  If you also give out free gum, they'll come every day and start bringing their friends.
7.  If you put free books outside, cookbooks will be gone in the first hour and other non-fiction books will sit there for weeks.  Except in warm weather when people are having garage sales.  Then someone will back their car up and take everything, including your baskets.
8.  If you put free books outside, someone will walk in every week and ask if they're really free, no matter how many signs you put out .  Someone else will walk in and ask if everything in the store is free. 
9.  No one buys  self help books in a store where there's a high likelihood of  personal interaction when paying.  Don't waste the shelf space, put them in the free baskets.
10.  This is also true of sex manuals.  The only ones who show an interest in these in a small store are the gum chewing kids, who will find them no matter how well you hide them.
11.  Under no circumstances should you put the sex manuals in the free baskets.  Parents will show up. 
12.  People buying books don't write bad checks.  No need for ID's. They do regularly show up having raided the change jar.
13.  If you have a bookstore that shares a parking lot with a beauty shop that caters to an older clientele, the cars parked in your lot will always be pulled in at an angle even though it's not angle parking.
14.  More people want to sell books than buy them, which means your initial concerns were wrong.  You will have no trouble getting books, the problem is selling them.  Plus a shortage of storage space for all the Readers Digest books and encyclopedias that people donate to you. 
15.  If you open a store in a college town, and maybe even if you don't, you will find yourself as the main human contact for some strange and very socially awkward men who were science and math majors way back when.  Be nice and talk to them, and ignore that their fly is open.
16.  Most people think every old book is worth a lot of money.  The same is true of signed copies and 1st editions.  There's no need to tell them they're probably not insuring financial security for their grandkids with that signed Patricia Cornwell they have at home.
17.  There's also no need to perpetuate the myth by pricing your signed Patricia Cornwell higher than the non-signed one. 
18.  People use whatever is close at hand for bookmarks--toothpicks, photographs, kleenex, and the very ocassional fifty dollar bill, which will keep you leafing through books way beyond the point where it's pr0ductive.
19.  If you're thinking of giving someone a religious book for their graduation, rethink. It will end up unread and in pristine condition at a used book store, sometimes with the fifty dollar bill still tucked inside.  (And you're off and leafing once again).
20.  If you don't have an AARP card, you're apparently too young to read westerns.
21.  A surprising number of people will think you've read every book in the store and will keep pulling out volumes and asking you what this one is about.  These are the people who leave without buying a book, so it's time to have some fun.  Make up plots.
22.  Even if you're a used bookstore, people will get huffy when you don't have the new release by James Patterson.  They are the same people who will ask for a discount because a book looks like it's been read.  
23.  Everyone has a little Nancy Drew in them.  Stock up on the mysteries.
24.  It is both true and sad that some people do in fact buy books based on the color of the binding.
25.  No matter how many books you've read in the past, you will feel woefully un-well read within a week of opening the store.  You will also feel wise at having found such a good way to spend your days.

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