-
+25 +1
How long will printed books continue to exist and be necessary in the future?
Books will live on if we allow them to remain. We will need a tactile world to remind us that we are still here, that we can suffer and heal, make considered judgments, and love in a way that only biological beings can.
-
+20 +1
Book bans in Texas spread as new state law takes effect
As Texas enters its third straight school year of coordinated book banning activity, a growing number of districts are targeting library books. Caught in the dragnet: books featuring a “naked” crayon and one with a cartoon butt.
-
+19 +1
How important is bookstore distribution for nonfiction books?
"No matter what the topic of your book, you should be able to find a unique venue for it. I’ve been sold at wineries, hardware stores, and even apparel shops. I’ve just been asked to sell my books during a Biker Week that draws 18,000 people."
-
+30 +1
‘People who love books will come’: man opens bookstore atop a mountain in China
A man in China who spent 800,000 yuan (US$116,000) building a bookshop in a remote village on top of a mountain has captivated mainland social media after a video of the store was posted online. Milestone Bookstore is located in a rural area of Zhejiang province in eastern China, surrounded by farmland and woodland atop a mountain, Dami Video reported.
-
+17 +1
‘We’re book nerds’: the female friends opening bookshops together
Growing numbers of women in UK are joining forces with friends to run independent bookshops
-
+17 +1
Book prices need to rise for businesses to survive - industry body
Book prices in Wales need to increase for businesses to survive rising publishing costs, an industry body has warned. The Books Council of Wales (BCW) said prices had been "artificially low" to encourage customers to keep on buying. One Welsh publisher said the price of paper increased by 40% last year, with ink and glue prices rising too.
-
+19 +1
Almost nobody turned up to buy Prince Harry's book at midnight
Only a dozen copies of the book were sold in one store at midnight despite staff expecting queues at the door.
-
+13 +1
To build a delightful library for kids, start with these 99 books
The war over children's books is depressing. As a reset, we asked parents from across the political spectrum to tell us which books they consider essential.
-
+24 +1
Texas Bookstores Are Writing Their Own Stories
Indie bookshops across the state are embracing change, to thrive and stay alive. But a lot depends on the upcoming holiday season.
-
+17 +1
40 years of literature and love at Oak Park bookstore
If you’re looking for a calm, quiet place to get lost in a good story, there’s nothing quite like a local bookstore. But with the rise of big box stores and online retail, indie shops have faced stiff competition. None of that seems to have deterred the owners of the Book Beat in Oak Park, though. The store, tucked into an unassuming corner of a strip mall, has been thriving for 40 years now.
-
+19 +1
What Is Going On With Barnes & Noble?
Writers sounded the alarm after learning Barnes & Noble stores would only be stocking hardcovers with proven sales records. Here's more on what this means.
-
+19 +1
What We Gain from a Good Bookstore
It’s a place whose real boundaries and character are much more than its physical dimensions.
-
+23 +1
Where to dispose of unwanted books? Try a library bookstore
From Temecula to Pasadena, people are asking me how to get rid of books. This is because I wrote about my long-overdue purge of my own shelves, which resulted in 250 books filling 10 boxes on my living room floor. “So, where did you take your boxes of perfectly good books? I have thousands,” says Cynthia Tuell of Upland. “Marie Kondo doesn’t seem to mind throwing lots of stuff away but I believe we need to reduce, reuse, recycle. Where did you recycle your books?”
-
+21 +1
Another local bookstore bites the dust. This time it's my favorite one on earth
In a world too full of heartache, can I really feel this sad about a store closure? Let me check. YES. EXCUSE ME, BUT DUH. Yes, absolutely yes. It’s not even a question. Well, then. I suppose my gut is yelling what my brain resists. I can indeed feel melancholy. We aren’t grading heartache on a curve, here. Each experience occupies its own space.
-
+19 +1
What Kind of Bookstore Browser Are You?
We booksellers have seen it all.
-
+27 +1
How Barnes & Noble Went From Villain to Hero
To independent booksellers, the enormous chain was once a threat. Now it’s vital to their survival. And it’s doing well.
-
+10 +1
Remembrance of Bookstores Past
New Yorkers still tell stories of browsing at Harlem’s Liberation Bookstore or spending the afternoon at Scribner’s.
-
+12 +1
Good Riddance to Amazon’s Terrible Bookstores
Amazon is as dominant as ever—and its retail ambitions aren’t going anywhere. But booksellers can toast the end of its disastrous foray into their turf.
-
+17 +1
Amazon to shut its bookstores and other shops as its grocery chain expands
Amazon.com Inc said on Wednesday it plans to close all 68 of its brick-and-mortar bookstores, pop-ups and shops carrying toys and home goods in the United States and United Kingdom, ending some of its longest-running retail experiments.
-
+17 +1
Waterstones acquires Blackwell’s, the UK’s biggest independent bookseller
Sale of 143-year-old family-owned business marks a further concentration of the industry
Submit a link
Start a discussion