Independence
Aug. 17th, 2004 11:14 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I like specialty bookstores best. I like going in and knowing that the clerk has read some stuff I've read, that the clerk has some idea of what kind of books they're trying to sell, that even if we have different opinions, the clerk will have opinions about the stuff I have opinions about.
Some people keep trying to claim the virtues of specialty bookstores for independent bookstores, though, and I just haven't been buying it. I go into "mainstream" or "general" independent bookstores, and for the most part I don't see the diversity of stock they claim. Some manage it. Most coast by on the same bestsellers you can find everywhere else. Most have clerks who are more into the indy cred of working at an independent bookstore than they are into knowing all their sections well. (If I was into a local poetry scene, I probably wouldn't feel this way, as local poetry seems to be one thing a "non-specialty" independent bookstore will have that's different from the chains.) I've felt that it's all nonsense, this "independent bookstore" thing.
But. I found some things at Schuler's, which is a large general independent, that I haven't seen elsewhere. They had a good big stock of Albert Goldbarth poetry, and they had The Latvians: A Short History. I got those. I also saw the middle book in the K.J. Parker series I'm reading, which is a British import. I'll buy it at Uncle Hugo's instead, but it was good to see something genuinely different in the stock. And they had YAs divided into mainstream and SF/fantasy/mystery, and their "genre" section was large and well-stocked.
So there were things to like at Schuler's. It was doing the independent "general" bookstore well. Maybe the ones I've run into before have just been poorly done, or maybe they've been too small -- Schuler's is the size of a Borders or a B&N, and it has music and a cafe, so it's competing with the big stores on their own turf. It makes me a little more willing to listen when people talk about independent bookstores as though they're the same thing as specialty bookstores. I'll still probably point out that many independents are not the way they describe them at all, but at least I won't have to give people the "what are you smoking?" look.
Where do you buy your books?
Some people keep trying to claim the virtues of specialty bookstores for independent bookstores, though, and I just haven't been buying it. I go into "mainstream" or "general" independent bookstores, and for the most part I don't see the diversity of stock they claim. Some manage it. Most coast by on the same bestsellers you can find everywhere else. Most have clerks who are more into the indy cred of working at an independent bookstore than they are into knowing all their sections well. (If I was into a local poetry scene, I probably wouldn't feel this way, as local poetry seems to be one thing a "non-specialty" independent bookstore will have that's different from the chains.) I've felt that it's all nonsense, this "independent bookstore" thing.
But. I found some things at Schuler's, which is a large general independent, that I haven't seen elsewhere. They had a good big stock of Albert Goldbarth poetry, and they had The Latvians: A Short History. I got those. I also saw the middle book in the K.J. Parker series I'm reading, which is a British import. I'll buy it at Uncle Hugo's instead, but it was good to see something genuinely different in the stock. And they had YAs divided into mainstream and SF/fantasy/mystery, and their "genre" section was large and well-stocked.
So there were things to like at Schuler's. It was doing the independent "general" bookstore well. Maybe the ones I've run into before have just been poorly done, or maybe they've been too small -- Schuler's is the size of a Borders or a B&N, and it has music and a cafe, so it's competing with the big stores on their own turf. It makes me a little more willing to listen when people talk about independent bookstores as though they're the same thing as specialty bookstores. I'll still probably point out that many independents are not the way they describe them at all, but at least I won't have to give people the "what are you smoking?" look.
Where do you buy your books?
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Date: 2004-08-17 09:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-17 09:42 am (UTC)When I lived in Lincoln, I bought a TON of books at A Novel Idea. If you've never been there, you should *totally* go. Best. Used. Bookstore. EVER.
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Date: 2004-08-17 10:25 am (UTC)In practice, I bounce between speciality and Borders, because Borders is easy for me to stop at on the way to or from at least 3 places I go very regularly.) I also like Borders for their "Place an order online, pick it up when it comes in" option, which I do for specific stuff I want.
I would like to shop at Dreamhaven and Uncle Hugo's more often (but either of them is much more of a conscious decision to get to: not near other stuff I'm doing regularly, which makes it harder.) I do a moderate amount of shopping at Magus now that I'm in there every couple of weeks for classes, some of which is books.
I was in Bound to be Read for the first time on Saturday (I'm not usually down that way either...) and liked it much. (Small SF section, but well-stocked with stuff I like reading. I didn't even make it to the non-fiction.)
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Date: 2004-08-17 10:40 am (UTC)Three years later, Borders was well on its way to being the corporation you all now know, and I had started eating meat.
I still eat at Seva though, and I definitely still shop at Borders. But the "new" Borders out by the highway doesn't cut it; it's Store 1 for the feeling of true happiness. Perplexingly, bookstores all over Britain thwarted me at every turn with crappy, crappy genre selections, except one tiny independent store in... (blanking on the town name. I bought something there. I'll report back some day, but I doubt anyone cares)--until I went to the Borders in York, where I found a Store 1-worthy selection of genre goodies.
That said, my favorite (not-used) bookstore is The Regulator in Durham, which is a small independent. Just because I have a history there. They had a well-stocked YA fantasy section when I was growing up--and still do.
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Date: 2004-08-17 10:44 am (UTC)I mainly look for new titles and Must Haves at the University Bookstore. It's a tightly packed, dense and overflowing section that often has older titles competing with new releases on the shelves. They sell back issues of Locus and have a fairly wide selection of collections, anthologies, graphic novels, and other small print titles. Lots of local writers have signed stock and given readings.
Occassionally, I'll go to B&N or order off Amazon. But that's only when I'm particularly lazy. It's not that I dislike the big box stores, it's just that I feel better supporting the smaller stores. I can go into any one of the smaller stores where the buyers are interested in customer feedback and/or will go out of their way to special order something they don't have in stock.
There are some small specialty stores that aren't very warm and fuzzy. They aren't interested in hearing from their consumers or going out of their way to make a sale. They don't cater to fandom in any way, shape, or form, so I frequent those kinds of stores less often.
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Date: 2004-08-17 04:14 pm (UTC)My experiences with general bookstores have been mediocre, until the big-box chains, so I also lack the habit of liking general independents.
Before Uncle Hugos, the B. Dalton at Southdale had the best SF section in town.
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