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Book man:
Christopher
Tarr's store
won't make him
rich.
MELANIE
STETSON FREEMAN
STAFF
|
'We're not in it for the money'
The number of
independent bookstores has been steadly growing. But will they
survive?
By Teresa Mιndez | Staff
writer of The Christian Science Monitor
BROAD BROOK, CONN.
The swan song of the independent bookstore has
been sung and then sung again. In a bookselling climate dominated
by the Internet and chain stores, even the most persistent redoubts
are reportedly packing up. Certainly the numbers bear this out.
Membership in the trade organization for independently owned
bookstores has dropped by more than half in the past decade.
Yet new stores continue to open. "We're like
Mark Twain" (who lived long after he was mistakenly reported dead),
says Oren Teicher of the American Booksellers Association (ABA).
"Rumors of our death are premature."
In 2005 the ABA registered 90 new stores.
Last year there were 97, spanning the country from tiny, two-store
towns to bursting metropolises. It's a recent shift, and one that
should be heartening for famished bookworms. But it leaves one
wondering, even worrying, about these novice booksellers, so new to
a business where 2 percent is often considered a good margin of
profit. Are they blinded by their love of books, harboring romantic
dreams of earning a living? Is there even room in the cultural
landscape for the independent bookstore? Is it worth the risk?
Like others who set up shop in 2006,
Christopher Tarr, owner of Broad Brook Books & Stuff, on a bank of
the audibly rushing waterway for which this town was named, has
faced his share of doubters. "Everybody's first reaction to a
bookstore is, 'Why ?' " he says. But the question never gave him
much pause.
As for the other questions, the answer to
those, it seems, is yes. These new booksellers are romantic
(but also pragmatic), they hope to pull in a salary (or at least not
lose money), they believe there absolutely is a place in their
communities for independent bookstores, and yes, the risk is
well worth it.
Mr. Tarr, his narrow store crowded with the
unfinished poplar shelves that he assembled himself, embodies many
of the attitudes shared by recently minted booksellers, just as his
store reflects some of the trends among the newest crop of
bookshops.
His wife grew up in this town of 3,500, a
bedroom community 25 minutes from Hartford; he's from the next town
over. When the couple moved from Maine, four years ago, Tarr was
struck by the lack of things to do in Broad Brook's sliver of a
downtown.
"I was adrift and I needed something to do,"
says Tarr, an English literature major, with a penchant for
philosophy, who has always had a "veritable bookstore" in his house.
"And this town needed something. So it seemed like the right thing
to do."
Other nascent booksellers also talk of
filling a community need by invigorating a sleepy hamlet or
revitalizing an urban center and being met with appreciation.
Fox Tale Books owner Mary McHale imagines she
may be able to help give the 2,200 person town of New Durham, N.H.,
a heart. "Hopefully this will be a starting point," she says. "In
some ways, we're like suburbia because everyone has to get in their
car to go places." Her bookstore, where the coffee is free, may
change that.
At the other end of the spectrum, in the
middle of recently hip and thriving downtown Los Angeles, is Julie
Swayze's Metropolis Books. Opened last month on a strip that she
says was once referred to as the demilitarized zone, Ms. Swayze sees
both arty loft-dwellers and homeless residents of the nearby
Midnight Mission as part of her customer base.
Broad Brook Books, meanwhile, opened in
August, in the 150-year-old red brick building owned by Tarr's
mother-in-law, who is also his partner. Monthly rent just covers
taxes and utilities, which may be key to staying open.
In the training seminars that her
bookstore-consulting company conducts, Donna Paz Kaufman says she
advises would-be owners to buy their own building. "Real estate is
one of the biggest hurdles," she says. Business at Paz & Associates
has held steady over the past 15 years, with about 300 prospective
booksellers requesting information each year.
But at the ABA, membership dropped from 4,057
in 1996 to 1,625 members last year. From the mid-'90s until two
years ago, store openings could be counted on two hands, says
Teicher of the ABA. He speculates that part of what's changed may be
that entrepreneurial book lovers have spotted a vacuum for the type
of services independents can provide.
Part of what these stores and the larger
independent community are working to do is find a niche, a way to
create an experience the warehouse-size stores cannot, whether
through knowledgeable handselling, hosting author and community
events, or carrying a particular genre.
The newest booksellers may also be a savvier
breed, with a background in business or books, sharpened by seeing
independent's decades-long struggle for survival. "Twenty-five years
ago they would have leased some space, built some shelves, and
opened the door," says Russ Lawrence, ABA president and owner, since
1986, of Chapter One Book Store in Hamilton, Mont. "Now they're
getting a business plan together."
|
Small is nice:
Beth Grant (l.), co-owner
of independent bookstore Broad Brook Books, greets a
regular customer.
MELANIE STETSON FREEMAN
STAFF
|
As for money, well, as Tarr says, "It wasn't,
'Let's open a bookstore and make a million dollars.' " Indeed. Lisa
Sharp of Nightbird Books in Fayetville, Ark., would love to earn a
small salary. But if her store "can support itself and still be a
contribution to the community," she says, "that would be enough."
Her husband is keeping his job as an architect. Similarly, Tarr's
wife is a payroll clerk across town.
At least there's an upside to the lasting
reports of the independents' demise. "In a way, it frees me up to
make the bookstore the way that I want it to be," says Adam Tobin,
an MFA poetry graduate whose Brooklyn, N.Y., store, Adam's Books,
has, for the time being, become his "literary project."
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