The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble
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All we have locally.
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My daughter works in an independent non-profit bookstore. These places are apparently very popular with authors, and usually in fairly academic towns. It's a great bookstore.
@Mik said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
My daughter works in an independent non-profit bookstore. These places are apparently very popular with authors, and usually in fairly academic towns.
Indeed. They're very author-friendly. Especially locals and up-and-comers.
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My daughter used to work round the corner from an independent bookstore that was started up and owned by Jeff Kinney, who wrote The Diary of a Wimpy Kid books. The franchise probably helps quite a bit with the funding.
It's a really nice friendly place to visit, and they have authors visit, but I'm not sure how many books they sell - it's in a small town (where Jeff Kinney lives, obviously).
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My daughter used to work round the corner from an independent bookstore that was started up and owned by Jeff Kinney, who wrote The Diary of a Wimpy Kid books. The franchise probably helps quite a bit with the funding.
It's a really nice friendly place to visit, and they have authors visit, but I'm not sure how many books they sell - it's in a small town (where Jeff Kinney lives, obviously).
@Doctor-Phibes said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
My daughter used to work round the corner from an independent bookstore that was started up and owned by Jeff Kinney, who wrote The Diary of a Wimpy Kid books. The franchise probably helps quite a bit with the funding.
It's a really nice friendly place to visit, and they have authors visit, but I'm not sure how many books they sell - it's in a small town (where Jeff Kinney lives, obviously).
I visited a ridiculously small town in Australia—I mean even by their standards it was remote—where everything was named after Spike Milligan. I always wondered what the connection was.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
My daughter used to work round the corner from an independent bookstore that was started up and owned by Jeff Kinney, who wrote The Diary of a Wimpy Kid books. The franchise probably helps quite a bit with the funding.
It's a really nice friendly place to visit, and they have authors visit, but I'm not sure how many books they sell - it's in a small town (where Jeff Kinney lives, obviously).
I visited a ridiculously small town in Australia—I mean even by their standards it was remote—where everything was named after Spike Milligan. I always wondered what the connection was.
@Aqua-Letifer said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
everything was named after Spike Milligan
OK, this needs expansion...
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Waterstone and Borders and some independents - I remember loving to visit various cities for their bookstores. I don't travel any longer. I haven't been in Barnes & Noble in a couple of years. I may have to give it a try. My spouse is a bookaholic as well.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
My daughter used to work round the corner from an independent bookstore that was started up and owned by Jeff Kinney, who wrote The Diary of a Wimpy Kid books. The franchise probably helps quite a bit with the funding.
It's a really nice friendly place to visit, and they have authors visit, but I'm not sure how many books they sell - it's in a small town (where Jeff Kinney lives, obviously).
I visited a ridiculously small town in Australia—I mean even by their standards it was remote—where everything was named after Spike Milligan. I always wondered what the connection was.
@Aqua-Letifer said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
@Doctor-Phibes said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
My daughter used to work round the corner from an independent bookstore that was started up and owned by Jeff Kinney, who wrote The Diary of a Wimpy Kid books. The franchise probably helps quite a bit with the funding.
It's a really nice friendly place to visit, and they have authors visit, but I'm not sure how many books they sell - it's in a small town (where Jeff Kinney lives, obviously).
I visited a ridiculously small town in Australia—I mean even by their standards it was remote—where everything was named after Spike Milligan. I always wondered what the connection was.
It wasn't Woy Woy by any chance, was it?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/oct/04/australia.davidfickling
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I worked in the college bookstore for a few years, mid 1970s.
B&N might have been our biggest supplier of used text books. I think that was the majority of the business back then. They had a large store in NYC, I remember mostly used books, but I don't think they had much other retail at the time.
They have redefined themselves more than once.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
@Doctor-Phibes said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
My daughter used to work round the corner from an independent bookstore that was started up and owned by Jeff Kinney, who wrote The Diary of a Wimpy Kid books. The franchise probably helps quite a bit with the funding.
It's a really nice friendly place to visit, and they have authors visit, but I'm not sure how many books they sell - it's in a small town (where Jeff Kinney lives, obviously).
I visited a ridiculously small town in Australia—I mean even by their standards it was remote—where everything was named after Spike Milligan. I always wondered what the connection was.
It wasn't Woy Woy by any chance, was it?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/oct/04/australia.davidfickling
@Doctor-Phibes said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
@Aqua-Letifer said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
@Doctor-Phibes said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
My daughter used to work round the corner from an independent bookstore that was started up and owned by Jeff Kinney, who wrote The Diary of a Wimpy Kid books. The franchise probably helps quite a bit with the funding.
It's a really nice friendly place to visit, and they have authors visit, but I'm not sure how many books they sell - it's in a small town (where Jeff Kinney lives, obviously).
I visited a ridiculously small town in Australia—I mean even by their standards it was remote—where everything was named after Spike Milligan. I always wondered what the connection was.
It wasn't Woy Woy by any chance, was it?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/oct/04/australia.davidfickling
Holy shit it absolutely was.
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I haven’t visited a Barnes & Noble for a long time. I will make it a point to visit one soon just because of this thread.
From the article @Aqua-Letifer linked earlier:
… the lesson is so simple. // If you want to sell music, you must love those songs. If you want to succeed in journalism, you must love those newspapers. If you want to succeed in movies, you must love the cinema.
Perhaps there are limits to this “simple lesson.” I cannot quite see a resurgence of Block Buster stores based on love for the movies or the cinema. On the political front, does it follow that “if you want to succeed at governing, you must love the government (institutions)”? This would suggest that the “the government is the problem” crowd will not succeed at governing, no?
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I haven’t visited a Barnes & Noble for a long time. I will make it a point to visit one soon just because of this thread.
From the article @Aqua-Letifer linked earlier:
… the lesson is so simple. // If you want to sell music, you must love those songs. If you want to succeed in journalism, you must love those newspapers. If you want to succeed in movies, you must love the cinema.
Perhaps there are limits to this “simple lesson.” I cannot quite see a resurgence of Block Buster stores based on love for the movies or the cinema. On the political front, does it follow that “if you want to succeed at governing, you must love the government (institutions)”? This would suggest that the “the government is the problem” crowd will not succeed at governing, no?
@Axtremus said in The Bizarre Resurgence of Barnes & Noble:
I haven’t visited a Barnes & Noble for a long time. I will make it a point to visit one soon just because of this thread.
From the article @Aqua-Letifer linked earlier:
… the lesson is so simple. // If you want to sell music, you must love those songs. If you want to succeed in journalism, you must love those newspapers. If you want to succeed in movies, you must love the cinema.
Perhaps there are limits to this “simple lesson.” I cannot quite see a resurgence of Block Buster stores based on love for the movies or the cinema. On the political front, does it follow that “if you want to succeed at governing, you must love the government (institutions)”? This would suggest that the “the government is the problem” crowd will not succeed at governing, no?
Your lack of reading comprehension is amazing. He wasn't talking about customers, he was talking about the people in leadership positions at companies. Honestly, if you can't be bothered to even read the article, don't comment on it.