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Old 03-20-2008, 05:03 PM   #61
Alisa
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Alisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongueAlisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongueAlisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongueAlisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongueAlisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongueAlisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongueAlisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongueAlisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongueAlisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongueAlisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongueAlisa can tie a knot in a cherry stem with his or her tongue
 
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: Paperwhite, Kindle 3 (retired), Skindle 1.2 (retired)
Quote:
Originally Posted by Darqref View Post
1. A *good* bookseller wants and needs to know as much as possible about what's being published, in all forms and formats. One of my reasons for going to a bookstore is to take advantage of that knowledge. Currently that is by seeing what's on the shelves, on the new books racks, or what the staff recommend. I could still use this in an ebook transaction - the point is that I don't know everything that is available. Even in print, I regularly get surprised by finding something I didn't expect, and that's almost the only way I'll see new authors. Ebooks just expand the problem, because I almost never hear about all the new stuff, and then there's the garbage filter that one effect of an established publisher.

2. A bookseller would have to charge something above the internet fee, just to pay salaries, lights, and rent. That inevitably means the ebook would cost more. That's a minus, but if the actual price is still reasonable, I may not mind paying. Dunno how the economics would really work out though.

3. One of the reasons for genre bookstores, is that it's hard (and/or not interesting to the seller) to be up to date on everything, and maybe they can keep up with a smaller focus. Would you go to a bookstore for ebooks, if the staff were really knowledgeable about something like foreign language literature, or one or more special genres? Now add ebooks to the mix, and suddenly you're finding out about stuff just published in Timbuktu or New South Wales, and it doesn't depend on a mistaken street date or slow shipment.

4. I don't believe we'll see an ebook-only physical store. But when the bookstore is doing stuff like author signings, I think anything extra would be good for business.

*** Hey Fans, here's a special offer, get all of specialAuthorX's backlist in ebook form for $10 when you buy the new hardback. Good only while the Author is in the store!*** (or similar time limited promotions.)
I envision the "bookstore" of the future being more like a book club: a social space that serves food and drink, provides a place to hang out, and possibly sells other items like readers, accessories, games, etc. It could cooperate with publishers (possibly tailored to a specific genre) to publicize books, host events, et.c, for which it could also receive a commission. I'm not likely to go to a brick and mortar just to buy content I can easily download. I will go out and pay money for a good experience. I think plenty of book lovers would enjoy finding a place where they could talk face-to-face with other people that were interested in the same stuff.

I think when most of us look with sorrow on the idea of the "demise" of the bookstore (or the library *gasp*), it's not just for a big room full of paper. It's for the value those places provide to us in reading and learning. That comes from people, not wood pulp.
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