It also often doesn't/didn't exist. No mom & pops for me when I was a kid. Until the first cheesy little chain bookstores opened up in our local mall, we had nothing. And even then the selection sucked until they finally opened a real Border's a few years ago.
posted by aaron at 8:32 PM on June 25, 2001
Unprovable assertion. The mere fact that an independent bookstore exists does not automatically mean that it is "good." Many of those independent bookstores probably sucked.
and many of these fell by the wayside during the first years of the superstore invasion; membership in the American Booksellers Association dropped from a high of about 5,000 in the mid-1990s to a low of about 3,000 in the middle of last year.
These numbers are provided with no breakdown of the reasons the owners of those bookstores gave for closing down. (For all we know, 2,000 independent bookstores may have simply decided to give up their membership in the ABA. Maybe the ABA raised their yearly dues through the roof at some point in the late 1990s? No way for us to tell.) As such, they're meaningless.
Besides, in the end, the fact remains that no giant bookstore chain can force people to shop at their stores. The consumers are making their own choice to patronize chain bookstores over the independents. The indies will have to either adapt or die.
posted by aaron at 10:46 AM on June 26, 2001
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posted by ZachsMind at 8:08 PM on June 25, 2001