alt.
books
by
M.J Rose
Hand
Selling Online
Readerville.com
a web-based community for anyone who loves books
is opening a bookstore. Its a hybrid, grafting the best
of what web technology has to offer onto the heart of those old-fashioned,
independent bookstores that are disappearing even as I write this.
Independents
are usually on the small size, crammed with more books than there
are shelves. While not everything on those shelves is a best seller
or even current they contain more worthwhile books
than most of us can read in a lifetime. And usually the proprietor
knows your name and your tastes after youve made just on
e
or two visits back.
These are
the stores that authors live and die by; not only do independents
start the buzz about new books that might not be getting big press,
they can literally create bestsellers. And these are the stores
that readers mourn when they shut down, pushed out of business
by the superstore that opens in the mall or by online sales that
cut into profit.
But there
are survivors, too. Dennis Duttons in Brentwood, Just Books
in Greenwich CT, Northshire Books in Vermont, Mary Gay Shipleys
That Little Bookstore in Blytheville, A Clean Well Lighted Place
for Books in San Francisco, R.J. Julias in Madison CT, even
the mighty Powells in Portland, OR: if they gave out Pulitzers
for the best bookstores, these would be the winners.
Now, Readerville.coms
store is poised to join their ranks.
The site,
powered by booksite.com, which handles all the backend, offers
a searchable database of over one million books, comparable to
other online bookstores.
But there
the comparisons stop.
Highlighted
here are fascinating finds, creative companions and Readerville
reviews on books that might have been released last week or last
century.
And because
this new bookstore is part of the Readerville.com site, it is
has a community of avid readers surrounding it where book lovers
spend hours engaging in every kind of literary conversation a
bibliophile could imagine.
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