Category Archives: Blatherings

Independents at what cost?

Who loves Independent bookstores? I’d really like for you to take a moment after you read this note and tell the rest of what the name of your favorite Independent bookstore is and why. I’d also like you to tell us where that store is. They deserve to recognized! But before you do that, I want to share my current thoughts with you. This comes on the heels of a week of phone calls, e-mails, and one snail mail letter regarding Independent bookstores. 

Okay, I’m going to speak freely and hope not to get kicked out of the industry, but I have to ask. 

How are the Independent stores going to survive if many of them have taken on the attitudes of the superchains? We, authors and publishers, are constantly driving ourselves insane with ways to market, many times focusing on marketing to the Independent stores with the sole purpose of supporting them as Independents. 

What the heck for? 

I don’t direct this at all Independent stores, just the ones who feel the need to: 

1. Forgo good customer service.

2. Refuse to do author events.

3. Treat most authors like second hand muck.

4. Refuse to think outside the box when picking books to sell. 

These are just a few of the things my authors and I Have faced over the last two weeks with more than a dozen Independent stores in 4 different states. 

When we call to talk to them, they are rude. We leave messages, they never return calls. We drop by with promo materials they hold them like they are infested with bacteria. (One Independent store actually dropped the materials into trashcan as author was leaving store–gosh how good that author must have felt seeing that.) 

It seems to be becoming common practice to charge authors to do events? They call it co-op, but it is far worse. Two stores this week, claimed they only work with Self-published authors if–I explained we are an Independent publisher, they insist this is pretty much the same as self-publishing-um, side note: why are we consider self-pubbed (and not in a good way) because we are Independent, and yet they are Independent and are convinced they deserve to be worshipped and adored. Back to point: we pay a certain amount to be on the shelf, on consignment, they won’t order through distribution channels, we pay a higher price to be in store and mentioned in newsletter, and another twice as high price for an event. PLUS we have to give them 50% discount. Um, and this wasn’t just one store it was two in as many days. Two different states. 

When did it become okay for Independent stores to look down upon other Independent businesses with total disdain. I had one author go back to a store several times. She asked who the owner was, was given a name and told she wasn’t in. Went back a few days later, asked for owner, was told by “customer service rep” wearing name badge with the same name as the owner that the owner was not in. Okay, it could have been the same name different person, but what are the chances, really? 

Augie Aleksy, World's Greatest Bookseller!

And what happens to Independent stores when they refuse to bring in anything but the bestsellers and everyone already has all the best sellers? The best seller list has been known to keep the same books on it for weeks at a time. 

Doesn’t this cut into potential sales when customers buy them up the first week? What do they buy the second week? 

There are authors out there who are marketing their butts off to readers and doing everything right, but still can’t sell books because they want to support their Independent stores but the Independent stores won’t carry the books the readers want. Those same Independent stores get furious when we Independent pubs and authors promote the likes of Amazon. It is traitorous, they tell us and they aren’t going to support us if we do that. Problem is we do that because they won’t support us. 

I ask again, why is it demanded that we support a business that refuses to support us? 

And the poor readers. I often visit bookstores when I travel. I rarely tell anyone I am a publisher, I am usually visiting to buy books or just enjoy the feel of a cozy bookstore. The last ten Independent bookstores I have been in were dreadful. I was never greeted, not once in any of the ten stores. I asked for help in a couple and while the responses were varied, only ONE bookseller was willing to help me, and that wasn’t until after she finished talking to her daughter about her grandson’s upcoming birthday party—15 minutes. Glutton that I am, stayed just to see how long it would take. 

Several of the stores did not have the books I was looking for and one refused to even try to get it because it was not from a real publisher. Really? 

Once Upon A Crime, Minneapolis, MN

I LOVE Independent bookstores. I used to own one, and I miss it dreadfully. But I can say with pride that even the nastiest most disgusting and rude customers were treated with respect and my staff and I did everything in our power to ensure they were satisfied, we were even nice to the creepy guy who sat in the back corner of the store reading the romance novels and making scary moaning noises. Why? Because he was a customer and after his little sit downs, he always bought books. 

I beg of you Independent booksellers out there, don’t put yourselves up on pedestals and think you are better than everyone else and should be treated special. Give us the good customer service our loyalty and money earns us and let US put you up on the pedestals. If you treat us well, we will adore you. 

Now, because I ask you to do it, I will tell you my favorite Independent bookstores. 

First and foremost is Centuries & Sleuths in Forest Park, IL. If you’ve never met Augie Aleksy, you should make the trip. He is a delight and he loves his customers. I honestly think he is my favorite bookseller ever. 

I also give huge kudos to the folks over at Olde Towne Books & Tea in Oswego, IL. These people are just plain cool. 

Another store in Woodstock, IL that earns my praise is Read Between the Lynes, I’ve never been there, but have worked them repeatedly and they are nice as pie. 

Ooh, and the Pat and her gang at Once Upon a Crime in Minnesota. Now, those are some nice folks who really know how to treat their customers. 

Mr. Shaw who owns Books Plus in Amelia Island, FL is a doll and his store caters to their customers. 

There are plenty more, but I would like to know who YOUR favorite stores are and why. Don’t they deserve your praise?

Don’t be dissin’ Ellen (Hopkins)

Ellen Hopkins is the latest victim in the fight to protect the young from reality. You can read the beginning of this dreadful saga at Ms. Hopkins’ blog, Censorship Bites.  In a follow up post to her original, she made a request that people might contact Mr. Sconzo. I did just thats. I then decided to write my own post on this, but then I saw how many others had done that and decided to post the letter I sent Mr. Sconzo instead. So below is my response to this insanity.

Mr. Sconzo, 

My name is Karen Syed and I am the president of Echelon Press Publishing based in Laurel, MD. It has recently been brought to my attention as well as the attention of the industry that you played a key role in having Ellen Hopkins removed from the appearance roster of the Teen Lit Fest. How sad I find this. 

While I do not live in your area, I do not have children in your school, and I will not be attending the Lit Fest, I still feel it important that you know the possible impact your actions may have on the lives of many young readers. We live in such a peculiar society. We complain incessantly about the decreasing test scores, the rise of adult illiteracy, and the overall rise in crimes and suicides being committed by young adults. Why do you think this is? Young adults are talked down to, they are sheltered from anything that might actually help them make important decisions in their lives, and they are discouraged from thinking for themselves. 

One important factor is the lack of intelligent reading materials available to engage young readers and make them want to increase their skills and allow them to become intelligent and productive adults. 

Then, there is the overwhelming amount of gratuitous violence made available in the media outlets (videos, video games, even music). By disengaging young people from the opportunity to meet and be inspired by an author of Ms. Hopkins’ caliber, you have made it even more probable that they will spend the time—which might be better spent at the Lit Fest meeting Ms. Hopkins—at home glued to a televisions with a movie or a video game teaching them how to kill more effectively. 

Ms. Hopkins has become an extremely sought after author with regard to speaking to and communicating with young readers. The potential positive influence a woman of this character could have on young people is invaluable to society as a whole. Ms. Hopkins takes the time to explore issues that many think are taboo for young readers. She does not glorify these issues, she puts them into perspective and allows the readers to embrace the positive potential of making better decisions. Her works are not dark and morbid, they enlighten, and more than anything they engage young readers. Isn’t this what we want for our future generations? To be engaged enough to care about something other than violence. 

I have had the honor of being a co-presenter at an event with Ms. Hopkins that took place at a high school. She is not only intelligent, she is committed to the idea that her books help young readers while entertaining them. She is exactly what an event like the Lit Fest deserves to have. She is exactly who the attendees of the Lit Fest deserve to come in contact with. 

It is a shame that you have chosen to censor her and her works on behalf of those you claim to be committed to. You have, in turn, probably done more harm than Ms. Hopkins and her work ever could and you have infringed on the rights of those young readers who would have benefitted from knowing her. 

I sincerely hope that in the future you will actually consider the needs of your charges as opposed to the importance of your own personal opinions. 

Karen Syed, President, Echelon Press LLC
Great Books. Great Price!
http://www.echelonpress.com
http://www.klsyed.com

 

In the Shadow of Bollywood

By Shobhan Bantwal – author of The Unexpected Son

If one grows up in India, it is inevitable that one is influenced by Bollywood, the affectionate and slightly mocking term for Bombay Hollywood. Bollywood churns out more movies each year than any other country in the world. Why? Because there is so much poverty and despair, that a movie packed with action, color, dance sequences, and a dramatic love story offers the perfect escape from reality.

Bollywood movies are vastly entertaining – often three hours long. And they are addicting. When people pay a lot of money and stand in long lines for tickets in the heat or rain of tropical India, they want their money’s worth – at least three hours’ worth. 

As a starry-eyed teenager in India, I grew up on a steady diet of Bollywood stories. I used to wonder why such wildly exciting tales couldn’t be put in a book. After waiting for many long years for such an author to emerge, I gave up the wait and decided to write “Bollywood in a Book” myself. My books are women’s fiction bubbling with high emotion, drama, some romance, and lots of cultural detail – all the elements of Bollywood. 

My first two books were set in India and dealt with hot-button social issues that plague women in contemporary India – the practices of dowry and aborting female fetuses in a male-oriented society. My third novel was set in Edison, New Jersey, and portrayed the immigrant experience in suburban America. 

The Unexpected Son is my latest book, set partly in India and partly in the U.S. It tells the tale of a happily married woman who wakes up one morning to a shocking truth: she has a grown son in India, a child she was told was stillborn 30 years ago. Now he is fighting for his life. Confessing her secret to her family could ruin them and her – and yet, she is compelled to return to her battle-scarred town in India and reconcile with her past, and her unknown son. 

Check out the Promotional Trailer

A Note From Shobhan – Information about my books, video trailers, contact, photos from India, reviews, contests, and recipes is available on my website: http://www.shobhanbantwal.com/.  Enter a giveaway on my website during August for a FREE copy of The Unexpected Son.  You can also visit me on Facebook and MySpace. All my books can be purchased at any retail bookstore or online bookseller.

For more information about virtual tour, visit

The Unexpected Son

About The Unexpected Son

What happens when a woman who’s realized her dreams wakes up to a shocking truth? It is a morning like any other in suburban New Jersey when Vinita Patil opens the battered envelope postmarked “Mumbai.” But the letter inside turns her comfortable world upside down. It tells Vinita an impossible story: she has a grown son in India whose life may depend on her.

Once upon a time, a naive young college girl fell for a wealthy boy whose primary interests were cricket and womanizing. Vinita knew, even then, that a secret affair with a man whose language and values were different from her own was a mistake. He finished with her soon enough—leaving her to birth a baby that was stillborn. Or so Vinita was told.

Now that child is a grown man in desperate need. How will she confess her secret past to her arranged-marriage husband and her grown daughter? Nonetheless, to help her son, to know him, Vinita must revisit her darkest hours by returning to her battle-scarred homeland—and pray for the faith of the family she leaves behind.

Shobhan Bantwal calls her writing “Bollywood in a Book,”romantic, colorful, action-packed tales, rich with elements of Indian culture — stories that entertain and educate.

Her writing career is a “menopausal epiphany,” because she took up creative writing at the age of 50. By day Shobhan works for the government. In the evenings and on weekends she slips into her writer’s cape and flies off to Authorland. She loves writing stories about her native India and Hindu culture.

To date, Shobhan has four published novels by Kensington Publishing, with a fifth slated for 2011. Since 2002, Shobhan’s articles and short stories have appeared in a variety of publications. Her award-winning stories are available for reading on her website: http://www.shobhanbantwal.com/

 

Check out the Cable Television Interview