Live From BookExpo America -- Day 3

Printer-friendly versionPrinter-friendly version

Celebration of Bookselling Features Presentation of Inaugural Indies Choice Awards

ABA honored the winners of the inaugural Indies Choice Book Awards today at the Celebration of Bookselling Luncheon. Hundreds of booksellers gathered to honor 50 of their favorite authors and to celebrate the year's top Indie Next List picks. The theme of the day was gratitude -- for both booksellers and authors. As Neil Gaiman summed it up -- "Independent booksellers are awesome."


Indies Choice Book Award winner Neil Gaiman greets booksellers at the Celebration of Bookselling.

Bookseller Tom Lowenburg of New Orleans' Octavia Books said that the awards ceremony belongs to the independent booksellers who chose its winners. "This is really our event. There's an air of informality as we sit at the table with and honor these authors that we've had a relationship with." He also appreciated the expansion of the awards beyond the previous four categories. "It lends more personality to the event," he said.

The Indies Choice Book Awards, formerly the Book Sense Book of the Year Awards, have expanded to six categories -- Best Indie Buzz Book (Fiction), Best Conversation Starter (Nonfiction), Best Author Discovery, Best Indie Young Adult Buzz Book (Fiction), Best New Picture Book, and Most Engaging Author -- and represent the collective picks of nationwide independent bookstores.

Incoming ABA President Michael Tucker of Books Inc., the event's emcee, began by thanking Levenger for providing the gifts for the award winners and honorees. He also offered booksellers' collective appreciation to outgoing ABA CEO Avin Mark Domnitz and outgoing President Gayle Shanks of Changing Hands Bookstore in Tempe, Arizona.

Gaiman, whose Graveyard Book (Harper Collins) won Best Indie Young Adult Buzz Book, earned a round of applause when he announced a Graveyard Book competition for independent booksellers. He challenged booksellers to create the best possible Graveyard Book-themed Halloween party and to send pictures and details to Harper Collins (though Harper Collins was hearing about it for the first time, Gaiman assumed their cooperation). The winner, he said, gets an in-store author signing, and 10 runners-up will win "signed posters and other tchotchkes."

After Gaiman issued this challenge, Jon Scieszka, an honoree for Most Engaging Author (Knucklehead, Viking Children's Books) then put Penguin on the hook for a similar Knucklehead competition.

Annie Barrows, co-author with Mary Ann Shaffer of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society (Dial Press), winner for Best Indie Buzz Book, said that indie booksellers made The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society into the phenomenon that it has become. She explained that the main character says books have a secret homing device that "brings them to their perfect readers." Independent booksellers, she said, are that secret device.

To accept the award for Best New Picture Book, Bats at the Library (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), author Brian Lies, who couldn't attend the lunch, spoke to booksellers via a video in which he stepped out of a jury-rigged batmobile and gave kudos to booksellers who introduced his bat books to kids nationwide, "from Portland, Oregon to Portland, Maine."

Sherman Alexie, who was honored as Most Engaging Author, said that since the time he was "just a kid" and doing his first tour, to 28 cities, for Tonto and Lone Ranger Fistfight in Heaven (Grove), independent booksellers have always shown him "amazing kindness," welcomed him, fed him, and gave him a "sense of tribe, in the best possible way."

David Wroblewski (The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, Ecco), winner of Best Author Discovery, said he was "utterly, utterly grateful" for all the support shown by indie booksellers, "the most informed and involved readers there are."

In a video featuring Sarah Vowell (The Wordy Shipmates, Riverhead), who won Best Conversation Starter, the author said she appreciated the "hard work and enthusiasm" that went into handselling her book. Her video included vignettes that demonstrated, in inimitable Sarah Vowell style, how virtually any office conversation can be parlayed into a discussion of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

Three books were inducted into the Picture Book Hall of Fame -- Where the Wild Things Are, by Maurice Sendak (HarperCollins); Make Way for Ducklings, by Robert McCloskey (Viking Juvenile); and Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus, by Mo Willems (Hyperion Books for Children).

Also part of the celebration of bookselling were the announcement of Publishers Weekly's Bookseller of the Year, which went to Carmichael's Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky, and the Women's National Book Association 2009 Pannell Awards, which went to Joseph-Beth Booksellers in Cincinnati, Ohio, for the General Bookstore category, and Mrs. Nelson's Toy and Book Shop in LaVerne, California, for the Children's Specialty store category winner. That Bookstore in Blytheville in Blytheville, Arkansas, was recognized with an honorable mention in the General Bookstore category.


Hundreds Pay Tribute to Outgoing ABA CEO Domnitz

Hundreds of indie booksellers, publishers, and others from the book industry gathered at Hotel ABA in Brooklyn last night for an emotional goodbye to outgoing ABA CEO Avin Mark Domnitz.


From left to right: Incoming ABA CEO Oren Teicher; ABA CFO Ellie Chang; and outgoing ABA CEO Avin Mark Domnitz

ABA's COO Oren Teicher opened the event by noting, "When I got Avin to agree to this evening, I had to promise that we'd have a good time." Teicher, who will become the association's next CEO on June 1, more than made good on that promise. The evening was full of laughter, tears, emotional reunions (six former ABA presidents had flown to New York to attend the event), and tributes for the man who, in Teicher's words, has been "the most passionate and effective advocate that [America's] booksellers have ever had."

Reading from one of the hundreds of e-mails received following the news of Domnitz's decision to retire (the bookseller, in praising Domnitz's financial seminars, had told him that he was "part of our store's Board of Directors, whether you know it or not"), Teicher said, "There are literally hundreds and hundreds of booksellers that are in business because of Avin Domnitz." Looking ahead, Teicher said, "In everything ABA does, we will channel Avin."


John Ingram, chair of Ingram Industries, pays tribute to Avin Mark Domnitz.

Joining in the praise for Domnitz was John Ingram, chair of Ingram Industries, who said he had first met Domnitz during the CEO's bookselling days in Milwaukee. Ingram characterized Domnitz as "first and foremost a great bookseller," whose insight and influence had helped the company develop "a lot of the programs we have today." Ingram said, "There isn't anybody who has loved independent booksellers more than Avin -- though sometimes [he] had to administer tough love." Lightning Print had a hand in one of gifts Domnitz received at the celebration, a special hardcover edition of a notebook that he has kept since 1968, which lists every book he has read since then, close to 1,000 titles. In addition, Domnitz received a signed, first edition copy of Philip Roth's Goodbye, Columbus, presented by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.


Former ABA presidents Ann Christophersen, Neal Coonerty, Joyce Meskis, Mitchell Kaplan, Richard Howorth, and Chuck Robinson took the stage for an "ABA Presidential Summit" tribute.

Outgoing ABA President Gayle Shanks of Changing Hands Bookstore in Tempe, Arizona, praised Domnitz's ability to combine a firsthand knowledge of bookstore operations with the insights gained from an understanding of "macro-bookselling," as well as an international industry perspective. "It has been an absolute blessing to have you in our lives, and we love you so much." When Joyce Meskis, Ann Christophersen, Neal Coonerty, Mitchell Kaplan, Richard Howorth, and Chuck Robinson took the stage for an "ABA Presidential Summit" tribute, Meskis told Domnitz that "the wisdom you shared with us has made us all better booksellers, and we are so grateful."

But perhaps the most emotional moment came when Domnitz's brother Rick took the stage to speak. In a short, moving speech, he said that booksellers, like Domnitz's family, were "fortunate to have come into [Avin's] circle of concern," and he thanked ABA for "now returning him to us. We will take good care of him because we love him so."


ABA's Town Hall Meeting

The topics discussed at the American Booksellers Association's Town Hall Meeting -- held on Friday, May 29, at BookExpo America in New York City -- included this year's show and BEA programming and changes, prospects for healthcare reform for small businesses, Internet sales tax, and lay-down dates. The informal meeting, designed to allow booksellers to ask questions and share views on any industry-related topic, was led by outgoing ABA President Gayle Shanks of Changing Hands Bookstore.

The meeting began with a brief convention update from BEA Show Director Lance Fensterman, who, before opening up the floor to questions, reported that the number of ABA members participating in this year's BookExpo America is "nearly identical" to the bookseller attendance at the last New York show, in 2007. "They say the sky is falling, but apparently it's not falling for independent booksellers," said Fensterman. "We appreciate our partnership with ABA."

Hut Landon, executive director of the Northern California Independent Booksellers Association, wondered what the response has been to having ABA's Day of Education back at the convention center. For the past two years, the Day of Education was held at Hotel ABA. "That's a great question," said Fensterman, who noted that BEA and ABA were working very closely regarding this issue. "We're going to have to take your temperature [after the show] to find out what's best for ABA members. We wanted ABA under the big tent, but I understand the sense of community [at Hotel ABA]; we need to know how this went."

Fensterman also discussed plans to move the show to a midweek schedule next year, which he predicted would garner "more consistent participation from publishing houses" and noted that he expected that "we won't take you out of your stores on the biggest day of the week." He said BEA was considering the possibility of a Tuesday evening trade show preview just for booksellers, "but we're not sure how we would do that yet. We're quite open to good ideas."

In addition, BEA is looking into providing digital video for those who could not attend BEA. "We're close," Fensterman said. "There is an effort this year to catch a lot more content on video. As for streaming it live simultaneously, we're close, but it's still fairly cost prohibitive. It might be doable to take on one event -- something that was highly relevant."

Miah Olmsted of Back to Books in Hudson, Wisconsin, asked about ABA's advocacy efforts regarding health insurance policies for small businesses. Oren Teicher, incoming CEO of ABA, responded that President Obama's proposed healthcare reforms offered the potential of giving small businesses greater access to affordable healthcare. He reported that Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of Health and Human Services, had noted that making healthcare more affordable was a key priority.

Teicher urged booksellers to attend Saturday's session "How the SBA and the Federal Stimulus Package Can Help Your Business," in Room 1E09 of the Javits Center, which will feature Ana M. Ma, chief of staff at the U.S. Small Business Administration. He explained that tomorrow's session provides booksellers with a unique and powerful opportunity to let SBA know which issues, such as health care, are most important to independent booksellers. "SBA categorizes a small business as $50 million in annual sales with 500 employees or fewer; so, we need to educate SBA that there are businesses that are a lot smaller. This is an important message to convey."

Catherine Weller of Sam Weller's Books in Salt Lake City, Utah, inquired as to the status of ABA's e-fairness efforts. Teicher reported, "We've worked really hard this past year to get New York-style legislation passed.... We have efforts in about a dozen other states. We're going to keep plugging away and ... we're going to win -- not just because we're right, but because of the financial crisis in so many states. It would be preferable to deal with this nationally, but in the absence of a federal solution, we'll continue our efforts at the statewide level. I predict there will be a few more states with Internet sales tax legislation by next year."

Bob Contant of St. Mark's Bookshop in New York, noted that he had a dilemma with his competitors ignoring publishers' lay-down dates and wondered what ABA and publishers were doing in regards to this issue.

"We're all struggling with that," Shanks said. "Our whole industry is in a transition. Publishers are trying to figure out what they are doing, and we are trying to figure out what we are doing. It's not that we haven't been talking about it. ABA's Mark Nichols and David Walker have discussed this with publishers often."

Following the discussion on lay-down dates, Olmstead gave "major props" to the association for the IndieBound iPhone application.

The Town Hall meeting concluded with a query from Todd Dickenson of Aaron's Books in Lititz, Pennsylvania. He wondered if anyone had any experience filing a claim with LIBRIS. "How good are they?"

"This goes back several years when we had a water issue," said Chuck Robinson of Village Books in Bellingham, Washington. "They were incredibly responsive and quick to deal with it."

Matt Miller of Tattered Cover Bookstore in Denver, Colorado, told attendees that he is on the LIBRIS Board as is Books & Books' Mitch Kaplan. "If you have problems, obviously first call LIBRIS. But if you are having any problems with LIBRIS, let me or Mitch know."


ABA's Annual Membership Meeting

Following the Town Hall, outgoing ABA President Shanks called the association's Annual Membership Meeting to order. Board member Steve Bercu of BookPeople in Austin, Texas, delivered the Report of the Nominating Committee, which noted the election of new Board member Betsy Burton of the King's English Bookshop in Salt Lake City, Utah, and the re-election of Becky Anderson of Anderson's Bookshops in Naperville, Illinois, and Beth Puffer of Bank Street Bookstore in New York to second three-year terms on the Board. The association membership also ratified the Board's choice of Michael Tucker of Books Inc. in San Francisco to serve a one-year term as ABA president and Anderson to serve a one-year term as vice president/secretary.

In the Report of the President, Shanks began by noting, "I probably don't have to tell any of you in this room that this has been a tough year both for member stores and for ABA." However, she said that "ABA staff and booksellers across America have no intention of giving up the good fight to create the literary landscape and to maintain our marketshare and our place in our community's hearts." Among the highlights of the year, Shanks noted: alliances with other indie trade associations, a task force on interactive electronic catalogs, "expanding the possibilities for our booksellers to use IndieBound in new and creative ways," and increasing the use of social media ("the [ABA] staff is Twittering up the wazoo, helping and learning from booksellers how to be more effective in this medium").

Shanks told the membership that "perhaps one of the biggest jobs this board took on this year was hiring a new CEO," noting that "it took us quite a while to get our brains wrapped around the idea that [CEO Avin Mark Domnitz] was retiring." Turning to Domnitz, she said, "Avin, in this public forum, on behalf of the current Board, previous boards, and the entire membership, I'd like to express our sincere thanks and appreciation for the amazing job that you have done for this organization," and the members offered a standing ovation in support of her words. Explaining that the search committee for a new CEO had received more than 100 applications and had "interviewed seven serious contenders," Shanks said the hiring of current ABA COO Oren Teicher gave ABA "the person we thought best to lead [the association] into a new era ... his intelligence, his passion, his experience with our programs, and his commitment to open communication with members and the board make him the perfect successor to Avin." In her last report, Shanks said, "Life and presidents move on," and she expressed her confidence that the Board would "continue to guide and lead the organization moving forward. Thanks so much for the opportunity to serve you as your president the past year."

Shanks then presented to the membership proposed revisions to ABA Bylaws to allow for ballot distribution and voting by electronic means, which passed unanimously.

Incoming ABA President Tucker reported on ABA's membership figures, which, as of April 2009, numbered 1,880, down from 2,117 the year before, and he noted that, even in difficult economic times, the association's retention rate remains high.

In the CEO's report, Domnitz noted that the year-old IndieBound program had established "resonance with booksellers and publishers" and that, despite the severe economic downturn, "clearly has resonance" with consumers. He report that IndieBound.org averaged 180,000 visits per month and 600,000 pageviews per month. The IndieBound iPhone app has 50,000 downloads to date and had risen to number two among Free Book Apps on iTunes.

Domnitz told the membership that "the number-one priority at ABA remains education." He noted that this year's Winter Institute, held at Salt Lake City, Utah, had more than 500 total attendees at the nadir of the economic downturn and that the Day of Education offered at BEA remained a central focus for ABA. He noted, too, that ABA webinars to help booksellers respond to the recession had been well received and that "you can expect, I think, to see more and more distance learning" initiatives from ABA. The association conducted a membership outreach program, he said, with ABA staff e-mailing and/or calling all ABA members to assess how they were handling these tough economic times and to provide a free "Surviving Tough Times" webinar, which reached more than 100 booksellers.

Domnitz reported that participation in the ABACUS financial survey had significantly declined this year. Encouraging booksellers to submit their numbers to ABACUS, he said, "This would be the time we need to see the numbers" because "you hold the raw materials" to begin to gain important insights in these tough times. On the digital front, Domnitz noted that IndieCommerce staff has just completed development of a new open-source website solution that is more stable, much faster, and has many new features, and he updated members on the associations efforts regarding e-book sales.

The Shop Local movement also continued to grow with a pre-Winter Institute Conference on Local First/Shop Local Initiatives, and an Indie retailer post-holiday survey. The survey showed the positive effects of independent business alliances, which Domnitz characterized as "a competitive force" for indie businesses. He also updated members on the advocacy efforts of the past year in support of e-fairness and sales tax equity, outlining efforts in 12 states.

Addressing the association's finances, Domnitz said, "This is the proverbial rainy day" and outlined how the "absolute collapse of the economy" had affected ABA. "Our portfolio is down significantly," he said, but he also noted that "by a good measure we are outperforming the indexes." He noted the steps ABA had taken to address the current financial situation -- including rebudgeting every ABA department, cutting all discretionary spending, freezing wages, and suspending employer contributions to the association's 401(k). Reviewing ABA's financial year, Domnitz said the auditor had given the association "a clean opinion," that the association had no debt, and that, even in a severe recession, "ABA cut dues, and increased services to the members, and we will continue to do so."

In concluding his report, Domnitz said, "Thank you for allowing me to serve you. You will be well served in the future by Oren Teicher ... and I just hope you will be as supportive of Oren as you have been of me."

Watch for reports on the trade show floor, which opened on Friday, as well as recaps of other BEA programming in upcoming editions of Bookselling This Week.


ABA Programming on Saturday

10:30 a.m. - Noon


Ana M. Ma

How SBA and the Federal Stimulus Package Can Help Your Business (Room 1E09)
Ana M. Ma, chief of staff at the U.S. Small Business Administration and Michael Goldman, a counselor for the New York City chapter of SCORE and a past member of its executive committee. Oren Teicher, ABA COO (moderator)

2:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Booksellers Connect: Topical Discussions (Room 1E10) *ABA Members Only

ABA members are invited to attend these informal roundtable discussions. Tables will be set up for events coordinators, children's stores, frontline booksellers, and around topics including IndieBound, digital issues, social media, and more.


ABA Booksellers Lounge Autographing Schedule

SATURDAY, MAY 30

10:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.

Steve Berry

The Charlemagne Pursuit

Ballantine

10:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.

Brandon Sanderson

Warbreaker

Tor

11:30a.m. - 1:00 p.m.

HYPERION CAFÉ

   
 

Claire Cook

The Wildwater Walking Club

 
 

Nancy Grace

The Eleventh Victim

 

1:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m.

M.J. Rose

The Memorist

MIRA

1:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.

Linda Sue Park

Keeping Score

Clarion

2:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.

Cara Black

Murder in the Latin Quarter

Soho Press

 

James R. Benn

Blood Alone

Soho Press

2:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.

Robert Goolrick

A Reliable Wife

Algonquin


Categories: