Sentences with phrase «like small bookstores»

A lot like small bookstores.

Not exact matches

If there is a small business, family owned, who only hires Christians (say, their own family members, or friends, or if the business is in the Christian community like a Christian bookstore), then I think that religious exemptions most certainly should apply.
A width of 30.75» is slim for a double stroller, however, this stroller is still wider than a single stroller and it may be difficult to use in tight spaces like a subway or small bookstore.
The online bookstore, offered exclusively to BooksJustBooks.com customers, helps small publishers sell books on the Internet at a fraction of the cost charged by other online stores like Amazon.
Like any good small business owner, Patchett couldn't pass up the chance to deliver an impassioned plea for supporting local stores (especially her soon - to - open bookstore, Parnassus Books).
I feel like I've seen less small press show up at my favourite independant bookstore now than I did 10 years ago.
If every bookstore and library had a section like this that someone cared about maintaining, it would give tens of thousands of aspiring authors at least a small chance of being discovered.
The old method of dealing with small bookstores is in jeopardy due to the closure of so many shops and major chains like Borders.
We don't know, because the writer didn't bother to speak to Diamond, or anyone at small indy comic shops, where ordering policies differ vastly from those at bookstores like B&N.
For curated self - published and small publisher titles, we have Kobo Next, which has been a rotated banner that appears in various different spots on the website and features a mix of well known plus lesser known authors and titles that our merchandisers feel are worthy of a second look (all divided by genre)-- much like that gorgeous table display that reflects a bookstore staff's selection:
You can sell books during the day and customize the bookstore to your liking and sleep above the location in a small... [Read more...]
Lauren Charles [00:09:12] Yes, a sell sheet, and in fact if you can walk in with something that has your title, the cover of your book, make sure that cover looks nice, make sure that it pops, and then, and I would highly recommend to anyone who's coming in, indie press, small press, anything like that, anyone who's coming into any level bookstore, you should be able to say with absolute certainty, this is how you can order my book, this is the discount I know you can get it at, and I know it's returnable, and I can even help you.
The book sales departments «sell in» your book to the many and varied retailers who sell books — from small independent bookstores to wholesalers who supply a variety of accounts to special markets like gift stores.
As a customer at The Curious Iguana said, «We need intimate, small places like this that care about the books they pick... This isn't just a bookstore.
Sales for a small tier of mega-bestsellers like Patterson, King, Evanovich, Roberts, etc. skew toward brick & mortar print and away from ebooks and online because of the broad brick - and - mortar visibility you mention in airports, supermarkets, etc., and especially because of paid co-op placement in bookstores, which they benefit from disproportionately (Because publishers concentrate marketing spend disproportionately in their biggest - name tentpole authors).
I like browsing the shelves bookstores large and small, frequenting one branch or another of the public library (my city has a great one), and reading samples online.
They are moving into small storefronts — sort of like what they did before they were driven out of business by the big box bookstores like BN and Borders.
Then there was Kobo, an upstart spun out of a Canadian bookseller (Indigo), with the backing of a lot of smaller bookstores in the US, like the now defunct Borders.
While this is okay on a small scale and for independent bookstores, if you'd like massive retailers like Barnes & Noble to carry your book in stores or do a book signing, publishing with IngramSpark is recommended.
Nor should they forget that the real problems for small bookstores came with the influx of the big box bookstores like B&N.
It's a small victory for self - published authors like myself to get their books on bookstore shelves.
Even small independent bookstores now have online sales, as well as huge stores like Amazon.com and BN.com.
As for the small and self publishers, this will open new possibilities and could potentially bring back the mom & pop bookstores that I so dearly miss — where you could go and feel like you were more than a «customer» making a sale.
I have wondered as little communities like mine lose their small independent bookstores and have no big box booksellers if the libraries will pick up the slack and start holding author signings.
Since getting my device, I've stopped buying print fiction for the reasons I gave you above... tired of paying inflated prices in Irish bookstores, could buy great stories that are only on digital, access to thousand of small presses... and not having to rely on what the Big Five (formerly the Big Six) tell us to read, which are those big branded named authors like Lee Childs, Nora Roberts, Michael Connolly, Cecilia Ahern etc..
And with no other major retail partners in the U.S. the only other place to get them was from a small number of indie bookstores like Powell's Books and Family Christian Bbookstores like Powell's Books and Family Christian BookstoresBookstores.
It's no wonder the financial commitment from players like those helped spawn the development of a slew of restaurants and a spate of art galleries as well as a the Midtown Movie Cinema that shows small independent films and a large bookstore called Midtown Scholar Bookstore.
In an Upper West Side Brownstone, filled with light and with a nice sized apartment, how could a single woman struggling to keep a small (and inherited) bookstore open afford an apartment like this?
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