Archive for the 'BEA' Category
BEA: A few final bits
I did get a picture from Debbi Michiko Florence but I am not posting it because I think I look horrendous. However, I will link to her awesome book, China: Over 40 Activities to Experience China–Past or Present. It is great!
Jay Asher, author of the fabulous Thirteen Reasons Why (which YA book group read in March, and then Jay spoke with us by IM, and then I promptly lost the entire conversation) posted about BEA on his blog, including the part where he and Jill and I had drinks. Which was cool, except for how a gin and tonic costs $10 dollars in LA.
Two more great BEA reports:
From Pub Rants, another sum-up of the graphic novel breakfast, hers much better than mine, as well as a great picture of the signing lines. She talks about an author describing them as “horse racing in reverse.” Personally, I’ve always seen them as cattle chutes.
And from Bookselling This Week, former bookseller and author of Swollen and Upstream Melissa Lion wrote the funniest BEA article I have read. I share her sentiment about the ABA bookseller lounge, which was definitely an oasis: “I arrived at BEA and felt very fancy because I got to bypass the lines for tickets and march right up to the ABA Booksellers Lounge, which will henceforth be known as the Chill Out Room because I secretly hope that by calling it that, next year it will be rechristened and indie booksellers will say things like, ‘Enough with these publicists and their new, hot books, I’m going to the Chill Out Room.’”
In an odd piece of news, I was told by a reader of this blog that co-op is actually his dream job. Booksellers are free to look as flabbergasted as I did when I heard this. I offered him a volunteer position at the store doing co-op–all the ARCs you can read!–but he already has a real job, unfortunately.
And in a final note to myself: never, NEVER schedule 2 off-site events for the week you get back from BEA. Don’t even schedule one.
BEA: Sunday (fin)
There is not much to say about Sunday except that I was completely exhausted. (Still was, until today, when I slept through my alarm and was three hours late to work. Ooooooops.) Though I did see Debbi Michiko Florence, who I recognized from LJ. Debbi, if you see this, send me the picture you took of us so that I can include it in this post! Shipped 65 pounds of books home, and then wandered around LA for a bit before heading to the airport on one of the weirdest cab rides of my life. That was Sunday! And now I am home, and trying to incorporate many of the things I learned into what I’m already doing. This week is full of off-sites, so it’ll have to start next week, I think. But the store is psyched about IndieBound, and can’t wait for the Literary Liberation box, so that is great. Will update in the next day or so with a LOOOOOOONG list of books that are patiently waiting to be blogged. For now, I am diving back into the new Octavian Nothing book!
BEA: Saturday (comics–oops, sorry–graphic novel breakfast)
For once, papers were where I thought they were, allowing me to bring you these quotes in a timely fashion!
Art Speigelman:
“Roy Lichtenstein did no more for comics than Andy Warhol did for soup.”
“I learned to read while trying to figure out if Batman was good or bad, which is something that Frank Miller is still trying to figure out.”
“Picasso: the first cartoonist who could pass for a painter.”
Again, on this panel, for the third time in three days, I heard the phrase “comics are a gateway drug.”
Mike Mignola, on the difference between cartooning and Hollywood: “In Hollywood, you can spend a long time working on something and have absolutely nothing to show for it.”
Jeph Loeb talked about his first job for DC, where he was asked to write Challengers of the Unknown, and where he first worked with Tim Sale. Still accustomed to the medium of film, he kept making Tim re-draw pages over and over to get the angles the way he wanted them. On the first issue they did together, Tim drew a total of 72 pages, meaning that there are 64 unused pages of art floating out in the world somewhere. Jeph also said that he thinks that comic movies are not going away–they are a new, solid genre of film.
In the question and answer session, Lucy of Talking Leaves Books in Buffalo, NY brought up a point that had been bugging me–there had been a fair bit of name-dropping of box stores and Amazon, but NO mention of independents (in my margin, I had scribbled, “looks like comics folk didn’t get the IndieBound memo yet”). Which, as she pointed out, was disappointing, since she was carrying Raw since before the box stores decided it was popular enough to include in their stores. Then Art Speigelman said, to applause, “There would have been no Raw magazine if it weren’t for independent bookstores.” Thanks, Art! Jeff Smith jumped in to apologize as well.
The only other note I can read on this paper is “I have never seen so many iPhones in one place.” Which is true, I never have. BEA was positively chockablock with iPhones.
BEA: Saturday (pictures)
Well, as you can tell from the last post, Saturday was just a blur. But here are some pictures to document that blur. Read more »
BEA: Thursday, part IndieBound
So! The big secret! Can now be told!
It was revealed at the Celebration of Bookselling last night, where many great books, booksellers, and bookstores were honored. And at the end, the big reveal! BookSense, which has had an amazing 10-year run and has been crucial to the revitalization of indie bookstores, is going away, and in its place is IndieBound. Words cannot express how excited I am about this–I think it’s just what indies need right now, and if it’s half as cool as the stuff I saw yesterday morning, it’s going to be huge. Go poke around the website and see what you can see–I’ll be posting more about this in the coming weeks when I am not trying to a million things every day at BEA! The logo is great, the slogans are great, the T-shirts are great, and the providing of a community not just for indie booksellers, but for people who love them, is genius. I am so psyched!
BEA: Thursday, part IV (intro to co-op)
Okay, like everybody in the world, I find co-op confusing and thus have mostly not looked into how to use it (despite the urgings of our dedicated and awesome Macmillan rep, who even wrote me a template for a co-op claim; yay Jerry!). But I also knew that by not working on it, I was losing out on what was essentially free money from the publisher. So I went to this session determined to learn what to do. And I pretty much did, in as much as that is possible with co-op. At least, I understand the idea a lot better, and I know where to start. The panelists were Mark Kaufman of Paz & Associates and Libby Cowles of Maria’s Bookshop. They were a great pair, because Mark has been working with co-op for almost a decade with one of the projects Paz & Associates does (helping bookstores make newsletters that are eligible for co-op), whereas Libby is new to bookselling and has only been working with co-op for a year.
The panel almost exactly followed the handout on bookweb, which I am not going to reproduce here, but which you should definitely check out if you don’t understand co-op. It does a pretty good job of laying out the basics. The notes I wrote down are in addition to the presentation, so I’m not sure how much sense they’ll make, but here they are anyway. Read more »
BEA: Thursday, part III (creating killer events)
After lunch, it was off to: Creating Killer Events, with panelists Collette Morgan of Wild Rumpus, Margie Scott Tucker of Books Inc., and Dan Cullen of ABA. Now, this is a hard one to blog. I’m going to try to do what I did with the graphic novel one and move ideas around to group them together, because there was a lot of back-and-forth that won’t make sense if you weren’t there. Read more »
BEA: Thursday, part lunch
The keynote speaker was Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!, a daily TV/radio news program that is different from any other news program (due in large part, no doubt, to the fact that it is the only news, public or corporate, that is absolutely not underwritten by any corporations). Inspirational as all get out; Goodman is an incredible speaker. Her new book is Standing Up to the Madness: Ordinary Heroes in Extraordinary Times, which I look forward to reading. (For some reason listening to her speak made me think of What Are You Optimistic About?, and now I want to do an endcap on optimism, which might be nice as we get closer to the election.)
Quotes I wrote down:
“Dissent is what makes this country healthy.”
On the importance of indie media and indie bookstores working together: “We are stronger together. We are weaker alone.”
“These are people you would not want to meet in a dark alley, especially if you’re hijacking someone’s civil liberties, and these are the librarians of this country.”
On librarians and booksellers who have opposed the PATRIOT Act: “They’re not looking for trouble. But when trouble comes to them, they stand up.”
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