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Do bookshops have a future?

To survive, Waterstone's is planning to copy the very independent stores it put out of business. Will it work in the age of Amazon? All customers want is the personal touch, argues Tim Walker

'If Waterstone's is to survive in the age of online retail, it will have to restore the values that made its original shop great'

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'If Waterstone's is to survive in the age of online retail, it will have to restore the values that made its original shop great'

Dominic Myers looks more like an off-duty banker than a bookseller.

Stocky and bald, with a preference for the Cameron-esque suit-but-no-tie sartorial combo, the managing director of Waterstone's also does a fine line in Cameron-esque soundbites. One evening last summer, he ascended the stairs in the bookshop chain's High Street Kensington branch to toast the first part of his plan to, as he put it, "refresh the brand".

Among the assembled canapé-munchers were bestselling authors, leading publishers, a couple of journalists who'd heard there might be free champagne (there was), and – skulking behind the staircase – Waterstone's founder, Tim Waterstone. The High Street Ken store, Myers explained, was the flagship in a fleet of 20 Waterstone's branches to which the company had returned some measure of autonomy: the power to tailor its own local stock offering; to choose which titles to recommend and display prominently; to give customers more space to sit or browse, without tripping over steaming piles of Dan Brown.

Though swaddled in Big Society-like marketing speak, it was a genuinely significant moment. Last Saturday, publishers and booksellers handed out a million free books for World Book Night. As this grand bid for new readers demonstrates, the books trade is in what optimists and Amazon employees might describe as flux, and the rest of us would call crisis. The UK arm of Borders went bankrupt 14 months ago; now its US parent is heading the same way. Myers' predecessor Gerry Johnson lost his job after a catastrophic Christmas 2009.

Waterstone's is still owned by the HMV group, which has issued three profit warnings since September, and next month expects to announce a year-end net debt of more than £130m. Before Myers' appointment, the chain's aggressive approach to competing with Amazon and Tesco had sowed resentment among publishers and previously loyal customers alike. People who had once frequented the poetry section were unimpressed by the prevalence of heavily discounted blockbuster cookbooks, airport thrillers and Katie Price autobiographies.

But perhaps, just perhaps, behind the new boss's re-designed logo lurks a real change in the way the country's sole surviving major bookshop chain does business. When he took the helm, Myers rightly cited "stifling homogeneity" as a source of his company's ills. Its financial woes are forcing Waterstone's, however tentatively, to return to what made it so popular in the first place: knowledgeable staff, hospitable stores, and a love of literary fiction with popular potential.

You'd be forgiven for thinking that "The Waterstone's 11" referred to the 11 Waterstone's branches that closed in February across Britain and Ireland. But it is, in fact, the name of the company's latest promotion: a selection of debut novels nominated by their publishers and whittled down to 11 by a panel of Waterstone's booksellers. Unlike many such schemes, including the tyrannical 3-for-2, it involves no financial sweeteners from publishers.

Sam Leith, former literary editor of The Daily Telegraph, is one of the 11; his first novel The Coincidence Engine comes out in April. "The Waterstone's 11," he says, "is, I think, a way of putting down a marker that says, 'We're not just a bookshop that piles books in the window once we've agreed on a joint promotion.' A lot of promotions – 3-for-2s, Book of the Month and so on – give punters the impression that they're a literary decision, when in fact they're supported by the publisher's marketing spend. The Waterstone's 11 is, to my knowledge, a literary decision. Obviously I'm thrilled about it."

Tom Tivnan, features editor of The Bookseller, also finds it heartening. "Waterstone's are trying to make themselves into proper booksellers again," he says. "Since Dominic Myers took over there's been a conscious decision to energise the shopfloor, to make booksellers responsible for some of their own buying. They're really promoting good writing that will sell, not just mass- market crime fiction. It seems to be in the spirit of the old Waterstone's."

When Tim Waterstone, a disaffected former WHSmith's employee, opened his first store in Old Brompton Road in 1982, he introduced Britain to a different breed of bookshop, with sophisticated stock displayed on classy black bookshelves and sold by highly literate staff. So impressed was Sir Laurence Olivier that he marched into the High Street Kensington branch, soon after it opened, and presented Waterstone with a £20,000 investment.

No book had ever been displayed on a table in WHSmith's, unless it was the Beano Annual in the month before Christmas. Waterstone's, however, filled the fronts of its stores with the works of firebrand young novelists such as Salman Rushdie, Martin Amis and Julian Barnes. With the help of a new generation of go-getting literary agents, they turned literary fiction into a bestselling genre. The Waterstone's 11 is an unashamed, top-down attempt to reproduce that early serendipitous success.

This speedy rise was a blessing and a curse. The upmarket retail model was perfect for a chain of 50 or fewer stores, but "arrogance" – Waterstone's own word – overtook the founder, whose business expanded too quickly. He was forced to sell his unwieldy young company to the dreaded WHSmith in 1993. Five years later he bought it back for £300m with the help of HMV. Yet despite being made chairman of the newly created HMV Media Group, he again grew dissatisfied with the way Waterstone's was being run. He left after three years and was made to watch, exasperated, as his original vision was diluted ever further.

Dillons had already been under the aegis of HMV, and its stores were rebranded as Waterstone's. Then, in 2006, the company took over Ottakar's – a smaller chain that many felt resembled the early, golden-age Waterstone's. Publishers and authors were dismayed when the Competition Commission failed to prevent the sale. Nowadays, if there's a bookshop on your high street, chances are it's called Waterstone's. Even after the recent closures, there are still more than 300 branches; whether any of them resemble that first Old Brompton Road store is a different matter.

If Waterstone's is to survive at all in the age of online retail, it will have to restore the values that made that original site great. That means imitating the independent bookshops it spent the past couple of decades helping to put out of business. After the demise of the Net Book Agreement in 1997 (which had fixed UK book prices since the turn of the 20th Century), Waterstone's entered a discounting war, undercutting small independents unable to afford such slim profit margins – only to be undercut itself, by the web and the supermarkets.

Around the time of the Ottakar's sale, the company was roundly demonised in the press thanks to the brash pronouncements of its then buying manager, Scott Pack. Pack is a book-lover who gave his son a middle name ("Haruki") inspired by a Japanese novelist, but his championing of chick-lit, and his Stalinist, centralised buying system, based on bestsellers, did little to endear him to publishers and the intelligentsia.

Pack's tenure (which ended in 2006) also coincided with peaking sales of the Harry Potter series and The Da Vinci Code; they no doubt encouraged the view that bookselling's future lay in blockbusters. I was a sporadic Waterstone's employee at the time, during vacations from my English degree. The fellow that hired me to work at the Guildford High Street branch was of the old school. In my time there, however, he was replaced by a manager who was happier to have Nigella and co take centre stage.

In a recent article for The Spectator, the writer Michael Henderson lamented the "illiteracy" of the handwritten "staff picks" cards at a number of London branches of Waterstone's. One had made a grammatical error while praising F Scott Fitzgerald. Another had wrongly identified Evelyn Waugh as a "her". The "duffers" responsible, Henderson speculated, were surely not university graduates. His indignation won him few friends in the bookselling community, which responded forcefully on the magazine's website. The author of the first card, Daniel Pryce, revealed between expletives that he was not only a committed Fitzgerald fan, but also planning a Masters in History.

Waterstone's booksellers are undervalued and underpaid. I'd wager the majority, now more than ever, are graduates and undergraduates. David Mitchell, an exemplar of the lit-fic genre the chain helped popularise, was once a fiction buyer for its Canterbury branch, under maverick manager Martin Latham, who has employed several published authors and screenwriters. My Waterstone's colleagues included an Oxford English graduate who made me read Naomi Klein's No Logo before departing for the BBC, and a Cambridge undergraduate, who pressed upon me a copy of Saul Bellow's Humboldt's Gift (which, admittedly, I still haven't read).

The most dispiriting development since my brief time behind the till is the staff uniform. I wore a discreet badge clipped to my breast pocket; often customers would ask, hesitantly, whether I worked there at all. Now Waterstone's booksellers all wear identical branded polo shirts and saggy fleeces, encouraging a customer's perception that they're unable to think for themselves. They look (with apologies to supermarket shelf-stackers) like supermarket shelf-stackers. If Waterstone's wants to become less homogenous, the uniform ought to be the first thing to go.

Waterstone's is not the first high street brand to try, cosmetically at least, to become more local. In 2009 Starbucks – once a place where book-lovers would linger conspicuously with a Penguin classic – launched its first "locally relevant" coffee shop in Conduit Street, London. Rather than a traditional identikit Starbucks, it was designed as a coffee-making chameleon that mimicked its more stylish surroundings. (The Starbucks idea of "local", I should note, involved sourcing furniture from Brussels and Paris.) Starbucks, though, is competing merely with its own bland reputation. Waterstone's must compete with the web, which beats it not only on price, but with an inventory deeper and broader than any physical bookshop. eBooks may seem a side-issue – even in the US they account for only an estimated nine per cent of book sales – but their popularity will surely grow. So far, however, the internet can't offer bespoke, curated experiences like a bookshop can: author readings, signings, book groups, festivals. This is the added value that makes a local bookshop invaluable to a town and its readers.

The recording industry is learning to sustain itself through live music. (Though HMV, to which Waterstone's is still disastrously tethered, has failed to restore its fortunes with its attempts to diversify.) As the publishing industry goes the same way, physical retailers will have to hope they can somehow remain in the chain that links writers to readers. Booksellers may claim they act as vital curators of books, bringing each reader a skilfully edited choice of the 150,000 titles published in any given year – but that argument hasn't kept record stores alive. And the number of independent bookshops, it almost goes without saying, has tumbled: last year, between two and three were going out of business each week.

Yet, against the grain, some smaller chains appear to be thriving. Foyles, once confined to a single huge, haphazard store on Charing Cross Road, now has a handful of successful franchises in London and, with business booming, is opening a branch in Bristol. Daunt Books has five branches across the capital, and recently took on the struggling Owl Bookshop in Kentish Town. (Owner James Daunt, incidentally, predicts there will be no national chain of bookshops three years from now.)

Many of Waterstone's early employees now hold influential positions within the publishing industry. But one of the original staff members at Old Brompton Road was Robert Topping, who later managed the Manchester Deansgate branch. Sacked by the WHSmith regime, in 2000 he stood outside the annual managers' meeting in London with a placard saying "Save Waterstone's from the Mekon" – that being Private Eye's nickname for the then-MD. He now runs Topping and Company, a pair of much-loved independents.

"We're an old-fashioned bookseller," says Topping. "We just love books. I wouldn't call the people here customers; they're friends, readers, authors – people who love books. We don't sell bags or cards or accessories. It's not about rolling out a store format across the country. We want to be individual and independent, and that takes a lot of energy and passion. I believe in the original concept of Waterstone's. Tim Waterstone was a great, inspiring mentor; he gave freedom and scope to booksellers. But that's the past. It's a different company now."

There have been whispers in the book trade that Waterstone himself could finally buy back his baby, which HMV may choose to off-load for somewhere in the region of £70m. The founder has a good relationship with Myers, and approves of his strategy, as his presence at the Kensington launch attested. Equally compelling is the prospect of a purchase by Russian investor Alexander Mamut. Mamut already has a six per cent stake in HMV; it's said his interest in Waterstone's is intellectual, not financial.

Waterstone's as a stand-alone operation is in better shape than its ailing parent: its 0.4 per cent like-for-like drop in Christmas sales is as nothing to HMV's 13.6 per cent. The company may have to shrink further to survive: a failure in business terms, but perhaps, in the long run, a good thing for the remaining stores' customers. More initiatives like the Waterstone's 11 (which is due to be an annual affair), and more autonomy for every store in the chain, can only make the company more valuable to readers again. Even the 3-for-2, though it neglects many great authors, gives many others an opportunity to be read by a big audience.

"People complain that Waterstone's narrows the market," says Leith. "But the market's not nearly as narrow as it would be without Waterstone's. There was a feeling before, which may now be returning, that here was a place that mediated somehow between the local village bookshop that we all think of as the perfect place to buy books, and titanic mega-retailers like Tesco. It intelligently but profitably found a way to sell literary fiction."

Daunt and Topping have the benefit of running bookshops in particularly wealthy areas, giving them a captive audience of book-lovers with plenty of disposable income: Daunt's stores are in Hampstead, Chelsea, Marylebone and Holland Park; Topping's are in Bath and Ely. In many other places, it may be that only a larger chain can sustain a local bookshop. Thanks to the acquisitions of Dillons and Ottakar's, Guildford briefly had three branches of Waterstone's, including mine. After the recent closures, it has just one: the town's only general bookshop. Where will people buy Sam Leith's book in Slough – subject of that famous Betjeman poem bemoaning its cultural barrenness – when it loses its only branch later this year? Luton, Tiverton and Maidenhead are already bereft. For all its faults, Waterstone's still brings a wide selection of great books to places other retailers can't reach. If you live in Guildford (and you don't fancy driving to Bath) it's the best local bookshop you've got.

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  • belriner
    Let's be honest though there are quite a lot of books out there, it is impossible for staff to know everything about every book. I worked for Waterstones up until fairly recently. The staff I worked with amazed me at what they knew and I came away from the company with a much stronger knowledge of books, especially local writers. The computer system is not just for looking up an author, but it contained very precise information about each book available which was updated as and when new information became available. As far as customer facing jobs go, Waterstones was the one I enjoyed the most. Flexibilty over our uniforms and the lack of name badges (they are an invasion of privacy I feel) made working in their store enjoyable, which meant an overall greater service was given to customers. I think Waterstones does offer their branches a lot of flexibility (more so than Tesco or Smiths where every shop is identical). This is where I think they need to focus and expand. Make the Waterstones branch in Bristol unique to Bristol, make the ones in Edinburgh unique to Edinburgh, for example. Do more than just promote local books and authors. Make customers feel as though they are in a local shop and not part of a chain. The company should focus on books and not try and move into other markets such as games or stationary, which I think may start to happen. WH Smith have done that and to make up for shortfalls in certain areas they are now overcharging across their whole shop and the service has gone way downhill, their staff often look very miserable. If you look close enough then a lot of Waterstones are more than just a place to buy books. A lot of events are run at many of their stores (big and small), such as book nights and childrens events which help the local community, especially when the Govt is closing libraries where these types of things usually went on.
  • Well as people are saying here, they do things differently in Germany (and France) because they value their heritage. Maybe we should learn from them.
  • THE MUST HAVE GADGET! The "BOOK" is a revolutionary breakthrough in technology: no wires, no electric circuits, no batteries, nothing to be connected or switched on. It's so easy to use even a child can operate it. Just lift its cover! Compact and portable, it can be used anywhere, even sitting in an armchair by the fire and it does not need to waste energy charging itself, yet it is powerful enough to hold as much information as a CD-ROM disc. Each BOOK is constructed of sequentially numbered sheets of paper (recyclable), each capable of holding thousands of bits of information. These pages are locked together with a custom-fit device called a binder which keeps the sheets in their correct sequence. Opaque Paper Technology (OPT) allows manufacturers to use both sides of the sheet, doubling the information density and cutting costs in half. Experts are divided on the prospects for further increases in information density; for now BOOKs with more information simply use more pages. This makes them thicker and harder to carry, and has drawn some criticism from the mobile computing crowd. Each sheet is scanned optically, registering information directly into your brain. A flick of the finger takes you to the next sheet. The BOOK may be taken up at any time and used by merely opening it. The BOOK never crashes and never needs rebooting, though like other display devices it can become unusable if dropped in water The "browse" feature allows you to move instantly to any sheet, and move forward or backward as you wish. Many come with an "index" feature, which pinpoints the exact location of any selected information for instant retrieval. An optional "BOOKmark" accessory allows you to open the BOOK to the exact place you left it in a previous session even if the BOOK has been closed. BOOKmarks fit universal design standards; thus, a single BOOKmark can be used in BOOKs by various manufacturers. Conversely, numerous bookmarkers can be used in a single BOOK if the user wants to store numerous views at once. The number is limited only by the number of pages in the BOOK. The media is ideal for long-term archive use. Several field trials have proven that the media will still be readable in several centuries, and because of its simple user interface it will be compatible with future reading devices. You can also make personal notes next to BOOK text entries with an optional programming tool, the Portable Erasable Nib Cryptic Intercommunication Language Stylus (Pencils). Portable, durable, and affordable, the BOOK is being hailed as the entertainment wave of the future. The BOOK's appeal seems so certain that thousands of content creators have committed to the platform. Go to your local Bookshop to pick one up now.
  • BookBugg
    I am currently doing an MSc thesis looking at the relationship between book discounting and the value of books in society so this article has proved quite interesting! If you feel passionately about any of the issues raised in this article and have a spare ten minutes, please follow the link below and answer a short, confidential survey about book buying habits and attitudes. Many thanks! https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/JYMSVYB
  • AngryPancho
    Though I'm always drawn to the odd musty bookstore, I usually fail in my search for fiery new insights. Reading this I'm reminded how disturbingly often a title is misleading. I hope we find a digital way to minimize the duds while enhancing the cross pollination. Better bookstores through better electronics?
  • Honestly, this isn't new. Perhaps for Waterstone's stores, but in terms of Canadian bookstores, Indigo has a very similar idea. Heather's picks, as well as 'Staff Picks' and the encouragement that booksellers are given to 'hand sell' their top reads combine to personalise a shopping experience that has been vastly portrayed as robotic. Perhaps it originated from the movie You've Got Mail, where the booksellers of the Big Bad Bookstore are shown to be incompetent, but by and large this is a myth - and the sellers who are incompetent, well they don't manage to last long. Furthermore, independent bookstores and Large Format bookstores can and do work well together. The store I work for is within a ten minute drive to a children's bookstore, and about a twenty minute drive to three used bookstores. None of the staff have any compunctions about sending business to these independent sellers, and we're all too happy to list off the variety of alternative places to shop if we don't have the stock. The idea that personalising the shopping experience is an old trend, and quite honestly, it should have been implemented long before. Books are connections, to other people, other worlds, other modes of thought - and the job of the book seller is to be a textual matchmaker. I can't help but wonder if Waterstone customers haven't been led into an unhappy marriage. In terms of 'The End of Print' books will not cease to be - people love the physicality of books. To turn the page and dog ear the ends, to either mark up or keep pristine. The extreme of this will be that books become fetish objects. But even then, stores will keep selling them, and people will keep buying them.
  • The thing to remember about ebooks is that you don't own them. You just lease them, or license them, or rent them. Apart from giving a whole new meaning to the phrase 'a library of books' this has severe and profound implications for society's access to information. We all know that these devices already stifle the dissemination of knowledge as you cannot lend or resell an ebook ? but can these electronic libraries also be summarily switched off, deleted or altered?"
  • rabwallace
    This article is really about more than just the decline of the book shop but the decline of the High Street/Town Centre. There is something really enjoyable about browsing leisurely through a bookshop in a way that you could never do on the Amazon website. You can pick the books up, smell them, read pages and shift easily from subject to subject being able to discover books and authors that you'd never heard of. I have never bought a book at Tescos and only use Amazon when all else fails. The local bookshop to me is like a resource. The staff are friendly and helpful and can never do too much for you. If you pass them outside in the street they acknowledge you in a way that some faceless person working in nondescript prefabricated warehouse in a retail park somewhere never could. I willingly pay a couple of pounds extra for this sort of service because its an experience in a way that shopping at Tesco or an internet retailer never could be. If we want our local book store or music store to survive we have to take action and use them. In my experience moaning and whining about the state of things achieves very little.
  • DeclanAhern
    Restaurants seem to survive even after the arrival of supermarkets, take away meals, frozen foods and freezers and ready-cook meals. It is much cheaper to eat at home, either alone or with friends and you have much more choice than in a restaurant. It is probably something to do with the experience of eating in a restaurant, so perhaps independent bookshops could focus on creating an experience rather than a mere commercial transaction. Now admittedly eating is a necessity for people and book buying is not but there are certain factors in common such as location, ambience, friendly staff, a certain expertise and knowledge that the staff have and so forth. The good thing for independent bookshops is that with the correct technology they can order books for you and have them delivered just like Amazon, for example, at either your home or your workplace. Electronic books will undoubtedly do well, but it seems unlikely that they be able to compete with the convenience of the real thing and certainly will not give the same experience as visiting a real bookshop.
  • How about this for a radical idea ... One of the problems with a book shop is carrying sufficient different stock to allow people to find a volume covering whatever they are interested in. How about combining a bookshop with a library? Books priced on a sliding scale if they are borrowed multiple times, but all books are for sale or for rental. Rental can be via an annual subscription (maximum number of titles at any one time), or per title. Maybe where there is a hard back and paperback, only the hardback is the rental copy.
  • JaitcH
    Book stores have to move with the times. The British ones can look to North America for ideas. Paperbacks are usually read and passed on/discarded - I have one sitting here on my shelf that has travelled the world, too, starting off in the UK, passing through France, Germany, U.S.A. and Canada before ending up here in the Far East - it was a 'hostel' book, leave one and take one. However, these days with e-readers, things are better and more practicable with a unit the size of a decent hard cover book able to port many books, dependent upon memory capacity. Some books have 'on site' printing facilities where a customer consults a library of many works on varied subjects and males a selection. The sale person then completes the selection and orders it to be printed on a unit resembling a large photocopying machine. A short while later the customer departs with the hard copy, which is bound with a utilitarian cover and binding, nothing to pore over but sufficient for their needs. Properly bound versions can be ordered, should they want a 'proper' printed edition. One thing that could be a problem is the 'agency' scheme whereby book stores stock is 'on consignment' and not really their property. This enables the publishers to control prices, better called 'fixing' prices and removes the opportunity for book stores to have promotional sales. Used book shops are a delight to check out. There was one in Arundel I always stopped off to check out as some of the titles it carried were most eclectic.
  • I live in a small town and try to use my local independent bookshops (we have three!) but they are all very small and the service in one of them is not great - the staff generally aren't "readers", can't work the computerised ordering system, it takes ages for ordered items to arrive. I've found the staff in Manchester Waterstones very well-informed. A few years ago I'd read a book review but made no note of the author or book title, and only had a general idea of the subject. I described it to a member of Waterstones staff and he found the book for me within a few minutes, telling me that part of their job is to read the book reviews in the newspapers. This is the service which makes a good bookshop and I wish my local shops had similarly well-informed staff.
  • dcodco
    folks who go for price go to online retailers. folks who think buying books is an experience to enjoy go to foyles or other slightly shabby bookstores. i run a used bookstore, very profitable. all my business is over the net which means my customers are wherever in the world. i just shipped a book to tasmania which got my post office's attention. so don't panic, just adapt.
  • For more on the problem with ebooks Google "campaign for real books".
  • e-books? As they say on campaignforrealbooks.org : ..."even if you do own an ebook, you almost certainly don't own an ebook. Amazon, or whomever you bought it from, still actually own it. You just lease it, or license it, or rent it. Apart from giving a whole new meaning to the phrase 'a library of books' this has severe and profound implications for society's access to information. We all know that these devices already stifle the dissemination of knowledge as you cannot lend or resell an ebook ? but can these electronic libraries also be summarily switched off, deleted or altered?" Also checkout www.law.yale.edu/news/10288.htm
  • e-books? As they say on campaignforrealbooks.org : ..."even if you do own an ebook, you almost certainly don't own an ebook. Amazon, or whomever you bought it from, still actually own it. You just lease it, or license it, or rent it. Apart from giving a whole new meaning to the phrase 'a library of books' this has severe and profound implications for society's access to information. We all know that these devices already stifle the dissemination of knowledge as you cannot lend or resell an ebook ? but can these electronic libraries also be summarily switched off, deleted or altered?"
  • lib539
    If you want to spend less than 1p per book you could always borrow books from the public library
  • petra_etc
    Everything you say explains why there won't be any book shops in most towns.
  • petra_etc
    But exactly how do you 'stop' people buying their books from Amazon? Unless there is another Net Book Agreement, the shops cannot compete. If you 'protect' them you just create book museums.
  • My friend's new book (Angel Just-Rights, Rebecca Parker) became available to order in Feb 11 online and from all good bookshops. It has had more sales on Amazon and through bookshops websites online than through ordering into Waterstones / Foyles / Tesco / WHSmith stores directly. Disrtibuters are Gardners and Bertrams but how does anyone know how one goes about getting a book actually ON THE SHELVES of Waterstones / Foyles / Tesco / WHSmith because at present this book is only available TO ORDER. Thanks for yuor help!
  • I went into my local Waterstone's on Saturday - something I do with a heavy heart, although the staff are helpful. I was looking for a book (any book) by Ahdaf Soueif as a gift for a friend. I thought that wouldn't be too obscure. I had bought her books in high street stores in the past - after all, one of her novels made the Booker shortlist and all her books are in affordable paperback format. Moreover any bookseller who knows the field of books would be aware that, given recent events in the Middle East, books by Egyptian novelists (especially an Egyptian novelist writing in English) might experience increased demand. I wasn't surprised that I had to spell Soueif's name - or even that there were none of her books on the shelves. I asked if any store in the region might have one of her books. The response was that no Waterstone's store anywhere in the country stocked any books by Ahdaf Soueif but that I should order them from Waterstone's on-line. It seems to me shocking that, in a time of increased interest in Egypt and the Middle East, none of the works of a major Egyptian writer who writes in English is stocked by the only big bookselling chain left in the country. Even if Waterstone's management is no longer interested in books, I would have thought that a concern for potential sales might move them. But, I recall, that isn't how Waterstone's works. For Soueif's work to reach a table or window display, her publishers would have to have anticipated the events in Egypt long in advance and would be required to pay Waterstone's for the privilege of being highlighted in a display. This may make short-term gains but it results in an uninteresting selection being offered to potential book-buyers. No wonder Waterstone's performs so lamentably and is increasingly shunned by serious readers. Even in a time of economic difficulties, I often choose to spend more and undertake a long journey (at least an hour and a half by public transport) to a small, independent bookshop. I took the assistant's advice and shopped on-line - but I didn't use Waterstone's website.
  • e-books? Even if you think you own an ebook, you almost certainly don't own an ebook. Whoever you bought it from still actually own it. You just lease it, or license it, or rent it. Apart from giving a whole new meaning to the phrase 'a library of books' this has severe and profound implications for society's access to information. We all know that these devices already stifle the dissemination of knowledge as you cannot lend or resell an ebook ? but can these electronic libraries also be summarily switched off, deleted or altered?"
  • ebooks? Even if you do own an ebook, you almost certainly don't own an ebook. Amazon, or whomever you bought it from, still actually own it. You just lease it, or license it, or rent it. Apart from giving a whole new meaning to the phrase 'a library of books' this has severe and profound implications for society's access to information. We all know that these devices already stifle the dissemination of knowledge as you cannot lend or resell an ebook ? but can these electronic libraries also be summarily switched off, deleted or altered?
  • e-books? As they say on campaignforrealbooks dot org : ..."even if you do own an ebook, you almost certainly don't own an ebook. Amazon, or whomever you bought it from, still actually own it. You just lease it, or license it, or rent it. Apart from giving a whole new meaning to the phrase 'a library of books' this has severe and profound implications for society's access to information. We all know that these devices already stifle the dissemination of knowledge as you cannot lend or resell an ebook ? but can these electronic libraries also be summarily switched off, deleted or altered?"
  • mind_ful
    if all else fails, redesign the logo. the big mistake was to let anyone but tim waterstone run the company.
  • uanime5
    Given that it's possible to download whole games from Steam I'm surprised that there aren't more ebooks available.
  • BillTuckerUS
    I don't know about the UK, but in the US the disappearance of the independent shops that I've been familiar with has usually been simply about rent. Rents start to go up in a certain area and the bookstore finds that the 10-year, acceptable-rent lease that it had up to now will cost several times as much over the next ten years. One shop had been paying $3,000 per month, but the new lease was to be $24,000 per month, so it folded. Maybe this is why the online sellers have such a price advantage. So, I suspect that the German ability to retain small shops may be due to government-owned commercial space being rented at lower-than-market rates. Unfortunately, the Thatcher culture (adopted by Reagan as his own idea in the U.S.) won't tolerate that. When I lived in the U.S., I bought from independent shops whenever I could afford to. Unfortunately, many books had such high prices that I felt I could only buy them online. I never bought from Amazon because other dealers, such as Strand and Alibris were always cheaper, but friends spoke well of it.
  • snotcricket
    Tablet/Laptops, schools/education considering moving to a paperless situation - this & the next generation moving toward downloads for almost everything that is practical. Surely the owners HMV are well aware of this problem already sadly both the parent & its charge will soon be uneccessary as todays children become the independent consumer - either take on Amazon?? or give it up. The argument for the download is overwhelming with not a forest or a tree used in the production of the material, no inks or unwanted books to cause problems in disposal etc, etc. It makes such sense - however I'll stick to the book & its tactility but then thats what I'm used to - kids are not & they are the future.
  • zqxz
    Finally (48 hours) time limit to buy. LV Muffler $ 5.99 LV Bags $ 19.9 LV Wallet $ 6.55 Armani Glasses $ 5.99 LV Belt $ 6.9 Buy addresses- --- tntn.us Tips (48 hours after the special product is invalid)
  • Waterstones pretty much follow a policy of putting independents out of business, often by opening up next door to them then undercutting them until they are bankrupt, then stocking mass market books that you can get 45% cheaper from Amazon. Not a business model I have a lot of sympathy for. As they are, by default, pretty much the last man standing for dedicated book stores we sadly need them to stick around.
  • zenithmaster
    "without tripping over steaming piles of Dan Brown.
  • That's right. One day (when?) in the UK the 'markets must rule' Thatcherite dogma will be jettisoned in favour of a more balanced approach which will include protection of culturally important businesses and shops. People will remember there IS such a thing as society that needs to be shielded from the ravages of extreme capitalism. Maybe things have to get worse before they get better. As Joni Mitchell sang, "you don't know what you've got till its gone".
  • "Last Saturday, publishers and booksellers handed out a million free books for World Book Night." So they did. I watched the TV coverage of this and was reminded of the scenes in the Boulting Brothers' HEAVENS ABOVE where the non-needy showed up for the free food.
  • rogerbater
    There have been complaints for years of the sameness of high street shops (not by any means limited to Waterstones) because the sites are dominated by the retailing giants. They pay higher rents than most small businesses can afford and so drive out choice. But markets change and perhaps Waterstones is suffering from this sameness in every branch - increasing numbers of people are fed up with it. The sameness is tolerated if visiting Halfords or Boots but not liked when the book lover goes shopping. Amazon and their ilk will cater for those who know exactly what they want at the lowest price and aren't interested in the unique atmosphere of a good bookshop. Good luck to Waterstones with their latest effort. Ironic that they are now pursuing what they helped to drive out - individuality.
  • Hmmm. There are lots of reasons why bookshops has to create something new to attract people to buy books again. With all the tablet pc's and book readers there might be a big effect on the paper-printing industry.
  • madamarcati
    Typing errors and all.
  • madamarcati
    Cutting edge literature will remain be of interest to the well read, well informed minority. Such literature by its very nature can never be popular. It will continue to exist on the edge pf the mainstream as it always did before Madame Corelli's success and the rise of the blockbuster. True bibliophiles cannot adapt to the cognitive tyranny implicit in the machine led model of the e-book. For intellectual dialogue is impossible where there is no room for writing in the margins or sleep dreaming a response to the font as your fingers rest upon the pages. The book industry will evolve into two distinct trades. A corporate profit led business based around populist quickie lit and throw away texts and what these present trade leaders are presently calling niche or new paradigm publishing.
  • Interesting - as I was assured by an assistant who stood at the computer that none was available and that there was no point in my checking other stores. Thanks for that - though I've now ordered elsewhere.
  • If Waterstone's wants to catch the vibe of an inviting bookshop they should go and view Oxfam's bookshops in Maidstone or Windsor. Yes, these are secondhand shops but the passion of the staff and the inviting surrounds of a wealth of literature keep people returning. No coffee shop couches though.
  • That's pretty cool the way Germany protects the little guys. Wish the US did the same.. but it's all about big business here.
  • ....same as online dating couldn't match the thrill of being in a bar & casting your eyes around until you see a girl " that piques your curiosity and then you spot something else just a little way further... And before you know it, you've half a dozen interesting girls in your head, none of which you would have found on "Russian Girls.com" in a month of Sundays...... Very poetic, feed up your desire browsing in store & then buy on your iphone while in store . Amazon every time!
  • Hi. Interesting article - my opinion is that technology offers an improved, perhaps more social, way of discovering books than a bookstore can. The main issue for them is competition - there is so much choice out there, easily accessible through the internet, and wherever you are geographically that it's difficult to see the importance of an actual physical book shop in the future. That being said, there is still nothing like wandering around browsing - however this can now be gone in the 'virtual world', and it's often a lot easier to navigate to find something that interests you, and has linked, good, reviews from other readers. The shift is happening all around us and it's important to embrace the change, go with readers, so we aren't left behind in the 'digitalisation of books'. It's undoubedly an interesting time in the evolution of reading and the printed literature industry. Enjoyed reading it - thanks Adam www.iWriteReadRate.com
  • Everything being said about the future of physical book chains, I think that it will depend upon whether readers can get an improved, more social, or simpler experience in finding their next book elsewhere. Technology has a habit of changing our behaviours, and it would be unusual for this to be different in relation to books/bookstores. I think that the traditional industry needs to embrace the change, as it's now looking strongly like a generational shift for them. Enjoyed the article - thanks
  • If authors don't receive enough money for their work, they will have to do something else to feed and house themselves and their families. So it's all very well to say it's inevitable, but payment for authors in one form or another has to have a future, or there will be no new books. As you say, music only continues because there is a market for live performance.
  • Henchman
    Just checked Waterstones web for store availability. Map of Love ? 41 stores (low); 9 (med). In the Eye of the Sun ? 14 stores (low); 3 (med). Mezzaterra ? 1 store (low). I Think of You ? 0. Just thought it worth mentioning.
  • knitpick
    The town where I live has lost several well-run and knowledgeable independent bookstores in the last few years. The only bookshops we have left now are Waterstones (boring) and WH Smiths (cheap tat), neither of which come anywhere near having the quality of books that the other two bookshops used to stock, nor the depth of knowledge of the books they are selling (staff at both shops need a computer - which doesn't work a lot of the time - to do their thinking for them).
  • stevealley
    I would also add that mind numbing text called 'the Secret' which I sincerely hope is currently out of print.
  • Thanks from me too
  • DeclanAhern
    "Do bookshops have a future?" Yes, when they provide a good service. I use a small, independent bookshop called 'The Cobham Bookshop' in, of all places, Cobham! They take telephone orders, internet orders and orders by mail. Most books can be obtained within 24 hours if not in stock, they also provide the same service with regard to DVDs. A simple and easy to use website supports these activities. Staff are polite, pleasant and passionate about what they do. They are extremely well-informed and the small (at least compared to Waterstones!) shop has a particularly good selection of books for children. It is really up to the public to make their choice, if you want to see a bookshop in a high street near you, enjoy browsing and actually talking to people about books, then you have to buy them too!
  • drdavey
    I gave up bothering to go into Waterstone's ages ago. Go to any town in Britain, and you get the same books in the same place. Boring, predictable; and a perfect mach for the British high street. I now live in Germany where the policy is not to let big chains dominate, in order to protect small shops. As a result, every town has different and interesting shops, including book shops. Living here, you realise how much has been lost in Britain in recent years.
  • Bookshops as we knew and just about still know them will die, vanish - soon as electronic reader devices are as commonplace as mobile phones. And with that will come free "illegal" downloads of books ... exactly like with the music industry. Unfortunately for authors, I don't think there's quite the same cash ie demand for going to see an author read in person as there is going to see a singer/band. I'm not saying books will die - not even the printed form, completely (it'll be like vinyl) - but it's a minority sport now, relative to other pursuits. And so what if the printed form goes - much less clutter and more space when the room is free of CDs ... and shortly, for me, books. Roll on the future!
  • Christopher_Haslett
    How about a bookshop that guarantees it will stock no copies of "A Journey"?
  • brinksman
    Waterstones was elitist (I use past tense because of its inevitability). Nice staff, and very helpful, but a directorial policy of flooding the floors with obese books by 'celebs' and killing new writers (unless you suited Waterstones' snobby image) turned it into a scene of madness. Besides, authors no longer need Waterstones or any other book store. Ebooks have leveled the playing field. No more big payouts to Waterstones from the big publishing houses just to get their books in the window. Amazon's window is free. Most authors (the smart ones) are now questioning if they even need publishers, at all, in this the generation of ebook domination. Waterstones left it too late. Shed no tears.
  • egbutnobacon
    It seems that Waterstones is meeting the fate of many large chain stores. I used to enjoy Waterstones, but now it seems that far too much shelf space is taken up with celeb nonsense and bizarre self-help/new age titles. This is why I adore my library.
  • EMaven
    I am happy to read the debate below about actually buying books as solid objects. My worry is that if books become available online only. Who would then decide what is available and what you can buy? Even now Amazon and others monitor your reading lists and suggest the same topics so these get pushed up the lists, the reader that wants to delve into deeper topics cannot get access at all. Even in the real world of a solid book, try to get some books and you need to write asking permission from the Church and other organistations, I know, I have come up against this system. How much easier to scan books and deliver thousands online for your Kindle's et al, as is happening in London now at our greatest reference library, but what about the ones that disappear from this scanned list? How do we get those....? Digital cannot replace the real thing, new books can be sold as blockbusters but books of knowledge and thought, where will we get those?
  • brinksman
    Thanks for the tip about Book Butler. I'll use it in the future. Just proves my point in what I posted...
  • For better online price comparison, I use Book Butler. And because any book store (independent or chain) can (AFAIK) be part of it, it offers equal opportunity to every book store to sell more books.
  • Swap your books on ReadItSwapIt. Even 1p for a book on Amazon is expensive in comparison because it doesn't cost £2.80 to post most books.
  • ejderha
    The UCL branch of Waterstones (née Dillons) used to be renowned for its section on Physics & Astronomy. It is no longer I am afraid. Soon I will have to rely on the public library to check out a book in the "flesh" and then use Amazon to buy. So much for competition.
  • Robwisdom
    The people of Slough won't rue the passing of Waterstone's (previously a branch of Ottakar's). The small minority who buy books will probably go to nearby Windsor ? a far more pleasant shopping environment anyway.
  • FeedTheCat
    VLC is better plays everything. iTunes is dodgy software.
  • FeedTheCat
    Only a fool would use iTunes.
  • Aristotle120
    Agree with you on the pleasures of browsing the shelves and finding something new and unexpected. I, however, confess that I cheat; I go to the local bookstore, browse, write down what I want, and then while having a coffee in the very bookstore, fire up my laptop and order the books from Amazon. I then go to Church, confess my sin, get absolved, and am at it again next week.
  • bleachers
    iTunes, scary bunch, always in my computer with updates and new terms and conditions I have too agree with every time I log on almost. Too much, they're gone.
  • bleachers
    Try out Fantastic Fiction. More books on there than the Bodleian Library................. almost.
  • bleachers
    I read about fifty or sixty a year and see no point in paying more than I can get away with. So far Amazon UK has done me proud. I use Fantastic Fiction as a search engine, which has links to various sites selling whichever book I select. Amazon are by and large the cheapest and quickest. If you know better, please tell.
  • sculptor47
    I was a loyal customer of Ottakars - spending £1000 a year on books there. That loyalty increased when a predatory Waterstones opened up literally next door to them. After the takeover I was finally converted to buying online from the dreaded Amazon. I've wandered round Waterstones once or twice and not been impressed - HMV as a brand impresses me even less. Amazon gives me a quick delivery service at a good price - and not only for books. Their partners, in the UK and USA, fill the gaps for esoteric or second-hand titles. Best of all is the very large online listing of book titles - even if they are not currently available. The "trend" recommendations, and user arcane lists, go far beyond the specialist knowledge of any general bookshop. Only occasionally do I have to source a book online through Abebooks or Alibri. The monthly lists from Postscript Books fill the "totally random" impulse niche. Idle browsing of charity shops also throws up lots of unexpectedly interesting books from their unpredictable stock.
  • Amazon can only do that because of massive tax evasion in the US (and probably in the UK as well). At least stick to a UK/EU online vendor for your books. The price for supporting Amazon is a lot higher than you think. Also how many books do you read in a year that you can't afford to pay a little more?
  • ExPatJoe
    Amazon is fine, provided you know what you're looking for. It can't, however, match the serendipitous browsing experience to be found in a real, well-stocked book shop. You know, that moment when you glance at an adjoining shelf and see a title that piques your curiosity and then you spot something else just a little way further... And before you know it, you've half a dozen interesting books in your hands, none of which you would have found on Amazon in a month of Sundays, even with their "Amazon recommends" but all of which will be well worth reading.
  • bleachers
    Amazon every time. One penny a book plus postage, if Waterstone's can beat that, I'll change my mind.

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