Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Bookstore Tourism: The Book Addict's Guide to Planning & Promoting Bookstore Road Trips for Bibliophiles & Other Bookshop Junkies

Bookstore Tourism: The Book Addict's Guide to Planning & Promoting Bookstore Road Trips for Bibliophiles & Other Bookshop Junkies

List Price: $10.00
Your Price: $7.50
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A truly original idea
Review: "Bookstore Tourism" is a great little book and an even better idea. The book delves into why it's so important to support indie bookstores, and how they're fighting for their lives against the large retail chains, not just B&N and Borders but WalMart and basically any other major conglomerate that sells books. The ideas in the book are great and very helpful, telling people how to go about planning road trips with friends and other groups to towns with excellent independent bookstores. It's an interesting, enjoyable read and I highly recommend it. My only criticism is that it's too short and the author should expand it and do even more with the idea. When is Bookstore Tourism Part 2 coming out like the author hinted?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great guide for bookstore lovers
Review: "Bookstore Tourism" is a very interesting read that makes a strong case in support of indie booksellers. It addresses the competition between small, independent bookshops and the larger chain stores and internet merchants. It also gives numerous examples of how to organize bookstore trips with friends or with an organization or school. It's a great way to meet other book-lovers and to spend a day shopping at excellent bookshops that you might not be familiar with in another town. Mr. Portzline does a great job of spelling out how to organize such trips and why they benefit independent bookstores. It's a fantastic idea and a lot of fun! The book is enjoyable to read as well. If you love books, you can't go wrong with something like this.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: From the Author
Review: Bookstore Tourism Creates Travel Niche for Booklovers, Helps Indie Bookstores

"Bookstore Tourism" is an innovative grassroots effort started by Harrisburg, PA writer Larry Portzline to promote and support independent bookstores by marketing them as a tourist destination and creating a new travel niche for booklovers. The primary goal is to encourage booklovers around the country to organize day-trips and other kinds of literary outings to cities and towns with interesting, fun and unique bookstores that people in their own communities may not be able to visit regularly.

Between July 2003 and June 2004, Portzline led six sold-out "bookstore adventures" to New York City and Washington, D.C. for two colleges in central Pennsylvania. Since launching the project, he's received countless inquiries and expressions of support from people in the bookselling, publishing and travel industries, from educators, libraries and colleges, from book festival and "One Book" organizers, and from booklovers everywhere who are eager to get involved.

"Bookstore Tourism" covers the basics of planning and promoting a bookstore road trip, including how to do the necessary research, arrange transportation, publicize the event, etc. It includes numerous tips and step-by-step suggestions, as well as advice based on Portzline's experiences leading his own bookstore adventures. Other features include a primer on the bookselling industry, examples of great bookstore towns, suggestions for ways to partner with other organizations and agencies, and an appendix with numerous resources for anyone planning a trip.

The Chicago Tribune said, "This little volume might be just the thing to get people not only reading again but visiting their local independents. Spread the word." The Boston Globe said, "Larry Portzline has taken a novel idea on the road." The Dallas Morning News said, "Bookstore lovers now have their own guidebook." USA Today called the idea "a charming alternative" when it selected Portzline's website, BookstoreTourism.com, as a "hot site" in May 2004. Publishers Weekly said it "might be the beginning of a new concept in bookselling."


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Help for independent bookstores
Review: Bookstore Tourism is a new way to help independent bookstores by marketing them as tourist destinations and encouraging booklovers to plan bus trips to towns with unique bookstores. Instead of, for instance, taking a bus trip to the Statue of Liberty, why not take a trip to the bookstores in Greenwich Village?

The book looks at the present situation for the independent bookstore. The news is not very good. While some store are able to survive, even thrive, more stores are closing every day. There are a number of reasons, including the coming of the chains, the economy, skyrocketing rents and the internet. Another problem is the sheer number of new books published, reaching 175,000 in 2003 from over 78,000 publishers.

What can indie bookstores do to survive? First and foremost, customer service is everything. Selling used books creates more profit than new books. Get creative with entertainment and special events. Consider a makeover of the decor to find that balance between fun and functional. Including a cafe encourages customers to linger and buy more books. Get involved in the community. Perhaps shrinking the store is the way to go. Cross promote with neighboring businesses.

The book also explores the mechanics of setting up a bookstore tour. Included are things like making sure that the destination stores are still there, anyone can plan a bookstore trip, handling reservations, the best day to go, the best kind of transportation, seeing if the destination stores will hold special events during your trip, where to eat, things to do while in transit, publicizing the trip and dealing with the bus company, among many others.

Bookstore tourism is a wonderful idea (anything that helps independent bookstores is a wonderful idea) and this is an excellent book that ended much too soon. I really enjoying reading it. The author mentions that more books on independent bookstores are planned in the future. I can't wait.



Rating: 5 stars
Summary: for die-hard book fans everywhere!
Review: Reviewed by Katie Weekley for Small Spiral Notebook

Bookstore tourism is the brilliant idea that stems from an activity which, until now, most of us didn't realize was becoming a trend. We die-hard book-nuts already flip open the yellow pages when we travel to new cities, looking for local bookstores. Larry Portzline realized the beginnings of a movement and in the summer of 2003 organized a Pennsylvania college group to visit to several bookstores around Greenwich Village. When the tour sold out almost immediately, Portzline organized several more and, as he put it, "knew he was onto something."

Since then, he has received many inquiries from booksellers, librarians, travel professionals and many other types of booklovers who were excited by his idea and wanted to start their own organized tours of independent bookshops. He responded by starting a website (http://www.bookstoretourism.com/) and writing his book, Bookstore Tourism:The Book Addict's Guide to Planning and Promoting Bookstore Road Trips for Bibliophiles and Other Bookshop Junkies.

Portzline's book is an excellent how-to guide for those planning bookstore tours. He covers every possibility, from invitations/reservations, how to choose locations, methods of travel, and fun activities to do on the way. As for destinations, he offers descriptions of his favorite bookstores around the country, as well as methods for researching new places. He clearly loves bookstores of all kinds, and while he recommends researching places before visiting, he loves the thrill of finding hidden treasures and urges participants to be open to all possibilities.

Many independent bookstores, faced with high rents, low readership and competition from larger, more commercial stores, have closed in recent years. These bookstores are not merely businesses, but barometers of local cultures and environments for personal enrichment and learning. Portzline imagines, "Wouldn't it be great to see busloads of booklovers pulling up in front of your favorite indie bookstore on a regular basis?" He stumbled on a fantastic new trend and graciously shares his knowledge in this book.



<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates