In the land of SIBA
Blog Home All Blogs

The Anti-Racist Bookseller: Hispanic? Latino? Latinx?

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, September 15, 2022
Updated: Thursday, September 22, 2022

The Anti-Racist BooksellerHispanic? Latino? Latinx?

National Hispanic Heritage Month, also sometimes known as Latino Heritage Month, is September 15 - October 15. It honors the cultures and contributions of both Hispanic and Latino Americans as we celebrate heritage rooted in all Latin American countries.

The celebration originally began as a commemorative week introduced by California Congressman George E. Brown in June 1968 as a part of the Civil Rights Movement, and was officially commemorated for mid-September, chosen because it is the anniversary of independence for Latin American countries Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. In addition, Mexico and Chile celebrate their independence days on September 16 and September18, respectively. Also, Día de la Raza, which is October 12, falls within this 30 day period.

The terms Hispanic, Latino, and Latinx are often used interchangeably -- especially by white people -- but they actually have different meanings, and which term you choose depends on how people self-identify.

“Hispanic” denotes people ethnically from Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America and Spain.

“Latino,” or the feminine “Latina,” is used to describe people with ancestry from Latin American countries. Unlike "Hispanic, it doesn't mean those countries are Spanish-speaking. It can include people from Brazil (Portuguese) or Haiti (French) or those from indigenous cultures in Latin America, which number in the millions.

"Latinx" is a more recent term meant to be gender neutral, and is often used by LGBTQ+ communities. It is also sometimes criticized because it does not follow Spanish grammar.
(via salud)

Which term used often depends on personal choice. The Federal Government uses "Hispanic" on Census forms, and officially recognizes "Hispanic Heritage Month". But many people who might fall under that category choose to represent themselves according to their family country of origin: Mexican-American, Cuban-American. Or simply according to their ancestral ethnicity -- Mexican, Cuban, Dominican.

Still, "Hispanic" is also the term most commonly used by the people in question it is meant to designate. It is not a neutral word, however. Even setting aside the fact it has basically been imposed by the US Government for the purposes of taking the Census, the origin of the word is an anglicized version of "Hispano", meaning a person whose cultural traditions originate from Spain.

That immediately erases the complex cultural reality of Latin America, including the rich indigenous traditions and pre-Columbian cultures that are now inextricably mixed with the cultures of colonizing forces. It also ignores the African heritage of those with enslaved ancestors, whose history is actually one of resistance to Spain and European colonization.

Mario T. Garcia, professor of Chicana and Chicano Studies at the University of California in Santa Barbara recently said in an interview with NPR that people in the US lack a good understanding of the stories and history of Hispanic people. "Too often the focus is on the musical contributions or dancing or other happy artforms." Whereas stories of oppression or injustice are ignored.

Luckily, booksellers are experts at collecting and recommending stories. Remember, when you are creating your displays and reading lists, just how many different kinds of stories there are Latinx, or Hispanic, heritage.

Further reading:

Yes, We're Calling It Hispanic Heritage Month and We Know It Makes Some of You Cringe
Hispanic, Latino, Latinx: What's the Difference
Who is Hispanic: The Pew Research Center
¿A quién consideran latino en Estados Unidos? (y por qué es más complicado de lo que quizá imaginas)

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

We Passed a GREAT Time in New Orleans!

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, September 15, 2022
Updated: Thursday, September 22, 2022

Excitement was high at SIBA's two-day conference in New Orleans last week. Over 100 people including almost 70 booksellers from 37 different bookstores across SIBA's territory came together for SIBA's largest gathering since the beginning of the pandemic three years ago.

That booksellers were eager to meet in person became clear when all the events in the program sold out in advance well ahead of the registration deadline. So many people were interested in the now de rigeur bookstore tour that SIBA had to add a second bus. Even so, the tour quickly filled up and SIBA was forced to implement its first-ever wait list for an event!

Bus Tour

The first day of the two day conference was dedicated to experiencing a bookseller's New Orleans -- beginning with a tour of four NOLA bookstores, Octavia Books, Tubby & Coo's Mid-City Bookshop, Garden District Bookshop, and Baldwin & Co. It was especially encouraging to see expansion plans in the works for some of the stores. A number of people remarked on the positive outlook the NOLA stores had towards the future and the plans they were making to grow their businesses.

Bus Tour

After the tour, and in keeping with SIBA's commitment to showcase the historical significance of the community hosting them, booksellers attended a "Welcome Reception" at The Historic New Orleans Collection. HNOC is a museum, publisher, and bookstore which SIBA members were already familiar with from Fatima Shaik's Reader Meet Writer presentation of Economy Hall, which they published. They also produced the video which received special mention at last year's inaugural VIndies Awards, "We Are the Holy Ones." As a special surprise poet Kelly Harris-DeBerry, who wrote the poem featured in the video, was in attendance.

Linda-Marie Barrett and Kelly Harris-DeBerry
Kelly Harris-DeBerry and Linda-Marie Barrett

Booksellers heard from the new SIBA Board President, Jamie Southern, ABA CEO Allison Hill, and Binc Director of Development Kathy Bartson, each of whom spoke about their delight to be there in person, and to emphasize the continued importance of bookstore engagement. Southern spoke about the SIBA Board's current work on redefining their core membership and asked booksellers to get in touch with the board to voice their opinions and concerns and to attend the forthcoming town hall. Hill talked about plans for the upcoming Banned Books Week, and encouraged booksellers to sign the petition posted on their website. Bartson discussed some of the ways the organization has helped booksellers facing crises, and provided a preview of a new initiative to help bookstores to open in under-served communities.

Day two of the conference was dedicated to education, with breaks at lunch and at the end of the day to hear from authors with books launching this fall and in 2023. The education itself was pragmatic in focus. The session led by Jill Hendrix, owner of Fiction Addiction in Greenville, SC) "Bookselling A Hero's Journey" concentrated on creating a positive work environment for both yourself and your co-workers, and thus creating a staff that is trusted, resilient, and creatively engaged:

“Jill Hendrix was awesome! I felt like I got a really great handle on big picture management and how to make communication and positivity tangible.”

Angela Trigg (owner of The Haunted Book Shop in Mobile, AL) and Shari Stauch ( owner of  Main Street Reads in Summerville, SC) provided a whirlwind tour into the apps and platforms they find useful in increasing productivity and -- more importantly -- saving time:

 “Incredible, gave enough info for us to know if we want/need to look further, TONS of resources. Carefully planned and well-presented. SO GOOD”

ABA Profit & Loss Session

The American Booksellers Association did a deep dive into understanding Profit & Loss statements, an un-sexy topic that booksellers described as "fun and engaging" as they left: "The presenters killed it! Making a P & L session fun and engaging sounds impossible but I could listen to those two present anything-learned so much and loved every minute."

The day ended with a bookseller-to-bookseller "what's working" idea exchange led by booksellers from eight NOLA bookstores -- a session attendee wanted to go longer: “I love this-we all do amazing things and need more opportunities to share our brilliance!

"Sharing our brilliance" is perhaps the best description of SIBA in New Orleans.

Read more in the media:
Publishers Weekly
Shelf Awareness

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

SIBA Annual Meeting and Town Hall

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, September 15, 2022
Updated: Thursday, September 22, 2022

October 11, 1 PM ET | Register

The SIBA Board invites all members to attend the 2022 SIBA Annual Meeting and Town Hall on October 11, 2022 at 1 PM, Eastern, on Zoom. The meeting will include a report on the State of SIBA. The Board will report on the work being done on behalf of the membership, and the results of the 2022 Board ballot will be announced. There will also be time for questions from attendees.

Click here to register for the Annual Meeting & Town Hall

SIBA members who would like to propose a topic or raise an issue for the board's consideration can submit it in advance here. All submitted topics will be provided to the board, even if they are not addressed during the meeting.

The book industry in the (almost) post-pandemic world has been evolving at a rapid rate. New issues, new problems facing small businesses, and new priorities as bookstores transition into new business models...it is vital that SIBA members take every opportunity to let their board and the SIBA staff know what they need to be successful in this new and innovative climate. Every booksellers should this opportunity to talk directly with the people who are representing them in the industry.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

The Anti-Racist Bookseller: How to Read Now

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, September 1, 2022
Updated: Thursday, September 22, 2022

The Anti-Racist BooksellerThe Anti-Racist Bookshelf: How to Read Now by Elaine Castillo

Are you a bad reader? Probably.

In the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd, booksellers well remember the sudden demand for books about fighting racism. Bestseller lists were dominated by titles like Ibram X. Kendi's How to be an Anti-Racist, White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo, The New Jim Crow by Alexander Michelle, Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad. Books sold out overnight. Publishers struggled to reprint in the midst of the pandemic. Black-owned bookstores received avalanches of orders from house-bound readers who, if prevented by lock down from doing anything else, could at least do this: read.

Booksellers know books change peoples' lives. That is one of the reasons they are booksellers. Booksellers also know that books are not pills: you don't take two to cure your existential headache. Books, the questions they ask of us, jump start the process of change. It is still up to us to do the work of changing.

The books listed above no longer dominate the bestseller lists, but new books are being published every season for the committed reader's Anti-Racist bookshelf. One of the most exciting to be released this summer is How to Read Now by Elaine Castillo.

How to Read Now by Elaine Castillo"White supremacy makes for terrible readers, I find." is the often-quoted opening line to Castillo's razor sharp analysis of how white culture reads non-white writers, artists, and people. "When I say white supremacy makes for terrible readers, I mean that white supremacy is, among its myriad ills, a formative collection of fundamentally shitty reading techniques that impoverishes you as a reader, a thinker, and a feeling person; it's an education that promises that while swaths of the world and their liveliness will be diminished in meaning to you. Illegible, intangible, forever unreal as cardboard figures in a diorama."

When Castillo talks about reading, she is not just talking about books. She uses the verb "to read" in its larger sense -- the way we use it to, say, "read a room," "read the writing on the wall," "read a situation." That is, to engage with, to interpret, to understand. And despite her insistence that she did not write this book to "make better white people," it is nevertheless a heartwarming, wrenching, furiously funny account of all the ways white supremacy trains white people to fail at all those things.

How to Read Now takes aim at a number of comfortable but faulty truisms book people often tell each other, as evidenced by the titles of her chapter titles:

"Reading Teaches Us Empathy, and Other Fictions"
"The Limits of White Fantasy"
"Main Character Syndrome"
"What We Talk About When We Talk about Representation."

"The problem is," she notes at one point, "if we need fiction to teach us empathy, we don't really have empathy, because empathy is not a one-stop destination: it's a practice, ongoing, which requires work from us in our daily lives, for our daily lives--not just when we're confronted with the visibly and legibly Other." That is, books by people of color are not "ethical protein shakes" for white people and they are not written so white people can learn things, as what Castillo calls, unforgettably, "the gooey heart-porn of the ethnographic."

In other words, white readers tend to read writers of color for their specific experiences. But they read other white readers for their sense of the universal. That is reading as a white supremacist.

Castillo's ruthlessly close reading of everything from Joan Didion to The Watchmen to our current cinematic near-deification of Jane Austen stories is a joy and a pleasure to read. But the real take-away from the book is the question Castillo constantly asks:

"Who is this written/filmed/created for?"
The answer is usually "straight white people." We need to change that.

"How to Read Now is a battle cry. Incisive, provocative, humorous, brilliant — Castillo does not pull her punches. When the first essay opens with "White supremacy makes for terrible readers, I find" you KNOW you're in for an excellent collection of essays! If you are reading this, pretend I am standing next to you shoving this book in your hands because I seriously believe every reader and every writer would benefit from reading How to Read Now. This book is a big fat fuck you to the settler colonial narratives steeped in white supremacy that have taken up space for far too long. Seriously, you will not be the same after reading How to Read Now." --Christine Bellow, Loyalty Books, Washington D.C.

 

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

The September SBR Shelf

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, September 1, 2022
Updated: Thursday, September 22, 2022

Compliments of Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia!

SIBA promotes six new books every month to readers, the customers of our member stores, in our Southern Bookseller Review Bookshelf promotion. These titles appear at the top of our weekly SBR newsletter. We also feature them on our SBR Facebook page, with buy links promoted to our 15,000 Facebook friends, and on our Instagram and Twitter accounts. A different member store is featured with the titles on every new shelf. This month's Shelf is sponsored by Fountain Bookstore.

For publishers looking to promote their new titles out to readers across the South, the SBR Bookshelf is our greatest value because of high visibility and engagement across multiple platforms. Contact us for more information or to get your titles on “The Shelf” in coming months.

SBR Shelf September Edelweiss Collection

SBR Shelf for September

 

Tags:  sbr shelf 

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Holiday Catalog Materials Available

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, September 1, 2022
Updated: Thursday, September 22, 2022

The SIBA/RAMP Winter Catalog Bookseller Resource Page is now live. The page is a veritable treasure chest of materials for stores to use to help promote their catalogs and maximize sales.

SIBA Holiday Catalog

Among the many things available are links to the Edelweiss collections, downloadable lists of titles for each catalog, plus a link to a Dropbox folder to download catalog PDFs, art, and other assets as they're being created.

The marketing graphics based on the catalog's cover art are especially great. Stores can find posters, flyers and bookmarks, as well as pull out artwork stores can plug into their own Canva accounts to create beautiful signage and social media graphics.

Click here for a PDF of the full catalog

Tags:  holiday catalog 

PermalinkComments (0)
 

A Letter from the Executive Director

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, September 1, 2022
Updated: Thursday, September 22, 2022

Octavia BooksSee you Soon in New Orleans!

We’re excited to see so many of you next week at our fall conference in the beautiful city of New Orleans. Over 110 folks will join us for two days brimming with programming and networking opportunities. The event is sold out, but we’ll share takeaways in future newsletters. And maybe we’ll see you next time we’re in person!

Our team is finalizing details around a conference with many moving parts. This morning I purchased batteries for our a/v equipment, and local handcrafted chocolate bars for our author gift bags, and thought, “we can power this event with batteries and dark chocolate!” We’re scheduling the on-site staffing, working out bus tour logistics with crowd size and social distancing front of mind, and in talks with our reception host and hotel on final counts for meal planning. It’s like planning a wedding, but for booksellers and industry friends who will bond in a shared adventure at a Sheraton perched next to the French Quarter, within view of the Mississippi.

bookmarksThis weekend I made bookmarks for attendees, and chose themes of alchemy and time(lessness) to represent the magic of booksellers and authors and industry friends connecting through books. Our hope is that everyone leaves feeling refreshed, reinvigorated, and inspired to try something new in their stores, in their art, and in their publishing work. That is the alchemy possible at in-persons, when positivity, innovation, and curiosity are encouraged, and celebrated. We plan on doing just that.

See you soon!

Linda-Marie Barrett

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

The Anti-Racist Bookseller: Being an Upstander

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 25, 2022

The Anti-Racist BooksellerBeing an Upstander

One of the education sessions at New Voices New Rooms this month which received extra attention and feedback from booksellers was Responding to Hate -- a special event where booksellers shared their strategies for dealing with aggression from their communities and sometimes even their customers. NVNR Attendees can now watch the session by logging on to NVNR's Attendee Hub.

Discussion ranged from the general, like creating, sharing, and implementing store mission statements, to the practical, such as always having at least two staff people in the store, to the situational, such as how to tell when a volatile situation can be deescalated, and when it has to be shut down for the safety of everyone involved. One of the resources posted during the session was the Center for Anti-Violence Education (CAE)'s Upstander: Responding to Microaggressions Workshop hosted by the ABA, especially the accompanying"Bystander Intervention" handout.

A bystander, as the word itself makes clear, is someone who stands by. An Upstander is someone who does not. An upstander choses to get involved:

  • Takes action when they see an act of intolerance.
  • Speaks or acts in support of an individual or cause, intervening on behalf of a person being attacked or bullied.
  • Actively works to create an anti-oppressive world.

The term was originally coined as a way for students to confront bullying behavior in school. But the concept has also been applied to other kinds of injustices by encouraging people to speak up and intervene when they see a person being attacked. Being an upstander requires a shift in the way we are trained to think and act. As store owners and staff we were likely encouraged to appease aggressive customers and suppress uncomfortable situations.

But that might not be an option if an employee or another customer is being harassed or threatened. So how do you take action? When do you take action? What do you do?

The Bystander Intervention handout available from the ABA's Upstander session addresses the "What." It has a checklist of possible actions, of things to do to discourage bullying behavior, or to utilize when you intervene to stop an injustice.

The other valuable handout available, "Calling In Strategies," addresses the "How" and "When." This handout works as a kind of self-assessment both you and your staff can use to determine if you are the right person to step into an uncomfortable situation, and how to do so as safely as possible.

Here are some simple ways to be an upstander from The Bully Project, an initiative to reduce school bullying by encouraging students to step in when they see a student being attacked:

1. Help others who are being bullied. Be a friend, even if this person is not yet your friend. Go over to him. Let them know how you think they are feeling.

2. Stop untrue or harmful messages from spreading. If someone tells you a rumor that you know is untrue or sends you a message that is hurtful to someone else, stand up and let the person know this is wrong.

3. Make friends outside of your circle. Reach out to someone who is alone. Show support for a person who is upset by asking them what is wrong

4. Refuse to be a “bystander”. If you see friends laughing along with a bully or a bigot, call them on it.

Read more

Note: Some of the links to resources mentioned in this article require a log in to member-only areas of New Voices New Rooms and the American Booksellers Association. Booksellers who do not have accounts with those entities can reach out to SIBA for help.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Read This Next! September

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 25, 2022

Read This Next!Southern indie booksellers have selected five books, their hand-sell favorites for the upcoming month, as September 2022 Read This Next! titles. The chosen books all release in September and have the enthusiastic support of southern booksellers, This month Read Different! Read These Next!

Edelweiss Collection | Flyer | Flyer Front (JPG)

September Read This Next! Titles

What SIBA Booksellers have to say:

Artemis Made Me Do It by Trista Mateer
Every page of this book is chock full of beautiful, enchanting words that dig in deep and tear up the soil to reveal things you might not have thought about in years. Even if a poem doesn’t directly connect with you, it will in fact, ruin you.
–Caitlyn Vanorder in Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, NC

The Fortunes of Jaded Women by Carolyn Huynh
The Duong sisters are cursed. It all started with their ancestor Oanh, who defied tradition and left her husband for true love. With many narrators, whip-smart humor, and at the center of it all family healing, this is a perfect Summer read.
– Grace Sullivan in Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, VA

If I Survive You by Jonathan Escoffery
A unique narrative on identity and belonging that effortlessly mixes the past, present, and future together. The writing in this book is superb and Escoffery’s voice is unflinching in his presentation of the characters, highlighting both their strengths as well as their flaws.
–Stuart McCommon in Novel in Memphis, TN

We Spread by Iain Reid
I adore the way Iain Reid can make you feel so clueless and enthralled at the same time. The way he writes, even the most horrifying feeling, is soothing. I found myself trying to read slower as I neared the end because the experience passed too quickly.
–Mary Salazar in The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, NC

When You Take a Step by Bethanie Deeney Murguia
Follow a trail of color through this book as you see where taking a step will lead. Each page follows a child as they explore the world. And even though everyone’s journey will be different, they can all make a difference.
–Jamie Southern in Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, NC

Current Read This Next! books and what SIBA booksellers have to say about them can always be found at The Southern Bookseller Review

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

NVNR Banned Books Panel

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 25, 2022
NVNR Banned Books

The Banned Books session was one of the most popular events at NVNR August. (Read about it at Shelf-Awareness). ABFE executive director David Grogan, Sam Droke-Dickinson, co-owner of Aaron's Books in Lititz, PA, and Amy Sarig King, author of The Attack of the Black Rectangles, held a lively, passionate discussion on the upswell of book bans in the country and what booksellers can do to fight them.

The session also was notable for the lengthy list of resources posted in the event chat. We've pulled those out for booksellers for easy access:

Link to NVNR session recording
American Booksellers for Free Speech (ABFE)
The American Library Association
https://www.instagram.com/americanlibraryassociation/
https://www.ala.org/

Information on Virginia's Book Ban, which could criminalize the sale of books by retailers
News coverage LGBTQ+ Books pulled by Fairfax County, VA School system
National Coalition Against Censorship School Book Ban Resource Center
Change.org Petition to Stop the Book Ban in Virginia
Book Pros(e) Podcast from Aarons Books: Episodes 4&5 discuss censorship with A.S. King
Banning Books Action Items for Booksellers from Sam Droke-Dickinson
Banned Books Bookshelf Sticker from Indigo Maiden

A book-banning group to know:
Moms for Liberty
began as an anti-masking group in Florida, and have expanded their scope to "parental rights in schools" -- including lobbying against school curriculum that include Critical Race Theory, LGBTQ+ rights, and discrimination. Many chapters are active in campaigning to ban books in school libraries that address gender and sexuality. They have chapters in most of the states in SIBA territory.
https://www.momsforliberty.org/
https://www.momsforliberty.org/chapters/

Attendees can sign in to the New Voices New Rooms Attendee Hub to watch sessions and access all the special content available.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Pass a Good Time with Some Great Books

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 25, 2022

Octavia BooksThe NOLA Galley Room is now open to all SIBA Booksellers

SIBA's New Orleans event has sold out, but booksellers who are unable to attend can still request some of the books and products available in the event Galley Room.

Event attendees will receive signed ARCs of the presenting authors' books on site, but some of the books are also available in limited quantities via the virtual galley room along with other titles and products publishers put in the hands of booksellers.

The NOLA Galley Room will stay open until the end of the event, September 8th. Visit the NOLA Event page for information about authors, and to access the schedule and the Galley Room.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

In brief: Industry News

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 18, 2022

Edelweiss hosts town hall for booksellers from historically marginalized communities
On August 25th at 6:00 PM ET Edelweiss will be hosting a booksellers town hall on Zoom, specifically to discuss the current needs of bookstores serving marginalized communities. This information exchange will focus on what bookstores need and how Edelweiss can help to meet those needs. Register here

Good Books Come to Those Who Shop EarlyABA Announces Fall Marketing Campaign: Good Books Come to Those Who Shop Early
Fall is near, and with that comes ABA’s Fall holiday shopping campaign: Good books come to those who shop early! Created by ABA, the initial marketing assets for the campaign are now available, including in-store displays and recommended messaging for newsletters and social media. Additional assets will be released on a rolling basis through October including videos, printables, how-to articles, and more graphics. Read more 

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

The Anti-Racist Bookseller: Check your holiday calendar

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 18, 2022

The Anti-Racist BooksellerCheck your holiday calendar.

Bookstores, as retail operations, place a lot of importance on fourth quarter holiday sales. So much so that the American Booksellers Association regularly creates major marketing campaigns for their members, and regional associations like SIBA create special gift catalogs for their members to provide their customers. And while these things are presented as non-denominational celebrations, the industry's investment in the traditions of a Christian holiday remains.

It is easy to downplay, or ignore, other traditions at this time of year. Traditions that are nevertheless important to some of your customers. That is why it is important for an anti-racist bookstore to be mindful of all the major holidays and festivals your customers and employees may celebrate, and to create a calendar the store can follow throughout the year.

One of the best of such calendars comes from Cultures Connecting -- the organization that often provides DEI training at SIBA events. Designed with the school year in mind, it is an invaluable resource for business owners whose diverse staff may require the same consideration and respect for their celebrations and traditions that we currently offer without question for Christmas and Thanksgiving.

"The purpose of this calendar," says the Cultures Connecting mission statement, "is to address and support the diversity of students, staff, and families in K-12 education settings and beyond. We recognize that by increasing our understanding of diverse cultures, group experiences, traditions, values and beliefs, we can enhance our relationships with one another and hence, create culturally responsive environments where everyone feels valued and respected."

Download the Cultures Connecting Diversity Calendar 2022-2023

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Bookseller Profile: Tom Lowenburg, Octavia Books

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 18, 2022

Octavia Books

Octavia Books
513 Octavia Street
New Orleans, Louisiana
(504) 899-7323
https://www.octaviabooks.com

FB | TW | IG

Social Media Reach:
FB: 8,429; TW: 8.304; IG: ,832

How long have you been a bookseller? 22 years.

What is the best part of being a bookseller? Putting a good book into the hands of an enthusiastic customer

Tom LOwenburgWhat are you currently reading?
Rinker Buck's Life on the Mississippi: An Epic American Adventure.
And we are looking forward to hosting the launch event for this title soon. 

What is your favorite handsell title this year?
Taylor Brown's Wing Walkers

What is the best thing you've done this year in the store?
We are working on an expansion and historic building renovation that will double the size of the bookstore.

Is the store doing any community work?
We underwrite THE READING LIFE our WWNO (NPR). We serve as a community gathering place.

What are some community partners you work with regularly?
Stay Local / The Urban Conservancy, Crescent City Farmers Market, local schools, New Orleans JCC, Tennessee Williams Festival, Tales of the Cocktail

What are some of your passions outside of the bookstore?
So many: local culture, literature, building community...

What e-commerce system does the store use?
Indiecommerce. ABA has done a great job developing and supporting a platform specifically for the need for the unique needs of independent bookstores.

What is your top priority for the coming year?
Making a lasting impact on our community as we expanded bookstore space.

What is your favorite SIBA benefit?
Getting together and sharing ideas with fellow booksellers throughout our region. There are so many great ideas and practices being carried out by the most dedicated folks around.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

NVNR: Author Panel Recordings Available

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 18, 2022
NVNR Memoir

Recordings of all the Author Panels at NVNR August are now available for NVNR attendees to watch. They represent some of the most moving, inspiring, and outright wacky moments of the show, so if you missed seeing an event, now is the time to catch up! Click on the video above for a taste of what's available (and an impromptu song!)

Attendees should sign in to the New Voices New Rooms Attendee Hub to access all the special content available.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Pass a Good Time with Authors

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 18, 2022
Author Luncheon

Registration for SIBA's New Orleans event September 7&8 has sold out! Although it is closed, booksellers can ask to be on the waiting list by emailing lindamarie@sibaweb.com. Attendees should bookmark SIBA's event page, which will serve as the program and "app" for the event.
https://sibaweb.com/mpage/nola-2022

Who will you meet at the Author Luncheon?

DIANE MARIE BROWN is a professor at Orange Coast College and a public health professional for the Long Beach Health Department. She has a BA and MPH from UCLA and a degree in fiction from USC’s Master of Professional Writing Program. She grew up in Stockton and now lives in Long Beach, California, with her husband, their four daughters, and their dog, Brownie. Black Candle Women is her debut novel.

GRADY HENDRIX is an award-winning novelist and screenwriter living in New York City. He is the author of How to Sell a Haunted House,  Horrorstör, My Best Friend’s Exorcism (which is being adapted into a feature film by Amazon Studios), We Sold Our Souls, and the New York Times bestseller The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires (currently being adapted into a TV series). Grady also authored the Bram Stoker Award–winning nonfiction book Paperbacks from Hell, a history of the horror paperback boom of the seventies and eighties, and his latest non-fiction book is These Fists Break Bricks: How Kung Fu Movies Swept America and Changed the World.

CIERA HORTON McELROY was raised in Orlando, Florida. She holds a BA from Wheaton College and an MFA from the University of Central Florida. Her work has appeared in AGNIBridge EightIron Horse Literary Reviewthe Crab Orchard Review, and Saw Palm, among others. She currently lives in St. Louis with her husband and son. Atomic Family is her debut novel.

E. M. TRAN’s debut novel, Daughters of the New Year, is forthcoming from Hanover Square Press/HarperCollins. Her stories, essays, and reviews can be found in such places as Joyland MagazinePrairie SchoonerHarvard Review Online, and more. She spent an inordinate proportion of her adult life working towards an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Mississippi and a PhD in English & Creative Writing from Ohio University. She is from and currently lives in New Orleans, Louisiana, with her husband and two dogs. She was born in the year of the Earth Snake. Ask her about Gilmore Girls or The Bachelor franchise if you want to be her friend.

DE’SHAWN CHARLES WINSLOW is the author of Decent People and In West Mills, a Center for Fiction First Novel Prize winner and a Los Angeles Times Book Awards, Lambda Literary, and Publishing Triangle awards finalist. He was born and raised in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, graduated from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and now lives in Atlanta.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Action Items: ABFE Banned Books Petition

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 18, 2022

In response to the growing attacks on books across the country, the American Booksellers for Free Expression (ABFE) has organized a petition for independent booksellers (and consumers if booksellers want to share this with them) to collectively condemn book banning and offer support to schools and libraries. The link to sign the petition is:
 https://www.votervoice.net/Booksellers/Petitions/3106/Respond.

The plan is to get as many signatures as we can by September 6 and then announce the petition during Banned Books Week!

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

The Anti-Racist Bookseller: Respect Ethnic Names

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 11, 2022

The Anti-Racist BooksellerRespect ethnic names. Learn to pronounce them correctly.

@Anpu, Anparasan Sivakumaran, a photographer based in London and a social media influencer, has created a short but engaging series of graphics on how and why you should take the trouble to learn to both pronounce and spell ethnic names that are unfamiliar to you. Ultimately, this is a matter of basic respect, and not hard to do. For example, under "Things you should never say" is "I'm never going to remember that." This is simply dismissive and offensive. Under "How to help" he suggests repeating a person's name to confirm you are saying it correctly, and points out that in business misspelled and incorrect names can cause time-consuming and expensive legal problems for everyone involved. Jotting down a pronunciation you are uncertain of will help you to remember it in the future.

Read How to Respect My Ethnic Name

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

NVNR: Looking Back

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 11, 2022

Watch next week for a more extensive recap of New Voices New Rooms in August. It was an amazing, exciting, moving, energizing and joyful event. In the meantime, here is a glimpse of the goodness to come, with the recording of our Keynote Breakfast Panel, We are Here: Centering Our Black and Brown Community

Featuring Tami Charles, Maria Hinojosa, Linda Sarsour, Ambassador Andrew Young and Paula Young Shelton.

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 

A Letter from the Board

Posted By Nicki Leone, Thursday, August 11, 2022

Jamie SouthernDear SIBA community,

Our Board President, John Cavalier, stepped down this month to focus on his store, Cavalier House Books. Cavalier House Books just purchased their own building and are expanding operations, which is demanding more of John’s time. However, he will remain on the Board through 2022. We are so grateful for his leadership during a time of many transitions. 

I am honored to have been selected by the Board to serve as Board President for the remainder of 2022.  As the new Board President, I want to hear from you as the Board continues our work for you. The pandemic time vortex has made it seem like forever since the last time we were all together at a regional show. I hope you are making plans to join us in New Orleans this September. I am so grateful for technology that has allowed us to keep in touch and continue our learning through New Voices, New Rooms and other virtual opportunities that the SIBA staff have created for us. We also were able to meet some of you at our recent gathering in Winston-Salem, NC in April, our first in-person meeting in 2.5 years.

I want to assure you that, even though we may not have seen many of you face to face in a long time, your Board has been hard at work. Our priority this year has been to update our bylaws and policy handbook. The SIBA Board began this work three years ago but got a bit derailed (understandably) during the CEO transition from Wanda Jewell to Linda-Marie Barrett, as well as by the pandemic. 

In 2019, as part of the CEO transition, SIBA leadership re-incorporated the organization in North Carolina, which prompted a review of our bylaws. Some updates have been made to our bylaws already, such as ensuring we are not using any gendered language. One main issue we are still wrestling with concerns the new parameters for core membership. We need your feedback on this issue. We have had Board coffee chats with the membership about this topic over the past year—thanks to all of you who’ve talked this through with us. However, we need more feedback on this topic. We want to make sure that SIBA is as inclusive as possible to all novel model bookstores and to remove barriers that currently exist for those who wish to join. As we continue the work of updating our bylaws and policies, we hope you will send us your thoughts.

The current bylaws can be found here. We hope you will take a look and send any feedback you may have. We will be happy to discuss during the gathering in New Orleans and will dedicate time to this topic at the annual meeting and town hall which will be held on Tuesday, October 11 at noon EST.

I assure you that the Board always wants to hear from you so please do not hesitate to reach out with questions or comments to any of us. Here is a link to provide feedback. You can reach me via email at jamie@bookmarksnc.org.

Happy reading,
Jamie Rogers Southern
SIBA Board President

This post has not been tagged.

PermalinkComments (0)
 
Page 41 of 87
 |<   <<   <  36  |  37  |  38  |  39  |  40  |  41  |  42  |  43  |  44  |  45  |  46  >   >>   >|