The
Writing on the Wall
The
writing may be on the wall for the UK's secondhand bookshops, but
what does it actually say? Mike Goodenough, long-time bookshop owner
and editor of TheBookGuide.co.uk, tries to make some sense of it. Add
a comment
I
sometimes feel that secondhand bookshops have been 'under threat'
for as long as I've owned one. Escalating rents and rates, the rise
of book fairs, a decline in reading, and most recently the internet,
have all, in turn, been predicted to bring about our demise. And
in recent years barely a month has gone by without some journalist
telling us that the game is up.
Thirty years
is a long time to labour under Damocles' sword, but I'm still trading,
as are a surprising number of the UK's secondhand bookshops. So,
should we be lamenting some fabled golden past, or celebrating the
resilience of this quirky sector of the British economy?
Despite six
months of some of the most punishing trading conditions that I can
remember, the evidence suggests that secondhand bookshops are generally
holding their own, and in some cases, doing rather better than of
late.
As editor of
'TheBookGuide' website, I maintain a database of secondhand bookshops,
with entries based on information provided by both bookshop owners
and their customers. Of course, presenting an up-to-date figure
for the total number of secondhand bookshops in the UK is close
to impossible. Understandably, bookshop owners are more inclined
to announce their openings than their closures, but the collaborative
nature of TheBookGuide encourages the prompt reporting of these
events, and the numbers are certainly robust enough to illustrate
the trend.
In 2005 I guestimated
that there where at least a 1000 shops in the UK, in April 2007
our database held 1078, and in April this year we were listing 1097.
Of the 2009 total, 114 are charity bookshops run by Oxfam and others.
Over the past two years I have closed 74 shops and added 93 to the
site. And in the first three months of 2009, 13 of the shops added
where either new businesses, or shops that had closed and subsequently
relocated.
This clearly
shows that (even if you exclude market stalls and bookrooms), there
are still well in excess of 1000 secondhand bookshops in the UK,
the vast majority of which are independently owned and run. This
is of course, strongly at variance with the commonly held and oft
repeated view that secondhand bookshops are disappearing like snow
on the water.
I know that
this is of little consolation if you live in an area with no secondhand
bookshops, but I would suggest that the reasons for this are more
likely to do with local factors, than any overall national decline.
The two localities
that have been hardest hit by closures are the centres of large
towns and cities, and traditional seaside towns. Insupportable rent
and rates seems to be the most common cause of closure in town and
city centres, with London losing twice as many shops as anywhere
else. And bookshops in seaside towns have suffered from a combination
of falling visitor numbers and a decline in holiday reading.
However, if
there is a nationwide factor common to shops shutting, it is that
bookshop keeping has become the occupation of the rapidly aging.
The 1980's bulge in bookshop numbers provides a partial explanation
for this, when many early retirees saw bookshop owning as a pleasant
occupation. And during the last decade in particular, younger entrants
to the book trade have been much more likely to sell at fairs and
on the internet, than to take on the commitment of a shop.
So, what of
the future?
There's no doubt
that the recession is impacting on secondhand bookshops, but not
all of its effects will necessarily be negative. And during the
last two recessions it was a commonly held view that secondhand
booksellers were amongst the last to feel its effects, and amongst
the first to recover. Recent newspaper articles, in which some larger
secondhand bookshops have reported improved sales of up to 10% so
far this year, are perhaps an indicator of this.
Shopping locally
is increasingly popular, as is seeing and touching what you are
buying, rather than relying on the vagaries of internet descriptions.
At the same time, charity shops are struggling to attract donations
as more people feel the need to try and turn their unwanted books
into cash. And selling to bookshops could become an increasingly
attractive option, compared to the time consuming uncertainty of
ebaying one's own books.
All these trends
should make life easier for independent secondhand bookshops that
are able to take advantage of them
The recession
is also likely to significantly depress rents, raising the possibility
of a return to town and city centres by some secondhand bookshops.
I also think that living over the shop could become a more popular
option, and we are likely to see the increased reuse of old industrial
and agricultural buildings as bookshops.
The internet
has both transformed secondhand book buying, and created a huge
new customer base. The challenge for independent secondhand bookshop
owners is to exploit this by offering a customer experience not
available on the net or in charity bookshops.
And as a younger
generation begins to embrace downloadable text, I see the role of
secondhand bookshops as a continuation of one they have always provided
- to put one intimately in contact with our printed past.
Clearly there
are still lots of opportunities to visit secondhand bookshops, so
stop wringing your hands and lamenting our passing, prise yourself
away from your computer, and get out and visit us. Add
a comment
Mike Goodenough
Editor 13.07.09
Comments:
When I was opening my first bookshop thirty years ago the pundits
were saying that books would be a thing of the past by the end of
the twentieth century. We now have more books published each year
than ever before!
I don't believe
that children (or adults) read less than in a supposed golden age
long gone. Children watch the TV and play electronic games now but
it is at the expense of playing out, getting exercise and going
to church etc rather than reading.
My local secondhand
bookshop is thriving and there are children sitting reading in their
dedicated corner every weekend and throughout all the school holidays.
A huge range of ordinary adult books are bought there and very few
are sold to 'collectors'.
Running a successful
secondhand bookshop needs a different set of skills from a generation
ago but the internet offers opportunities to people with shops as
well as 'competition'. What doesn't change is that the owner has
to work hard and stay open consistently. Shop owners find books
easier to source than anyone else and this will always be the greatest
advantage of having a shop.
People who are
not successful in business will always have someone else or some
external factor to blame. That's human nature. The fact remains
that there are still successful secondhand bookshops trading in
exactly the same conditions as those that go under.
I do not believe
that book fairs are thriving across the board and a lot of them
seem to be little more than pleasant social clubs. That's fine by
me but they are hardly a threat to the bookshop open every day to
sell ordinary books to ordinary customers. - Pierce Roche 15.07.09.
I would agree
with all the above comments. I was running one of the bookshops
that closed last year, principally because I have many other family
commitments and wanted my time free to fulfill them. The shop is
very small with a stock of 6000 or so titles which I've tried hard
to ensure are the truly collectable or most often sought after.
Last year trade slowed but that was probably a reflection of my
personal energy levels. Before that time business was very good
indeed for a small shop in a small town in the north of Scotland.
As has already been said, the book trade does indeed need hard work
and constant enthusiasm to pursue the best stock. For a single person
that level of focus and commitment can be hard to maintain, any
shortfall showing quite quickly.
There is no
lack of encouragement from the public however who frequently voice
their preference for the the attraction of a bricks-and-mortar bookshop
against the impersonal, non-tactile experience of internet browsing.
Most of my customers also say that the secondhand bookshop is a
more interesting place to visit than a chain store bookshop where
only the newest titles are available.
High Street
rents are certainly a deterrent but the innovative and adventurous
can find ways of bye-passing the High Street to find more reasonably
priced accomodation. Lock-ups and tiny back-street shoplets might
not be high profile but people in search of books will find them
out and once a business is up and running it can always move. The
trick is to start small and not to over-stock. There are plenty
of Charity Shops to stock the paperback fiction and endless glossy
repeats of gardening or cookery.
I have re-opened
for the time being and happily the old faces are returning with
welcoming words. A town is better for having at least one bookshop
in it.
PS. I meant
to add that in my experience book fairs are still well worth the
effort for the seller of collectable books. Footfall and sales numbers
seem to support that. The fact that they are also a meeting place
for familiar faces, both in the trade and amongst the collectors,
is a pleasant consequence to be valued rather than sniffed at!
Carol Argyris,
The Forres Bookshop 06.08.09
|