BruceChris
06-02-2008, 05:16 PM
Dear SoulForcers, especially women:
Hey, instead of writing a new thread, I have decided to dredge up the original, and re-title and re-write it, and recycle it! I just hope that the moderators don't have a rule against it somewhere. All of the original content is still here, but with a big update - - StarTribune link:
http://www.startribune.com/lifestyle/20164044.html?location_refer=$urlTrackSectionName
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
It is(was) with great sadness that I am bringing you notice of the passing of Amazon Bookstore Cooperative (No, not Amazon.com, these women have been around MUCH longer than that). This is a brick and mortar storefront and gathering place for women, and their friends, in Minneapolis, and it has been in business since 1970.
http://www.amazonbookstorecoop.com/
Dear friends,
For almost 38 years, Amazon Bookstore has been part of a proud tradition of independent bookselling in the Twin Cities and feminist bookselling across the country. Started by two women on the front porch of a living collective in 1970, Amazon grew to be a vibrant feminist and GLBT oriented bookstore, hosting author events such as Annie Leibovitz, Gloria Steinem, Rebecca Walker, Ani DiFranco; providing a home for book groups, workshops, and classes; and providing a space for local artists, musicians, and writers.
Amazon has always been more than a bookstore—we became a place where women, especially lesbians, could find their lives reflected back to them. In recent years we served the broader community of GLBT folks and their allies; of progressive people looking for current political writing; of neighborhood folks looking for a New York Times bestseller or a book for their child.
Unfortunately, with the changing economy of bookselling, we, like many independents, have struggled to keep up with the proliferation of chains and online mega-retailers (you know the ones). We have had many wonderful years and know we have made a difference, but we cannot go on at this point, and our attempt to sell the store has not come to fruition. We have decided to close our doors at the end of June.
We hope that you will come to the store in the next few weeks to say goodbye, tell us your Amazon Bookstore stories, and take advantage of our going out of business sales. Starting Saturday, May 31, everything in the store will be 20% off. And don't forget to use that gift card you have been squirreling away.
Thanks again to all of you for being a part of the history of Amazon Bookstore, the oldest feminist bookstore in the world.
Barb, Megan, Heather, Deb, Amy, Lori, Karen, Mary, Mary Ellen
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It is with great sadness that I mark their passing. They have greatly nourished the woman in me.
Bruce (given name) Chris (chosen name) Sikkema (My father's family name)
Hey, instead of writing a new thread, I have decided to dredge up the original, and re-title and re-write it, and recycle it! I just hope that the moderators don't have a rule against it somewhere. All of the original content is still here, but with a big update - - StarTribune link:
http://www.startribune.com/lifestyle/20164044.html?location_refer=$urlTrackSectionName
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
It is(was) with great sadness that I am bringing you notice of the passing of Amazon Bookstore Cooperative (No, not Amazon.com, these women have been around MUCH longer than that). This is a brick and mortar storefront and gathering place for women, and their friends, in Minneapolis, and it has been in business since 1970.
http://www.amazonbookstorecoop.com/
Dear friends,
For almost 38 years, Amazon Bookstore has been part of a proud tradition of independent bookselling in the Twin Cities and feminist bookselling across the country. Started by two women on the front porch of a living collective in 1970, Amazon grew to be a vibrant feminist and GLBT oriented bookstore, hosting author events such as Annie Leibovitz, Gloria Steinem, Rebecca Walker, Ani DiFranco; providing a home for book groups, workshops, and classes; and providing a space for local artists, musicians, and writers.
Amazon has always been more than a bookstore—we became a place where women, especially lesbians, could find their lives reflected back to them. In recent years we served the broader community of GLBT folks and their allies; of progressive people looking for current political writing; of neighborhood folks looking for a New York Times bestseller or a book for their child.
Unfortunately, with the changing economy of bookselling, we, like many independents, have struggled to keep up with the proliferation of chains and online mega-retailers (you know the ones). We have had many wonderful years and know we have made a difference, but we cannot go on at this point, and our attempt to sell the store has not come to fruition. We have decided to close our doors at the end of June.
We hope that you will come to the store in the next few weeks to say goodbye, tell us your Amazon Bookstore stories, and take advantage of our going out of business sales. Starting Saturday, May 31, everything in the store will be 20% off. And don't forget to use that gift card you have been squirreling away.
Thanks again to all of you for being a part of the history of Amazon Bookstore, the oldest feminist bookstore in the world.
Barb, Megan, Heather, Deb, Amy, Lori, Karen, Mary, Mary Ellen
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It is with great sadness that I mark their passing. They have greatly nourished the woman in me.
Bruce (given name) Chris (chosen name) Sikkema (My father's family name)