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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

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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

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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)

Zerbie
06-02-2008, 05:25 PM
Aww man! That sounds like a terrific place!! How sad that places like this are going away.

I was always fond of the gay bookstore/lesbian bookstore type of place. There doesn't even seem to be one in this valley. Sorry you are losing yours.

Rick336
06-02-2008, 05:28 PM
Thanks for the info BruceChris. The Amazon Bookstore was located only two blocks from my apartment (on the corner of Hennepin Ave. and 26th Street) when I lived in Minneapolis in the 1970s. I didn't know the owners but the store was well known in the lesbian and gay community.

Rick

Vanessa White
06-03-2008, 12:02 PM
That is very sad. It is like something becoming obsolete, like LP's......that is what it feels like to me, anyway. I have thoroughly enjoyed visiting the same type of community shops on my trips to Provincetown and Rehoboth Beach, and wonder if all places like this may meet the same fate.

I am sorry for you BruceChris, as someone who is more familiar with it. It really feels like a loss......

BruceChris
06-07-2008, 11:11 PM
It has truly been a vital part of the women's, feminist, and LGBT community in the Twin Cities for decades.


The stuff of herstory: Original Amazon bookstore to close

http://www.minnpost.com/client_files/alternate_images/3668/large_AmazonBookstore280.jpg

amazonfembks.com

The Twin Cities is losing another independent bookstore. Amazon Bookstore Cooperative, the oldest feminist bookstore in the country, will close its doors at the end of the month, after nearly 38 years in business.

Barb Wieser, the staff-owned cooperative's most senior employee, with 21 years behind the counter in Minneapolis, said the store struggled for years to compete in a business climate that is increasingly unfriendly to small bookstores.

"It's very difficult for an independent bookstore to stay open today," said Wieser. "Between the Internet and the onslaught of the chains, and now the worsening economy, it's just too hard. There are no large independents in the Twin Cities."

Amazon was on the market for a few months, and Wieser hoped that a younger buyer or group might take it over. A number of "great women" considered the possibility of buying it, but the economics were too daunting.

"It's just too risky these days. Pretty much, bookstores are owned by people with money," she says. "Young people don't see a future in it. If the most you're ever going to make is $30,000 a year, well, that's OK when you are young, but if that's your career? People looking at it realize you won't be able to support kids, a life. That's the reality of bookselling today."

More than just a bookstore
Amazon specializes in books for, by and about women; children and alternative families; and the transgender/gay, lesbian and transgender communities. You can find a shelf or two devoted to these topics at Barnes and Noble, but those shelves don't begin to compete with the handpicked selection Amazon offers. The staff chooses every title it stocks, and it favors small presses, literary presses, local authors and highly specialized books that the big chains don't stock. But beyond books, the store has been a community gathering spot since it first opened on the front porch of a women's housing cooperative in the 1970s.

"Our biggest heyday was back when you had to come to our store to get these things — there was no Internet, no other place to get the kind of books we sell, and no online communities. This was a haven for people seeking like-minded company," says Wieser, who pauses to take a call from a distraught regular customer — a man — who has just learned the news. "He was very upset."

"A lot of people are pretty grief-stricken. Especially GLBT and transgender people, and women in general. Our customers feel like this is their place. It's always been a community-based bookstore. For some people, it's been their home; they felt accepted here, when there weren't a lot of places that accepted them at all."

Feminism lives
Wieser says Amazon is closing because it's an independent bookstore — not because it's a feminist bookstore. "There used to be a lot of feminist bookstores in the country, as many as 110, at one time," she says. "They closed because small bookstores have closed, not because people aren't interested in feminism anymore. I see a lot of very involved young women, and books and magazines that speak to them. People think feminism is over, because the media ignores it, but that's not true at all."

In fact, Wieser says the political climate during the past eight years has been good for the store. "When the war started, this was a place where people could come to talk about it. Books about current affairs have been very popular. Ecology and global warming have been selling very well. And so have books about the Middle East and Afghanistan. There's a hunger for knowledge about that part of the world, since we're so involved in it."

The store also does a brisk business with bestsellers. "People have been trained to buy bestsellers, because the chains get money for all those big displays they do, and they focus their attention on a few titles from big New York publishers. There aren't as many people who are willing to take a chance on an unknown fiction book," she says. Still, the bestsellers that Amazon does sell tend to be on topic. "We sold a lot of 'Three Cups of Tea,' last year (written by Minnesota native Greg Mortenson) about building schools for girls in Pakistan. It's encouraging that so many people are reading that book. We also sold tons of copies of 'Hit by a Farm,' by local author Catherine Friend."

Catering to the craving for bestsellers was essential to staying in business. Wieser says Amazon made other efforts to stay competitive, too. The store moved into a larger space four years ago, expanding categories. When the longtime Minneapolis gay bookstore, A Brother's Touch, closed in 2003, Amazon attempted to reach out to that audience, although Wieser admits, "We just don't get that many gay men in here." She mentions that Query Booksellers, a gay bookstore that opened in the East Hennepin neighborhood near gay coffee shop A Wilde Roast, only stayed open a few months. "If they couldn't make it there, it was hopeless — and that guy [longtime Twin Cities bookseller Lyle Starkloff] knew what he was doing."

Surviving feminist bookstores have had to seek other revenue streams to strengthen business. A Room of One's Own, Madison, supplements its business by selling textbooks to the local student population. The owner of Chicago's Women & Children First has taken a second job to help support the bookstore, says Wieser. She is directing Amazon's customers to these stores.

Efforts to stay competitive, however, do not include checking out the competition. "I never go into Barnes and Noble. Never. I don't really care what they have. I'm not interested. I do love going to the other independents and seeing what they have, though."

Amazon vs. Amazon
A few years ago, Amazon became involved in a classic David vs. Goliath scuffle with that other Amazon bookstore, which used the name without permission. "We sued them for trademark infringement, but ultimately we agreed to both use the name, and we had to settle out of court," she said. "It was a matter of who had the deepest pockets, so obviously, we really couldn't go on with it." The real Amazon received a small cash settlement from the online store, and used the money to keep the business going a little longer.

Wieser has applied to the Peace Corps, and hopes to advise small-business people in developing countries. Amazon will stay open until the last Saturday in June, and a celebration is tentatively planned for July. "So many women have worked here over the years, and it's been such a part of the history of the Twin Cities. We want to give people a chance to celebrate that history and get together one more time."

In Celebration and In Sorrow, Bruce Chris

BruceChris
06-20-2008, 08:41 AM
Never underestimate the power of a fiesty woman.

http://www.startribune.com/lifestyle/20164044.html?location_refer=$urlTrackSectionName

Namaste', Bruce Chris