Here in the bookshop in Ramsgate we are still busier than
expected for the time of year, it probably won’t last but it is strange to be
running an ordinary shop and having sales increase.
I guess Tesco may be right when they say that shopping is
going back to smaller shops, with shopping being done more often in the town
centres. With my bookshop I am inclined to look for reasons for trends and the
years of trending downwards caused by out of town shopping, the big retail
chains taking over bookselling, the internet and the Kindle certainly explain
the downwards trend since about 1995. Explaining the upwards trend now is a tad
tricky, though I think there are a number of reasons, the main one being that
there isn’t much shop shopping left once you have done the food shopping, the clothes
shopping and the internet shopping.
Not really sure what the chain bookshops are up to, my guess
is that the number of people buying physical books at the full price must be
very small now, as I said I am near the end of the James Patterson Alex Cross
novels, this a run of around twenty books published over the last twelve years
or so and frankly if you have never read them then it is best to read them in
order. The recommended retail price of each of them is around £8 each, so if
you bought them at that it would cost you around £160 to read them. we had
nearly all of them on the shelf in the bookshop, none of them priced at more
than £2 with an average price of around £1.75 so reading all of them, if we had
all of them would cost around £35 as it was I bought one of them in a charity
shop and two online, so as a customer the overall cost of sourcing most of them
from us topping a few up from the internet, using our exchange scheme would
probably have meant it costing around £40, buying all of them cheapest you
could online it would probably have come out around the same, but the effort
involved in buying 20 different items from 20 different sellers, with a high
probability of at least one of the orders going wrong, well you know…
On the non fiction front sales in our shop seem to be
holding there own too, although there is a bit of a strange one going on here.
The average non fiction customer seems to be buying much more narrower field in
depth books now, with the books that have contents very similar to websites not
really selling at all. And yet. What? I had a major browse in Waterstones the
other day and a great many recently published non fiction books seem to have
contents very like websites.
Another new Ramsgate directory out today, Ramsgate Private
Residents Directory 1971, click on the link to buy it http://www.michaelsbookshop.com/catalogue/ramsgate_private_residents_directory_1971.htm
an apology about the one I did the other day Ramsgate Street Directory 1971
here is the link http://www.michaelsbookshop.com/catalogue/ramsgate_street_directory_1971.htm
I took it out for a walk and some of the print was so faint I couldn’t decipher
it, this may have been a senior moment with reading glasses issue, but it
seemed pretty bad to me. Anyway it has been re scanned and if you bought one of
the very feint ones I will replace it with an ok one.
I have the 1963 ones in the pipeline and they should be
ready in around a weeks time.
I have just had a bit of scan of the what’s on Thanet site http://www.visitthanet.co.uk/what-s-on
I was surprised to see that the Manston Airport event wasn’t there, perhaps it’s
for airport supporters only a quick scan of Twitter https://twitter.com/search?q=%23manston&src=typd
and facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/savemanstonairport
suggests it has been a bit of a flop. I guess this is partly down to it not being well publicised and partly down to it not being at all clear what you get, does the entrance charge cover the cost of the rides? What rides are there [Dad anything worth going on and how much] like I can see getting there with the children, forking out £20 to get in and then finding it's about £3 per ride, which translates to £60.
Anyway being very sceptical of a TDC cpo, not at all keen on
an airfreight hub, but very keen on the historic aviation side and vaguely supportive
of an airport I could actually fly from, I really don’t know if I would be welcome
there so I think I will give it a miss tomorrow.
What the visit Thanet site did have to say is that the new Jeremy
Deller exhibition http://www.turnercontemporary.org/exhibitions/jeremy-deller-english-magic
has opened at Turner Contemporary, I have just watched the video a couple of
times.
This business of sketching artists is a strange one, if you believe The Guardian then this is a portrait of turner as a young man, see http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2010/aug/15/jmw-turner-portrait
Plenty of portraits of turner on The National Portrait
Gallery website at http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp04566/joseph-mallord-william-turner
I quite like this one.
I will try and get there tomorrow and do some sort of a
review here.
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Comments, since I started writing this blog in 2007 the way the internet works has changed a lot, comments and dialogue here were once viable in an open and anonymous sense. Now if you comment here I will only allow the comment if it seems to make sense and be related to what the post is about. I link the majority of my posts to the main local Facebook groups and to my Facebook account, “Michael Child” I guess the main Ramsgate Facebook group is We Love Ramsgate. For the most part the comments and dialogue related to the posts here goes on there. As for the rest of it, well this blog handles images better than Facebook, which is why I don’t post directly to my Facebook account, although if I take a lot of photos I am so lazy that I paste them directly from my camera card to my bookshop website and put a link on this blog.