Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really want to support them but when I recently took my daughter there, almost every book she picked was about $5 more in store (prices were ~$13 in store vs $8 on Amazon)…. I just couldn’t justify buying more than a few locally and ordered the rest online. But glad they are having success, reading is great.
It's called inflation. It affects more than just groceries and car prices. You don't have to spend money but it's not unreasonable for books to cost more now than when we were kids.
As for books being cheaper on Amazon, sometimes. That's been the Amazon model for decades - undercut competitors and put them out of business. So supporting predatory pricing is a benefit for you. For a while.
This. Amazon cross-subsidizes some products with profits from other products. That's been disastrous for all bookstores, not just Barnes and Noble. Also, the way cross-subsidizing works is that the it's done to drive competitors out of business and then the cross-subsidizer will raise its prices back up to cover costs again. It's predatory, as pp says.
Anonymous wrote:Where do you see the planned 2023 locations? I can’t find it in the articles.
Anonymous wrote:For the person saying support indie book stores….I live in north bethesda—is my closest politics and prose (which has basically no parking)? If there’s one within a 15 minute drive with parking I’d go. The other issue is that they don’t have as many kids or mkddle grades books which is 80% of my book purchase.
I feel bad because I have a family member who is a novelist. I drove to politics and prose to get his. I also rearranged a B&N display a bit to make his a little more prominent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really want to support them but when I recently took my daughter there, almost every book she picked was about $5 more in store (prices were ~$13 in store vs $8 on Amazon)…. I just couldn’t justify buying more than a few locally and ordered the rest online. But glad they are having success, reading is great.
It's called inflation. It affects more than just groceries and car prices. You don't have to spend money but it's not unreasonable for books to cost more now than when we were kids.
As for books being cheaper on Amazon, sometimes. That's been the Amazon model for decades - undercut competitors and put them out of business. So supporting predatory pricing is a benefit for you. For a while.
Anonymous wrote:It's essentially the Toys R Us of bookstores.
Anonymous wrote:Some good news to the bookstore lovers.
Expansion this size is possible because of a strengthened interest in books and reading that came as a result of the pandemic — more people read because they were stuck at home, and Barnes & Noble locations were able to improve stores while they were closed.
One of them is coming to Reston!
https://bookriot.com/barnes-noble-opening-30-stores-in-2023/
https://www.wsj.com/articles/barnes-noble-store-expansion-leads-big-box-real-estate-revival-in-2023-11671454054 (paywall)
Anonymous wrote:If you think this is good news, you aren’t paying much attention to bookstores or publishing news.
The hedge fund that took over Waterstones (UK bookstore chain) own B&N now. They’ve made HORRIBLE decisions this year about stocking books. Like they’ll only stock hardcover middle grade books (basically more expensive books by already-famous authors get the shelf space). There was a huge controversy because they weren’t giving prime space to the sequel to Ledgendborn, which was a wildly popular YA book. People were posting themselves literally hunting for the book in B&N stores.
If you care about books, you should care about how B&N is operating.
We have AMAZING indie bookstores in the DC metro. They will bend over backwards for your business and treat you like a valued member of their community if you frequent them.