posted by Jay
With the news of a planned book CoOp at the old HWS Shorewood location, we're interested in your take on the prospect of a new/similar/different bookseller/bookselling model in the same location.
I think it's safe to say all of us at the Flap are happy when new independent booksellers open, as the loss of the Schwartz shops were a loss for the community as a whole. Bookshops are places for discussion, for the sharing and communication and debate of free ideas of all kinds - and for the formation of social capital.
However, the question needs to be asked: how will this bookshop succeed where Harry W. Schwartz failed?
Is the "CoOp" model different enough to succeed?
What are "competitive" prices and how does that enable success?
Follow the discussion at the Inside Flappers social network, where you can discuss books, authors, write your own blogs - share your voice, ideas and media. We're keeping tabs on the news and articles on this development.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
New CoOp in Shorewood?
Posted by
Jay Johnson
at
9:56 AM
2
comments
Labels: bookselling, bookstores, industry news, Neighborhood News, Shorewood
Friday, March 6, 2009
David Schwartz on Bookselling & Milwaukee (circa 1995)
we here at the Downer store would like to take this chance to share something with you that isn't ours. we do this often enough, of course, but this time it's a little something closer to home.
and once more (for good measure):
Bookselling was and is for me a cultural and political expression, an expression of progressive change, of a challenge to oppressive authority, of a search for a community of values which can act as an underpinning of a better world. The true profit in bookselling is the social profit; the bottom line, the measure of the impact of the bookshop on the community.A. David Schwartz(July 15, 1938 - June 7, 2004)
Posted by
jordan
at
10:06 PM
0
comments
Labels: bookselling, david schwartz, i remember milwaukee, interview, jim peck, schwartz books, video
Monday, January 19, 2009
What I don't need to say,
because Justin just wrote it far better than I can.
(Also, an answer to the "what next?" question involving non-hobo hook-hands.)
PS SCREW OFF GOOGLE! and take your darn ads with you, since they're *disabled* for this site...
Posted by
Jay Johnson
at
9:42 AM
5
comments
Labels: bookselling, bookstores, meta, Neighborhood News
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
UNLEARNING EDUCATION
by sarah marine
THIS REALLY GOT ME GOING.
Taking bookselling very seriously, not in an uptight sense, but in that you seek out the highest quality of literature and share it with those around you, is what we do full-time at the Downer store. We know our customers by name, what they've read in the past and use that knowledge to recommend titles for them in the future. In turn, it isn't uncommon for someone to come in and basically have a meltdown if Stacie isn't around to tell them her opinion on a new title, it happens often that customers that have been supporting us for decades will, without fail, honestly ask every bookseller he sees what they are reading. In most cases each bookseller has their own personal book club. But it's not only these instore exchanges that keep the store alive- the vitality also comes from the collective conscious effort of every one of our booksellers to support other independent businesses in the neighborhood and Milwaukee, completely.
I've been reading some nonfiction as of late. A great friend Carl Hedman, with whom I worked last summer to establish the People's Books Co-op here in Milwaukee, has been steering me in the direction of a variety of superb pieces of work which deal with de-schooling, critical pedagogy and a variety of other educational philosophies which came to rise in the 1970's. He also informed me of his own venture with David Schwartz in establishing a free family school right here in Milwaukee some thirty years ago. I have never been a great student, I was quite the Max Fischer in my day, and these have really helped me to understand the downfalls of compulsory, competitive education and how today we should work to move away from these institutional practices toward a more personal and beneficial pedagogy aimed at creating positive student teacher relationships centered around a real education.
Here are a few of the books currently holding my attention:
Everywhere All the Time: A New Deschooling Reader edited by Matt Hern
From Leo Tolstoy, Ivan Illich, and Emma Goldman to John Taylor Gatto, John Holt, and Grace Llewellyn, Matt Hern has compiled an impressive cast of educational pioneers to aid parents, kids, and teachers in the quest for effective learning strategies.
Summerhill School: A New View of Childhood by A.S. Neill
As American education lags behind the rest of the world, this new edition is more timely than ever. The children of today face struggles far greater than any previous generation and we, as parents and teachers, must teach them now to make choices for themselves and to learn from the outcome of their decisions.
Adventures in Steiner Education by Brien Masters
This book outlines the basic structure of the journey through the Upper School in the Waldorf Steiner tradition.