Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Reading into the millennial book-buying boom

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NEW YORK (Reuters)Nearly a decade after electronic readers revolution­ised how people read books, paperbacks and hardcovers have become cool.

"It is like a hipster movement to get back into reading," said Trish Caudill, manager of Books-AMillion in Corbin, Kentucky. "It's almost cult-like."

Caudill, 29, has seen a resurgence of young customers and more sales of physical books at her store. Her peers are drawn in by graphic novels, the "Hunger Games" and "Divergent" series, and memoirs and essays by YouTube stars Joey Graceffa, Connor Franta and Shane Dawson.

Millennial customers at BooksA-Million and other retailers are missing out on online discounts at websites like Amazon.com Inc, but they are more interested in the group experience, with the bookstore becoming a social destinatio­n.

Across the United States, the 22-to-34 age group has become a larger percentage of the physical book-buying demographi­c. It is now 37 percent of the market, up from 27 percent in 2012, according to Nielsen Books and Consumers.

Millennial­s are also putting a huge chunk of their reading budget - 82 percent - into books they can hold, keep and eventually share, according to Nielsen.

Sara Gonzalez says she does not even look at the price when she is buying a book, even for costlier hardcovers. Part of what she says she is paying for is being part of a community of readers.

"I'm really big about read and pass along," the 30-year-old Chicago resident said. "Share the wealth."

Tech-obsessed younger people are finding that holding a book in their hands can "fill an important void," said American Bookseller­s Associatio­n Chief Executive Officer Oren Teicher.

That is the case for 24-year-old Kaitlyn Veach, who visits Caudill's Books-A-Million store daily and says she spends too much there.

Veach, a married skateboard shop owner, says she wants to keep her books forever. She shuns reading on devices and finds a thrill in turning the pages as she gets close to the end of a book.

"I can't wait to see what happens," Veach said.

While Veach and her peers prefer to shop in person and are will- ing to pay up for that experience, buying books does not have to break the bank. In fact, books can be one of the cheapest forms of entertainm­ent.

And the ultimate social and eco-friendly way to save money on books: the public library.

While borrowing might not help the book industry with sales figures, it could help keep the generation reading without straining their budgets.

 ??  ?? Customers browse the used books for sale from the Brattle Book Shop in an alley in downtown Boston, Massachuse­tts (Reuters)
Customers browse the used books for sale from the Brattle Book Shop in an alley in downtown Boston, Massachuse­tts (Reuters)

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