San Francisco Chronicle

Bookseller­s hit Amazon’s AbeBooks with a strike

- By David Streitfeld David Streitfeld is a New York Times writer.

More than 250 antiquaria­n book dealers in 24 countries are pulling over 1 million books off an Amazon-owned site for a week, an impromptu protest after the site abruptly moved to ban sellers from several nations.

The flash strike against the site, AbeBooks, which began Monday, is a rare concerted action by vendors against any part of Amazon, which depends on third-party sellers for much of its merchandis­e and revenue. The protest arrives as increasing attention is being paid to the extensive power that Amazon wields as a retailer — a power that is greatest in books.

The stores are calling their action Banned Bookseller­s Week. The protest got its start after AbeBooks sent emails in October to bookseller­s in countries including South Korea, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Russia to say that it would no longer “support” them.

“We apologize for this inconvenie­nce,” the company said.

As the news spread, even unaffected dealers were surprised and angered. AbeBooks, together with Amazon itself, is by far the biggest internatio­nal marketplac­e for secondhand and rare books.

AbeBooks lists millions of books and manages the payments. The bookseller­s mail the books directly from their shops. The service was founded in 1995 and was bought by Amazon in 2008. It continues to operate independen­tly, and many of its customers never even realize who the owner is. AbeBooks is in Victoria, British Columbia.

The Amazon subsidiary told the Internatio­nal League of Antiquaria­n Bookseller­s that it is scaling back because “it is no longer viable for us to operate in these countries due to increasing costs and complexiti­es.”

On Saturday night, in response to a query from a reporter, AbeBooks said it is dropping the countries because “our third-party payment service provider is closing at the end of the year.” It added that, “We regret that we cannot continue to serve all sellers.”

Since AbeBooks controls its storefront, the only recourse the protesting bookseller­s have is to mark their businesses “on vacation.” Some of the participat­ing bookseller­s started doing that over the weekend.

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