The Star Malaysia - Star2

Championin­g Asian writers

- By OL IVIA HO

THE first Singapore novel Callie Chong read changed her life.

It was Suchen Christine Lim’s 2013 novel The River’s Song and she fell so hard for it that two years down the road, when she was asked to help start Singapore’s first onestop online store for local print books, she agreed at once.

“I did not know until then that we Singaporea­ns could have books like this,” says Chong, 30, now the cofounder of start-up localbooks.sg.

“That’s a feeling I wanted Singaporea­ns to have – that our stories are not in New York or London, but here. Everyone needs his or her own River’s Song.”

Localbooks.sg was started in July last year by Chong and her friend Julie Hyun, also 30, and bank-rolled by Singaporea­n publisher Edmund Wee, 64, of Epigram Books.

Chong had been working at Wee’s firm when he approached her with the idea for an online bookstore that would shine a spotlight on local writing. Together with Hyun, they pooled S$100,000 (RM300,000 at today’s rates) of their own money and started localbooks.sg.

Their website is a one-stop online shop for 1,500 titles by Singaporea­n authors – poetry collection­s, memoirs, cookbooks and more – from several Singapore publishers, such as Ethos and World Scientific. They plan to double this in the next two months.

Though they have been in business for seven months, sales are still slow and they hope to make a splash during the #BuySingLit campaign later this month. The industry-led movement was launched last week to get Singaporea­ns to buy local books and will feature activities over the weekend of Feb 24 to 26.

Localbooks.sg is holding a weeklong pop-up store featuring children’s books at VivoCity from Feb 21 to 26. It is expecting 8,000 to 10,000 visitors to its “Kids’ Singlit Town”.

“We’ve realised it’s much harder to sell books to 30-year-olds than to children,” says Hyun. “You need to build that affinity early.”

She estimates the site has seen an increase of 20% in sales every month, but has yet to break even. The founders sell an estimated five to 10 books a day, but believe they need to reach at least 50 a day to be sustainabl­e in the long run.

Though they save on rental – they work out of Epigram’s office – most of their costs stem from logistics. Their books are delivered islandwide by courier, which costs between S$6 and S$12 each trip (RM19 and RM37). This would leave very little profit margin on a book sold for, say, S$6.90 (RM21.50).

Many publishers have their own online stores, as do bookstores such as Books Kinokuniya and BooksActua­lly. But Hyun says the company wants to give Singaporea­ns an easier platform to find local titles across the board.

Once, she went looking for a book she had chanced upon at a publishing event but because she could not remember the title, she was not able to find it later despite searching through several online stores.

She admits dark days are on the horizon, with e-retail giant Amazon set to enter Singapore this quarter.

They already face competitio­n from Book Depository, an online bookseller based in Britain that ships free worldwide, and Singapore-based online bookstore OpenTrolle­y, which carries mostly internatio­nal titles.

Last November, Wee put up for sale his personal collection of 10,000 books, raising S$30,000 (RM93,000) for the store. Chong and Hyun estimate this bought it another eight to 10 months’ survival.

National Book Developmen­t Council of Singapore assistant director and writer Adan Jimenez hopes it will not follow the fates of previous local online bookstores.

Singtel’s e-books store Skoob folded in 2013 after two years.

That same year, rival telco StarHub launched its own e-book service Booktique, which closed one-anda-half years later. Mediacorp’s ilovebooks.com lasted less than a year.

Adnan says: “The fact that localbooks.sg offers physical books over e-books is already a leg-up, as Singapore doesn’t have a big e-book market due to territoria­l restrictio­ns.

“But Amazon’s entry could make its focus on local books a handicap. Its next step should be to build a community around its brand, like what independen­t Tiong Bahru bookstore BooksActua­lly has done.” – The Straits Times/Asia News Network

 ??  ?? Chong (left) and Hyun are hoping to promote local writers. — ST
Chong (left) and Hyun are hoping to promote local writers. — ST

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