Austin American-Statesman

Authors sign up to boost bookseller’s sales

- By Alexandra Alter

In an effort to increase holiday sales, which have fallen for the last two seasons, Barnes & Noble is hoping to lure customers into stores this Black Friday with something book lovers cannot download: signed copies.

The chain recruited 100 prominent authors — including Donna Tartt, David Mitchell, Dan Brown, E.L. James, Jeff Kinney, George W. Bush and Hillary Clinton — to each sign roughly 5,000 copies of their latest books. The company will distribute the 500,000 signed books among its more than 650 retail stores.

“Customers get inundated with discounts and offers from every other retailer,” said Mary Amicucci, vice president for adult trade and children’s books at Barnes & Noble.

“The goal was to find an exciting reason for people to come to Barnes & Noble early in the morning and get something that they can’t get on any other day of the year.”

Drawing customers into its brick-and-mortar stores has become an urgent priority for Barnes & Noble. The chain has been battered in recent years by competitio­n from Amazon and by a sluggish book market.

It has closed more than 20 stores since summer 2013 and will spin off its money-losing Nook division into a separate company next year.

Holiday sales at its retail stores and website have declined for the last two seasons. In 2013, sales in the nine-week holiday period fell nearly 7 percent to $1.1 billion compared with the previous year. In 2012, sales fell nearly 11 percent, to $1.2 billion.

Amicucci said the initiative began seven months ago when Barnes & Noble compiled a wish list of 50 authors. When the first batch of authors responded enthusiast­ically, the company recruited another 50.

Some authors went further, adding little illustrati­ons to the books. Brandon Stanton, author of “Humans of New York,” drew dinosaurs, while Mo Willems, a children’s book author, sketched his popular pigeon character.

Some authors said they hoped the new campaign would help the struggling chain.

“The presence of a bookstore in a neighborho­od matters,” said Lisa Scottoline, who signed 5,000 copies of her novel “Betrayed.”

“If it’s not physically present, we will have fewer readers,” she said.

David Baldacci, who signed several thousand copies of his new book, “The Escape,” said he hoped the effort would help the last big bookstore chain standing to better compete against Amazon.

“You can go online and buy any book you want, but there’s not a lot of excitement with clicking the ‘buy’ button,” he said.

Independen­t bookstores also are counting on authors to draw customers for the holiday season — a period when many of them make as much as 30 percent of their annual sales.

As part of the American Bookseller­s Associatio­n’s “Indies First” holiday initiative, about 1,200 authors will sign books, greet customers and, in some cases, work behind the counter at more than 400 independen­t bookstores around the country on Saturday.

Oren Teicher, chief executive of the American Bookseller­s Associatio­n, said author appearance­s and signed copies were among the best weapons brick-and-mortar stores had against online retailers.

“Books are identical no matter where you buy them,” he said. “You don’t get a different or better ending if you buy them from us.”

 ??  ?? Authors Donna Tartt and Jeff Kinney are among those recruited by Barnes & Noble to sign books for retail sale.
Authors Donna Tartt and Jeff Kinney are among those recruited by Barnes & Noble to sign books for retail sale.
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