Broad Conversation

Events, news and opinion from Blackwell's, Broad Street, Oxford – one of the most famous bookshops in the world. Join the conversation…

I am not (just) a bookseller any more…

I love working in bookselling and feel privileged to have spent most of my career working at Blackwell’s on The Broad. Each year since 1987, when I started working in the book trade, the ‘death of the book’ has been trumpeted loud and clear. Each year the book has survived – sometimes thriving, sometimes taking a flesh wound.

Throughout this time I have seen my primary role (and that of the shop) as selling books. However, this perception has changed over the past year or so. With a ‘perfect storm’ of threats – the rise of Amazon and their ‘selling new books as a marketing tool’ approach, the significant take-up of ebooks, the sharp rise in tuition fees and the general malaise on the Hight Street and a double-dip recession – just selling books is not enough any more.

Now my role is focussed on making you fall in love with us. Yes, our passion for books will be the centrpiece to this, but it has to become a given that we need to offer much more. 

I was very struck by a recent book by economist John Kay called Obliquity; the central premise being that you are sometimes more likely to achieve a goal by taking an indirect path. Hence my commitment to making as many people as possible fall in love with us rather than just trying to sell as many books as possible. This way salvation lies.

The Damascene moment for me was when we agreed to Creation Theatre staging Faustus in the Norrington Room just over a year ago. It was abundantly clear that there were many hurdles to overcome and the success of the venture was by no means guaranteed. But it was ambitious, boy was it ambitious. I loved that fact. I also loved what it did for the shop – the feedback from audience and customers was overwhelmingly positive and it was the start of a relationship with Creation Theatre that is deeply respectful, mutually beneficial and above all fun. From that moment on our ambitions for many of the things that we do in the shop were raised.

Our events programme is undoubtedly the jewel in our ‘more than a bookshop’ crown – the variety and frequency can seem at times mind-boggling, from a sold out Sheldonian for Steven Pinker to our Writers Group and all points in between. Unbeknownst to most of our customers we run a small campus bookshop at Buckingham New University for part of the year and the size and success of our book tent at the Oxford Literary Festival goes from strength to strength (by my calculation it was probably the third busiest bookshop in the country on those nine heady days in March!) Some of the events that we run are not expected to make any reasonable amount of book sales but we see that being an active part of the cultural scene in Oxford as a fundamental responsibility. Barely a day goes by when we do not have some sort of event – maybe a bookstall in a college, an author talk in the evening or a group of visiting librarians who want a tour of the shop.

If you visit the shop you will, no doubt, notice that we are branching out into selling things other than books. This has the potential to be a tricky path to navigate – we must remain recognisably a bookshop – after all it is what our customers know and love us for and what we want to be doing for years to come. However, we are sourcing a range of quality items to complement our book offer. Examples of this are the ‘It’s All Greek’ statuettes that furnish our Classics Dept, top quality leather satchels or our bookish T Shirts from Out of Print.

It never fails to hearten me when I speak to customers; the esteem in which we are held is inspiring. Of course this can be a double-edged sword as expectations are incredibly high which can lead to disappointment when we fall short. We wouldn’t have it any other way – it truly is the customers – you – that allow the shop to hit the high notes that it does. The fact that genuine friendships are made between booksellers and customers is a source of great pride. We love to hear about the books that you are reading and we love to share with you those books that are dear to our hearts. No algorithmic ‘if you loved x you’ll like y’ here. Our aim is to inspire, delight, amaze and excite each and every person that walks through our doors.

Our relationship with other Oxford institutions – the Bodleian, the Story Museum, BookFeast and the Oxford University Alumni Office to name just four are a fantastic source of support and encouragement. We want to have relationships with all sorts of organisations throughout Oxford and will be working ever harder on this over the coming year. And just imagine if Oxford wins the UNESCO World Book Capital 2014 crown – I might just explode.

And not just Oxford institutions – thanks to all forms of Social Media we are building new and exciting relationships with authors, independent publishers, bookshops and book bloggers from around the world. I am seeking out the very best that is happening in the book world and working on bringing it to Oxford. But I am also keenly aware that the heritage and history that has been made inside our shop has been, to a large extent, hidden away from our customers – bringing that out, polishing it up and sharing it with the world is another part of my day job. One of my favourite phrases that we use here is about us being at ‘the cutting edge of tradition’ – we need to be a modern bookshop but we can best be guided in that by what we have achieved in the past 133 years.

I hope that I haven’t been too indulgent here – feel free to get down on bended knee and profess your love or come back to the shop and renew your vows. 

My final word is to quash the rumour that the job title on my business card says ‘Ambassador for Heritage, Tradition and Romance’ – maybe next year?

Filed under: Beauty of Books, Bookshop news and events, Creation Theatre, Oxford Literary Festival, The Book Trade, The Bookshop, UNESCO World Book Capital, , , ,

Bestselling Children’s Books from last week

Thanks to Helen Pielichaty for making the eminently reasonable request to see our bestselling children’s books from festival week. Here you go Helen!

Filed under: Bestsellers, Oxford Literary Festival

Current Bestsellers in the shop

Our current Top 20 bestsellers are dominated by the biggest titles from the Oxford Literary Festival

Filed under: Bestsellers, Oxford Literary Festival, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival photo blog

Thanks to all the authors, organisers, customers, Christ Church staff and fellow marquee dwellers who made the Festival such an unqualified, enjoyable event. Here are a few few photos that (I hope) capture some of the atmosphere and bring back some nice memories for those lucky enough to part of it…

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Filed under: Bookshop news and events, Oxford, Oxford Literary Festival, ,

Festival Time Again

It’s that time of year again when the literary great and good descend on Christ Church College for the annual Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival for nine days of debate, discussion and bookselling.

In its twelfth year now the Festival is firmly established in the literary calendar and has grown from a very small programme to where it is today – over 400 author events at fifteen different locations throughout Oxford.

For Blackwell’s it is a key date in our calendar and a huge undertaking for us in terms of the resource required to go from this;                                        to this;

 

Our set up takes two and a half days and requires a significant degree of precision to ensure that the correct books are going to the correct location for the correct time (we sell books at each of the Festival venues, not just from the Marquee).

The first day proper is always a nerve tingling time for all of us when the first customers walk through the door at 9am, but once the tills start ringing we are off and running and loving it.

There really is something for everyone. A flavour of the first weekend included the palpable buzz generated by Simon Callow, the 110th birthday of Peter Rabbit – he’s looking remarkably well on it…, a thoughtful joust between Roger Scruton and AC Grayling in the Sheldonian on whether we need God to survive, fans meeting the authors they love, the magnificent Hendricks dispensing copious amounts of free gin, Michael Morpurgo inspiring a generation of future readers.

I could go on, but I am sure that you get the gist. With the glorious weather set fair for the rest of the week there is no place on Earth that I would rather be. If you get the chance do come along

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Filed under: Bookshop news and events, Oxford Literary Festival, , , , , ,

Our bestselling titles

Our financial year finished at the end of June and I always look at our bestselling titles of the year around about now.

The top 5 fiction titles were:

1. David Nicholls ‘One Day’  This was helped by a fantastic event at the Oxford Literary Festival
2. Philip Atkins ‘A Dodo at Oxford’  But is it fact or fiction..?
3. Barbara Kingsolver ‘The Lacuna’ An instant classic? Book Groups seem to think so
4. Sebastian Faulks ‘A Week in December’ In fact it was the four weeks in December that this absolutely flew out of the shop
5. Hilary Mantel ‘Wolf Hall’  The 2009 Booker winner is still a powerhouse seller

Top 5 non-fiction titles were:

1. John Farndon ‘Do You Think You’re Clever?’ Questions and answers from Oxbridge entrance exams that has been a real hit with students and tourists alike. It outsold all fiction titles as well last year.
2. Neil MacGregor ‘A History of the World in 100 Objects’ Our runaway bestseller at Christmas…
3. James Hannam ‘God’s Philosophers’ Shortlisted for the Royal Society Prize, a book about medieval science
4. Edmund de Waal ‘The Hare with Amber Eyes’ Another star performance at the Oxford Literary Festival, the history of a family told through a collection of ‘netsuke’ – minature Japanese wood and ivory carvings
5. Ben Goldacre ‘Bad Science’  The de-bunker of scientific myth reamins one of our bestselling books two years after publication

A pretty eclectic list I hope you agree, and other titles worthy of mention include Seamus Heaney ‘Human Chain’ (now out in paperback but we always sell more hardback than paper), the Collectors Library edition of ‘Alice in Wonderland’ (if we added up sales of all editions of Alice it would be comfortably in our top 5), Stieg Larsson (obviously), Amartya Sen ‘Idea of Justice’ (just a brilliantly sane book), Kate Tiller ‘An Historical Atlas of Oxfordshire’ (published by the Oxfordshire Record Society essential reading for any local historian), David Palfreyman ‘The Oxford Tutorial’ (personal reminiscences on why the one-to-one tutorial makes Oxford University so special) and Archie Brown ‘The Rise and Fall of Communism’ (winner of the WJM MacKenzie prize for

Filed under: Bookshop news and events, Oxford Literary Festival, The Bookshop,

More than words: revelling in the court of Tim Smit

“YOU ARE ALL GOING TO DIE” bellows Tim Smit, the charismatic founder of the Eden project, recounting a previous talk where having arrived late was rushed on stage and unable to think of anything to say. And so begins one of the most inspirational hours of my life. Brimming with great anecdotes and insights into both his own way of going about things and general observations on how people interact, Tim has all the verve and charm of a motivational speaker, while pouring scorn over all the jargon and empty posturing of “innovative” companies, where people “think out of the box”. This is a man who ambles into the Sheldonian Theatre, ruffled hair, creased shirt tucked into his jeans, looking like he could easily be heading over to the garden to do some weeding…although in his case potentially on a massive scale!

This is where Tim Smit spoke

The Eden Project is an £80million environmental initiative, and we’re told to date that it has generated £1billion. What do you do when you are trying to bring a project to fruition and you’re stretched to the limit, and feeling like you can’t possibly bring everything together asks Tim. As a rule? Well, you take one more step out on a limb. Getting the funding for the project required some good fortune and Tim largely credits his success to taking risks and the sheer positive power on others generated by believing in what you are doing.

Another principle Tim lives by is seeking out the great potential in unexpected situations. Organisations and institutions obsess about gathering together the “great thinkers” in “centres of excellence”, but what of the untapped resources bubbling away within us all? And who knows what spark can ignite when you get people in situations they never planned? Well funnily enough I didn’t know who Tim Smit was before today and (rather shamefully) I knew nothing of the Eden project. So I came to the Sheldonian Theatre with no expectations, and I left having been treated to a fantastically stimulating event.  I’ve had my mind energised by a vision of how this country could invest in sustainable energy and move into a new age of industry and production, an “exciting” time, which Tim believes could prove to be as historically significant as the age of enlightenment. And why not, if we can show some of the drive and commitment which has been on show today?

Tim has a cunning little method to encourage novel situations: he accepts every third invitation (providing there’s no clash with family commitments). So was Blackwell at the mercy of Tim’s social invite roulette wheel when we asked him to appear at the Oxford Literary Festival this year? I never thought to ask him. But I do know that all of us here at the Sheldonian Theatre today were very lucky to have been able to spend a little time in the company of this inspiring man.

- Tom Osman

Filed under: Bookshop news and events, Oxford Literary Festival, ,

The Oxford Literary Festival – Set Up and the First Weekend In Pictures

The unpacking begins – this might take a while

You can’t create a masterpiece with out making some mess

The Nerve Centre

The shelves are up but empty – watch this space

Will the unpacking ever end?

Coffee needed as things take shape

Remember those empty shelves

Occasionally Zool will yodel to keep spirits high

Build it and they will come

Jemima on the till – she is Queen of Everything at #oxlitfest

Keep bang up to date with all things Festival by following us on Twitter www.twitter.com/blackwelloxford

Filed under: Oxford Literary Festival, , ,

The Rise and Rise of the Literary Festival

Once again we are delighted to be the onsite bookseller at the Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival. Whilst the amount of time and nervous energy that this takes up is huge we wouldn’t want to be anywhere else in the world from 2nd-10th April. Logistically it is the biggest operation that we run outside of the shop. This year will be the 15th installment of the Festival, growing from a very small affair into arguably the third most important literary festival in the UK behind Hay and Edinburgh.

Against a backdrop of economic uncertainty, cuts to cultural programmes and the oft-predicted demise of the traditional book are we at the pinnacle of festival fever?

The growth of literary festivals over the past years has been much commented on, my observations on this are as follows:

  • whilst writing and reading are essentially solitary pursuits our general need for sociability and communality have not diminished over the years, but the opportunities for them have. Whereas location and family used to be the natural drivers of collective behaviour this is being supplanted by groups drawn together by common activity e.g. football and festivals
  • book festivals are seen as having an intellectual stamp of approval – being seen at them is a positive statement, and it gives a definite feelgood factor to attendees
  • whilst authors are not necessarily the best ‘presenters’ in the world they are often unnervingly honest and they are amazingly accessible at these events. To see the real person on whose printed words you have feasted on can be truly inspiring, especially those unexpected nuggets that shine new light on a book. I remember seeing David Mitchell a few years ago when he mentioned that, having written each of the narratives in Cloud Atlas separately, he hadn’t seen the finished structure of the book until it was published.

With our position at the geographic heart of festival means that we often see, feel and hear the ‘buzz’ when a particular event is so good that the enthusiasm of the audience spills out into the marquee and grabs the attention of everyone there. If you ever doubt the power of books then you should experience this – it is truly uplifting.

Books matter and this most communal of activities for book-lovers are the perfect place for you to renew your vows. So, who are you going to see?

Filed under: Oxford Literary Festival, The Book Trade, , ,

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