I created this graphic with the intention of conveying a concise message regarding the challenges faced by independent bookstores in their competitive landscape. As we are in Prime Days it is vital to show customers what the true cost of Amazon is. It is accessible to bookstores as a downloadable poster and bag stuffer. - Larry Law, Executive Director of GLIBA Please share this week during Prime Days and and tag us on Instagram GLIBA @glibabooksellers Larry Law @wormwood DOWNLOAD 8.5X11" SIGN DOWNLOAD 11X14" POSTER DOWNLOAD 2-UP BAG STUFFER
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We are absolutely thrilled to welcome Brett! With his extensive background in indie bookselling and indie publishing, he brings a wealth of knowledge and expertise to GLIBA. Brett's love and enthusiasm for our region, our bookstores and the Midwest literary landscape is truly remarkable. We couldn't be more excited for you to get to know him. Together, we look forward to forging stronger connections with our community and many new ventures. Brett Gregory has worked with independent publisher Two Dollar Radio since 2016, doing everything from mailing ARCs, to reading submissions, to managing social media, to running publicity campaigns. He is a co-founder and co-owner of bookstore/café Two Dollar Radio Headquarters in Columbus, OH, where he operated the business until 2021. In 2017 he helped launch a music/literature festival called Flyover Fest in Columbus, OH. Flyover has hosted national artists such as Danez Smith, BRONCHO, Open Mic Eagle, Erika Sanchez, and many others. Before Two Dollar Radio, Brett studied English at the Ohio State University, completed an AmeriCorps stint in upstate New York with Habitat for Humanity, worked as a bartender, and went on several unsuccessful (but fun) DIY-tours in a rock band. He now lives with his family in Cincinnati, most recently working for the Public Library. Co-founded by Pacific Northwest book workers Justin Walls and Spencer Ruchti, the Cercador Prize recognizes works of literature in translation as selected by a committee of independent booksellers based across the United States. Ruchti will serve as the inaugural committee chair. A novel approach to the landscape of literary awards, the Cercador Prize for Literature in Translation will be awarded annually by a committee of five independent booksellers. During the initial prize cycle, each committee member will be responsible for nominating two full-length translations published in the U.S. between January 1, 2023 and December 31, 2023. Publishers, agents, authors, or translators may not submit titles for eligibility. Instead, committee members rely on organic discovery, discussion, and recommendations to determine their selections. The ten finalists for the Cercador Prize will be announced no later than October 15, 2023, with one winner to be announced no later than November 15, 2023. The committee will award the winning translator(s) a prize of $1,000. Translators based anywhere in the world are eligible for the prize. “The Cercador Prize is about bolstering visibility for translated literature,” says Walls. “It’s also about drawing an explicit connection between the work of independent booksellers and literary translators whose contributions to our reading culture are often similarly obscured. Beyond seeking out the best books currently being published in English-language translation, the Cercador intends to serve as an act of collective curation across disciplines.” The inaugural prize’s five committee members include Thu Doan of East Bay Booksellers (Oakland, CA); Riley Rennhack of Deep Vellum Books (Dallas, TX); Javier Ramirez of Exile in Bookville (Chicago, IL); Gary Lovely of Prologue Bookshop (Columbus, OH); and Ruchti of Third Place Books (Seattle, WA). Details about the prize can be found at https://www.cercadorprize.com/. Justin Walls is coeditor of Du Mois Monthly, a translation-focused pick-of-the-month series launched in 2019, and previously served on the 2020 Best Translated Book Award fiction jury. Spencer Ruchti is the Author Events Manager for Third Place Books in Seattle. He has previously worked for Tin House Books, Broadway Books in Portland, OR, and was the Assistant Events Manager for Harvard Book Store. With Walls, he is the coeditor of Du Mois Monthly. |
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