When I was 21 years old I worked fulltime for a national chain bookstore in downtown New Orleans where the business district meets the French Quarter. And after working for almost a year I had some vacation time accumulated, and decided to take a trip and check out San Francisco. Having heard an adage about reading fiction about the place one is traveling to, I bought a copy of Armistead Maupin's very first Tales Of The City novel. I read it on the plane to San Francisco. I very thoroughly enjoyed The City. Among many other things, particularly hanging out in the gay parts of town and just marveling at the feelings of acceptance and belonging.
Needless to say, I finished with the first book in the saga of Mark Anne Singleton's spur of the moment migration and visited A Different Light bookstore in the Castro and purchased More Tales Of The City, and continued reading about Mary Anne and Michael as I explored the city they called home.
It is with great sadness that I note that A Different Light bookstore is going out of business. Most of us who care about books are well aware of the increasingly challenging environment that small independent bookstores have been facing for more than a decade now. The news this year that e-books are increasingly making headway for both mainstream and indie book sellers (authors like @JAKonrath who have abandoned mainstream publishers to exclusively self-publish in e-book format report vastly increased earnings and career satisfaction) along with the growing ubiquity of Kindles and Nooks, as well as consumers now buying both new and used books online at prices local independents simply can not match. Back when I was bookseller, we constantly had dozens of customers each day come in to ask us to order a book for them. That just doesn't happen any more. Although I love bookstores and try to support them, the fact is I think there will be very few small independent bookstores in the future. Sadly, they just are no longer economically viable.
And so today, I mourn not only A Different Light but all small, independent bookstores. Like (author--codex) I believe that bound and printed books will continue to be published and used for most of my lifetime. But the days of being able to physically browse a large selection of eclectically chosen books are numbered. And I, for one, will miss them.
This post includes information reported in this article
Iconic Castro Bookstore Going Out Of Business
Showing posts with label San Francisco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Francisco. Show all posts
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Twitter a Bad Neighbor in San Francisco?
Twitter, a still relatively small (in business terms) company grew out of a project at a San Francisco firm, has taken the Internet by storm with its very popular micro-blogging service. Like many growing companies, Twitter is need of more office space, projecting growing to a level of 3,000 employees. San Francisco taxes businesses by a levy on payroll, rather than the more common tax on earnings or, as here in Washington state a tax on gross receipts. This means that most tech companies who looked to expand a large work force would look to move out of San Francisco, to an office park in Silicon Valley or to a completely different market outside of the Bay Area.
Twitter however came to an agreement with the city of San Francisco under which they will lease for six years a much larger space in a vacant building only a block or so away from its current headquarters office. In return, San Francisco will exempt Twitter from the payroll tax for all new employees hired during the six year lease. Twitter's neighbors complain that the gentrification will only increase rents in the area (San Francisco is a notoriously very expensive city) and that Twitter's presence will not benefit them at all, given the tax exemption. Seems to me San Francisco's tax policy does tend to favor smaller companies or smaller offices of large companies. Whether San Francisco's tax break is a good deal or nor? That's harder to call.
What do YOU think?
For more information see this article in The Seattle Times:
Twitter tax deal creates classic San Francisco row
Twitter however came to an agreement with the city of San Francisco under which they will lease for six years a much larger space in a vacant building only a block or so away from its current headquarters office. In return, San Francisco will exempt Twitter from the payroll tax for all new employees hired during the six year lease. Twitter's neighbors complain that the gentrification will only increase rents in the area (San Francisco is a notoriously very expensive city) and that Twitter's presence will not benefit them at all, given the tax exemption. Seems to me San Francisco's tax policy does tend to favor smaller companies or smaller offices of large companies. Whether San Francisco's tax break is a good deal or nor? That's harder to call.
What do YOU think?
For more information see this article in The Seattle Times:
Twitter tax deal creates classic San Francisco row
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