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Buyers interested in Borders

Just read an article in PW (Publishers Weekly) that there is at least one serious buyer interested in purchasing and reviving the Borders book chain. That’s definitely good news for all of us in the industry and for book lovers everywhere. We need diverse markets, everything from the big chains to smaller independents. A smaller, but better run Borders would have to be a plus overall.

I’m not a wiz at linking articles yet, so here’s the full piece courtesy of PW (and the Wall Street Journal)

Gores Group, a private equity firm based in Los Angeles, is in discussions to purchase more than 200 of Borders’s 405 remaining stores “in a deal that would keep the bookstore chain operating as a going concern,” according to the Wall Street Journal. “People familiar with the matter” said the stores and other assets could fetch “roughly $200 million or so” and that “other suitors, whose identities couldn’t be learned, are also in discussions with Borders.”

The company headed by Alec Gores “is known as a distressed investor, scooping up stakes in ailing companies and trying to rehabilitate them,” the Journal noted, adding that “interest in Borders has increased since Liberty Media Corp.’s recent bid for Barnes & Noble, valuing the chain at roughly $1 billion.”

A brief profile of Alec Gores in the Journal noted that he and his brother Tom appear to be intent on assembling an entertainment conglomerate. They “recently joined forces to buy Alliance Entertainment, which distributes DVDs, CDs and video games to stores such as Barnes & Noble, Amazon and Target.” They have also explored “buying at least three Hollywood movie studios, including Miramax,” and in 2008 the Gores “plowed about $100 million into radio programming company Westwood One.”

The Journal called the Gores brothers “a three-headed Los Angeles powerhouse. Brother Tom heads another private-equity firm, Platinum Equity. Sam Gores leads Hollywood talent agency, Paradigm. Sam has acted as a consultant for his brothers’ forays into the entertainment business.”

A few pics from Balticon

I realized when I got home I didn’t take as nearly as many photos as I should have, but these will give you a bit of an idea of the variety of sights and general fun that was going on at the convention.


Steampunkers


Steampunk pocket watches


A pint-sized Dr. Who and Dalek


Skull jugs


Goblin ghourds

If you haven’t attended a Con before I would definitely urge you to give one a try. I was surprised at how much fun I had. Many thanks to the organizers for an overall great job, and specifically for keeping a well-stocked green room.

An Unexpected Journey and There And Back Again

The two hobbit movies have been given official release dates. An Unexpected Journey debuts December 14, 2012, and There And Back Again on December 13, 2013. Now I just have to be patient!
http://www.eonline.com/uberblog/b244607_wait_hobbit_films_are_going_be_called.html

Did you know there are gourd societies? And other things I learned at Balticon

Top five things I’ve learned at the Balticon fantasy and science fiction convention this weekend:

1. There are gourd societies that focus on the art potential of dried gourds. Photos to come.
2. There is a natural, barefoot movement among many Con goers which seems very free-spirited and casual…until you see a guy going in to use the restroom. I’d be packing flip-flops for that.
3. If you don’t own a black t-shirt with some kind of witty sci-fi saying printed on it you’re probably not here.
4. Corsets are in. So are kilts.
5. You can visit the various suites and parties and quite probably make it the whole weekend on the food and drink you find there…if you can survive on Sunny-D, M&Ms, mini-bagels, and veggie trays. I couldn’t, but I did discover mini M&Ms in my travels. Who knew?

On the shoulders of giants and scary, pregnant clowns…

I participated on my second panel today, this one discussing the influences of the greats in the field. Actually, a lot of names came up that we don’t automatically think of when we discuss fantasy and sci fi. The panel included Michael Swanwick, John Anealio, Myke Cole, TJ Perkins, and yours truly. In addition to Tolkien and Kipling (yes, I’m mentioning them both again), I put in a plug for Barbara Tuchmann. No, she wasn’t a fantasist, but she was an exceptional writer and had the ability to sketch out a character (in her case, an actual person in history) in just a couple of sentences. I love her style.

We spent a little time debating the two central schools in fantasy of either carrying in Tolkien’s tradition or rebelling against it. I count myself among the former, while names like China Mieville and George RR Martin were held up as examples of writers rejecting Tolkien’s heritage. We all agreed there was no right answer to this. I’m a firm believer in variety. Some days I want to challenge myself with a daunting tome on ancient Greece and the next I’ll get lost in the antics of Sherman’s Lagoon http://www.slagoon.com/ (a comic strip for those not familiar with it).

Oh, so about the scary, pregnant clown. I saw one. She had painted her face white with a large, red mouth filled with jagged teeth. Unsettling to say the least. I suspect/hope this is from some graphic novel or computer game, but perhaps it’s just her thing. There are a lot of costumes on display here, some of them quite disturbing in the amount of blood and gore they depict. Then there are others that are truly magnificent. I’m walking around as button-down shirt guy feeling a bit like Brad Majors in Rocky Horror 🙂

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