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Nikki Stern

Nikki Stern
Location
Princeton, New Jersey, USA
Birthday
April 10
Title
whatever sounds good
Company
Sure, come on in
Bio
Author of "Because I Say So: The Dangerous Appeal of Moral Authority" (www.nikkistern.com) and "Hope in Small Doses" to be released June 1, 2010 by Humanist Press.

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Editor’s Pick
DECEMBER 11, 2011 12:49PM

Labyrinth Books: Princeton's Indie Model

Rate: 12 Flag

Princeton has always had an independent bookstore. Since 2006, Labyrinth Books has filled the needs of both the university and the community, and its innovative approach may offer a model for other struggling outlets. 

 Outside2web

Labyrinth is Princeton University’s official partner, offering course books at 30% to students and giving discounts to faculty. The store is next door to the University store  on the town’s main thoroughfare and attracts its share of weekend browsers. The store is organized “so you can find what you didn't know you were looking for," according to the website. There is no coffee shop and products like mugs, bookmarks, and calendars are kept to a minimum. Labyrinth is about browsing and book acquisition.

Events at Labyrinth are co-sponsored by organizations like the Princeton Public Library (itself a significant cultural presence in the community), the Princeton Research Forum, and  McCarter Theater, to name a few.  It also features Princeton area-writers, be they established or less well-known.  The owners believe these partnerships enable Labyrinth to “keep questions of social justice as well as the viability of the arts at the forefront of our concerns."  

  Inside1web

Labyrinth is supported by its nationally recognized scholarly book wholesaler, Great Jones Books. The warehouse not far from Princeton in Pennington, New Jersey that carries more than 50,000+ titles at discounted prices.

Looking ahead, the owners hope to acquire a print-on-demand machine (called the espresso machine), to produce books in the public domain, per-copy self-published books and soon, they hope, current titles. Says Labyrinth owner Dorothea von Moltke with obvious enthusiasm: “This would mean we would never have to say to a customer that we don't have a book. Instead, we'd tell them: give me 2 minutes."

Books on demand: the Labyrinth model. 

Labyrinth Books
122 Nassau Street
Princeton, NJ 08540
www.labyrinthbooks.com

top image: en.wikipedia.org 

 

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Comments

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Nikki ~ Labyrinth looks like they did their homework and will be around for quite some time! It's unfortunate that Yale made Barnes & Noble the winner in New Haven since there are plenty of outlets already for that chain in so many locations nationwide, but Labyrinth was a standalone and independent model. Thanks for a great story about the store, its owners, and future plans for the book on demand machine which I am figuring is similar to McNally Jackson's in the city.
Nikki--Great research and writing. If I'm ever down that way, I'll be sure to stop in.
It's wonderful and oh-so encouraging to read about a local business -- and a bookstore! -- being savvy and successful and such a vibrant presence within the community. And awful, but not surprising, to read about what happened to them at Yale.
A friend had a small used bookstore in a flea market in Gloucester awhile back. He made most of his money selling used books wholesale internationally.
May these people never close their doors. I see video/movie and book stores falling like flies now and it saddens me.
HUGGGGGGGGGGG
Nothing fills my heart like a good library and bookstore story!!!! Great job, Nikki!
Sounds like a neat place to find ze best books!! Rated!
Loved this! I worked as a cashier at the U Store when I was in high school about a zillion years ago...can't recall the Labyrinth though...how long has it been there?
Pauline: I remember you were a Princeton gal. Labyrinth came in just as Micawber closed in 2006. It's relatively new. I wrote a longer version (not fit for this open call) in which I recounted Labyrinth's less fortunate experience up in New Haven. Yale partnered with Barnes and Noble, which was a real blow to the idea of an indie store and a nail in the coffin for Labyrinth. That store closed earlier this year.

The owners made sure that Micawber's owner wanted to leave and Princeton wanted them to come in before making the move. It's working well and it doesn't hurt to have the huge warehouse with its own retail as well as wholesale business nearby...
Oh Nikki Stern. I Love the word Labyrinth.
Borges wrote a essay with that great title.
Congratulation on the editor tooth pick.
`
I hope it's a green jade toothpick. Howdy.
I wish I had a Princeton bumper sticker.
My pickup truck needs some status.
`
That neighbor use to be dangerous.
If a editor didn't like you go missing.
Troopers said `Just go get 'him' now.
`
I just got a Salon Pop-Up`
`
The popup is baby blue.
The warning read this:

Something Went wrong. Honest

In the old days cops winked at crook.
You carried a shovel into the woods.
No be lured by crooks into the woods.

The only thing folk see are buzzards.
No one ever investigated nasty deeds.
There were moonshine feud brawls.

Did you read that book you wrote yet?
I hear it's well written with no bad words.
Good info. I live 30 min from Princeton.