Several hundred people turned out at Ponsonby Central on Monday evening to celebrate the 25th birthday of Carole Beu's Women's Bookshop.
Present were many of the shops regular customers, along with authors, publishers, booksellers, volunteer helpers, former staff, media folk, publishers reps and friends from far and wide. It was a marvellous occasion.
For those unable to be present here is the speech delivered by Random House NZ's CEO Karen Ferns:
We are here to honour and celebrate the Women’s bookshop 25 years - a
TRIUMPH of RESILIENCE AND VISION and to recognise what an
enormous effort it has taken……..to not
only survive but flourish and become the icon bookshop that it has, where customers feel a strong sense
of ownership too.
I am sure Carole will acknowledge the many volunteers and
paid staff who have been the very important chorus line to Carole’s lead
performance. .
But on behalf all publishers I want to highlight how
grateful we are to Carole for her advocacy of our authors to her customers and
the importance of books and reading in contributing to a fulfilling life..
Passion and Energy are the words closely associated with Carole
Beu
Thank goodness she had those attributes as they were needed
in many challenging months and years that followed the opening of the first
site on Dominion Rd.
Carole arrived a multi
tasking school teacher and understood little of what was ahead of
her.
She certainly had no natural affinity with cash flow
projections and balance sheets and end of month accounts no matter how hard her
accountant tried
It was about learning on the job. But she has great
instincts and she knew it was not only about what happened inside the store but
also where she could take the store to in the world beyond .
Inside the store it would be about enthusiasm , good
personalised knowledge and great hand
selling to loyal customers, tracking down hard to find book s, inviting them to
instore events.
All the ingredients of a destination store as it had to be in
the early days just to survive particularly in Dominion Rd. The Ponsonby site
added an element of increased foot traffic and new customers. She adjusted her
stock mix accordingly.
But what Carole excelled at was recognising the Women’s
bookshop needed to get its name out and about. So she developed her website and
her newsletters full of strong recommendations. She went to conference after
conference of social workers and counsellors and worked the breaks to sell high
priced specialist books she would import form the US. She leant on publishers
to persuade them to fund authors travel to Auckland her big
theatre events which in time became the ladies literati events.
She recognised
that even though she was often superwoman she needed support to run the AWF bookstore and joined in with what
has become the regular gig with Unity. As part of fulfilling some of these
bigger events Carole learnt to drive the quirky Random house Van and made
clandestine arrangements with Jill Ewing to pick it up or drop it off in back
Auckland streets at strange hours of the night. Because she was always willing
to do what it took to make sure her
business was actively managed.It wasn’t just about waiting for customers to come to her. She was happy to go where
customers were and sell books there too.
She also reached out to the industry and sat on the Booksellers
NZ board and numerous
sub-committees. She has been very giving of the
knowledge she has gained from running her own store. She is a force of nature
even if a mellowing one in her grandmother phase of life. She can be
(and I
put this in the most delicate way) quite persistent when she gets on the case. As many publishers will know saying no to a
request from Carole can lead to a spirited and protracted affair often involving
high emotion on both sides. But we publishers have all weathered those moments
because it comes from the same source as the passion for what she does and the
drive and vision she has to make the Women’s Bookshop succeed. That is to be
admired.
I encourage all of you who buy books from the Women’s Bookshop to continue to do so. Give them your support because they deserve it.
They work very hard at it and they care about matching the right book to your
tastes.
Today Carole we salute you and the team both present and
past for this 25 years, it’s a glorious anniversary to celebrate and we also wish
you well for the future and whatever the
Women’s Bookshop becomes under your care.
Ladies and gentlemen raise your glasses in celebration of 25
years of the Women’s Bookshop.
In response Carole graciously acknowledged the many who had helped her over the years - her staff and volunteers, the publishers, the publishers reps,, authors, festival friends and colleagues.
And she managed to get in a plug at the end for the new Face TV book show that she is helping to get up and running and urged everyone present to donate $5 during May via www.boosted.co.nz. The fund raising effort is going to be launched at the Women's Bookshop on 1 May at 6.00pm.
She is endlessly energetic in the cause of books that woman!
A selection of photographs from the celebration.
Carole addresses the crowd
Anne Kennedy , Alexa Johnston, Carole
Beu, Sue Orr, Sarah Laing
In response Carole graciously acknowledged the many who had helped her over the years - her staff and volunteers, the publishers, the publishers reps,, authors, festival friends and colleagues.
And she managed to get in a plug at the end for the new Face TV book show that she is helping to get up and running and urged everyone present to donate $5 during May via www.boosted.co.nz. The fund raising effort is going to be launched at the Women's Bookshop on 1 May at 6.00pm.
She is endlessly energetic in the cause of books that woman!
A selection of photographs from the celebration.
Carole addresses the crowd
Colin Pinfold (Penguin), Rachel Cooper (Random)
Marthie Markstein (Random) Michele Hyland, Carole Beu, Margaret Thompson
(Penguin), Suzie Maddock (Hachette)
Witi Ihimaera, Carole Beu
Graham Beattie, Carole Beu, Glynn Lorrigan, Jilleen Cole
Anne O'Brien (AWF), Christine O'Brien (AUP), Carole Beu, Ka Meechan, Karen Ferns (Random)
Witi Ihimaera, Carole Beu
Graham Beattie, Carole Beu, Glynn Lorrigan, Jilleen Cole
1 comment:
Thanks for posting this Graham. What an amazing evening it was, bringing together the entwined elements of New Zealand's literati to celebrate Carole, her team and the store. I thought the speeches - by Karen, Paula and especially Carole were rousing. And throughout, your wonderful phrase 'the literary activist' was forefront in my mind, for Carole embodies that concept, like few others. She's a woman with grand ideas who, a rare gift, has the mettle to make them happen, kindest siobhan
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