Blue Griffin Books owner
Jonathan Archibald holds up one of the popular Dragon Lance books that are selling as fast as he can get them.
Lawrence Powell
Blue Griffin Books opens in Middleton
Archibald amazed, delighted with response
By Lawrence Powell
Spectator/NovaNewsNow.com
Jonathan Archibald
is continually buoyed by the positive response he’s been getting since
he opened a new chapter in his life and a book store in Middleton in
mid-August where he sells used books, magazines, and a lot more.
“Customer response has been absolutely amazing, ? said the
owner of Blue Griffin Books on Commercial Street next to Valley Credit
Union. “People were really excited about a book store opening. ?
One woman stopped by the evening before he was set to open. Archibald was putting the finishing touches on setting up his displays.
“I told her I was opening the next morning, ? Archibald said. “She said she’d be back the next day, and sure enough she was my first customer. ?
As he talks to the newspaper last Thursday, a man comes in looking for music books – guitar tab, guitar lessons. Archibald
shows him a selection and the man ends up leaving with three books. He
could have gone elsewhere but he believes in shopping locally. And
he’ll be back. And he’ll be back not just for books. He and Archibald struck up a friendly conversation about something they both have in common – Star Trek.
In fact it was Archibald’s passion for Star Trek that eventually led to Archibald opening Blue Griffin.
Archibald,
from Berwick, studied economics at Acadia University and admits to
bumming around ‘out west’ for a while before returning home to work in
the computer business. He was the guy who could take your computer,
clean it up, and get rid of all those viruses, worms, and Trojans. And
he still has a keen interest in computers. In fact coffee, computers,
and books are his three big interests.
But books won out. His Star Trek passion was so strong he
found himself buying and selling the books to support his own hobby. He
was no stranger to e-bay. One day he bought a bunch of books at an
auction, turned around and sold them, and made a bit of money.
“I thought to myself, ‘I’d like to do this full time,’ ? he said.
Blue Griffin Books has been about two years in the making, and Archibald
(admittedly not a carpenter) set to work building shelves on which to
display his huge stock of books, magazines, VHS movies, and games.
(“I’ve had a lot of requests for Play Station games, ? he said.)
While his inventory was considerable, he may not have been
prepared for the voracious readers in the Middleton area. Books were
flying off the shelves from Day 1, and what people were buying wasn’t
necessarily what he thought would sell. Poetry and classic literature
were being snapped up – by young people. Jane Austin and Herman Hesse
were selling fast. And religion has been popular as have been
children’s books and books for young adults.
Fortunately, as the books were going out the door, customers
were bringing in bags and boxes of books from their own collections and
receiving credit to purchase yet more books from Archibald.
And he has his own sources for books as well. Now he’s hit a sort of
equilibrium – not over-stocked and not too many empty spots on the
shelves. Although Thursday he took a big hit on L.M. Montgomery books
and The Little House on the Prairie series.
And science fiction and fantasy books are major sellers.
A woman came in recently with eight boxes of books plus a few backs. She backed her vehicle up to the loading dock and Archibald was in heaven. She received a considerable sum in credit and he ended up with a lot of books he knew people wanted.
“It’s good to get stocked up for Christmas, ? he said.
And he has a little bit of everything. He rhymes off the
categories: general fiction, science fiction, mystery, true crime,
western, war fiction, poetry, classic literature, crafts, gardening,
cook books, politics, biography, religion, history, reference, and
pocket romance.
A woman comes in looking for medical books. Archibald
shows her a selection, but what she wants isn’t there. If she was
looking for something specific, he can add it to a growing list and try
to find it for her. He’s done that for other customers. He’s found
Harry Potter books, called the customer. “They were there 10 minutes
later to pick it up. ?
Archibald
would love to combine a coffee shop with his boo store, but because of
the configuration of space, that’s not likely to happen. However,
computers is another thing, and by late spring or early summer he hopes
to have a bank of computers across the back of the store set up for
public use – limited web surfing and e-mailing capabilities. And in the
back room, where he has lockable storage, he eventually wants to repair
computers.
Archibald
doesn’t know what effect a book store will have on literacy in the
Middleton area, but he’s already sold books to adults wanting to learn
to read – or read better. He holds up a stack of old elementary school
readers he’s saving for a man who wants to become more literate. And
he’s had parents looking for books to help their children get up to
their grade level in reading.
He hopes he’s making a difference.
“People really seem to like it, ? he said of Blue Griffin
Books. “I’m getting the response that this is what Middleton really
needs. ?
Blue Griffin Books is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Saturday. On Thursday and Friday it’s open from
9 a.m. to 9 p.m. For now Archibald
closes on Sundays but he said if there is any significant changes in
shopping patterns since new provincial regulations came into effect, he
may have to reconsider.