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Mark Rubbo |
Australian bookselling legend Mark Rubbo, the long-time managing director of Readings bookshops in Melbourne, has retired after nearly 50 years in the book business, the Sydney Morning Herald reported, adding that yesterday was the first day of his official retirement.
"I'm getting physically not as able to do it anymore, although my back's been quite good recently," said Rubbo, who at age 74 is relinquishing control of the company to his son, Joe Rubbo.
Readings grew from one outlet in Lygon Street into a chain of eight shops, and Mark Rubbo "has been in the vanguard of nurturing new Australian writers, writing, and the country's vibrant independent publishing scene," the Morning Herald noted.
"He is one of the world's great independent booksellers," said Text publisher Michael Heyward. "For all of us who have spent a lifetime in books, working with writers, trying to extend the culture and doing something new, we have been really lucky to have him as a partner and a supporter."
Author Helen Garner described Rubbo as "the sort of guy who makes a good feeling in a room. I like him, I respect him, I'm grateful to him for his hard work, and his generous temper, and his imaginative presence in our lives. I'll miss him."
Author Peter Carey, who recalled buying a record at Rubbo's Professor Longhair music shop in the '70s, wrote him into the novel Amnesia, "with a character stealing a copy of Lord of the Rings from Readings (Rubbo hates shoplifters)," the Morning Herald noted. Carey said, "He's a very pleasant man who has sold a shitload of good books."
Rubbo was influential in setting up the Melbourne Writers Festival, helped to obtain Melbourne's status as only the second Unesco City of Literature, served on the board of the Wheeler Centre, judged the Miles Franklin Literary Award and several other writing prizes, set up Readings prizes for new writing, YA and children's writing, and in 2009 established the Readings Foundation. Rubbo has received several awards from the book industry, and became a member of the Order of Australia in 2006.
He will remain chairman of the board at Readings, and might even take occasional shifts on the sales floor. He also plans do some work with his friend Henry Rosenbloom, publisher at Scribe.
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Bookselling Ireland, part of the Booksellers Association of the U.K. & Ireland, has submitted proposals for consideration by the government in advance of the finalization of the next budget "to enable the sector to continue to grow and thrive."
Noting that the book industry "makes an important and positive social, economic and cultural contribution to Ireland," Bookselling Ireland wrote that there are currently more than 220 bookshops across the country, employing more than 3,000 people, and that bookshops "are an integral part of our cultural landscape and generate €189 million [about $208.3 million] to the economy." Among the measures proposed to the government:
- Culture voucher to allow young people to experience Ireland's cultural offering
- Expansion of the night-time economy support scheme
- Improve school procurement processes to allow bookshops to thrive
- Ensure all libraries have a ringfenced discretionary budget to source books of local interest
- Commercial rates relief
- Urban renewal
"We look forward to engaging with you and your officials as we work to sustain and promote the Irish bookselling sector and its vital role in maintaining the vibrancy of Ireland's town centres," Bookselling Ireland's chair Dawn Behan wrote.
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The bouquinistes, the legendary booksellers along the River Seine, "say the Olympics threaten to erase a symbol of Paris, after they were told by local authorities that they will have to remove their stalls for the Summer Games opening ceremony in 2024 for security reasons," Reuters reported. City authorities claim that about 570 stalls, or nearly 60% of the total along the river, need to be dismantled and moved for the opening ceremony next year on July 26.
"People come to see us like they come to see the Eiffel Tower and Notre Dame, (but) they want to hide us during a ceremony that is supposed to represent Paris," said Jerome Callais, the president of the Paris booksellers association.
Paris authorities said they met with the booksellers recently and offered to pay for the costs of removing the stalls as well as any repair work in the event of damage. Reuters noted that it "was not clear whether the booksellers had been told they must move for the duration of the Games or only for the opening ceremony." --Robert Gray