Showing posts with label ASDA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ASDA. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 September 2009

THE GREAT BOOK GIVEAWAY/SELL OUT

On the surface it looks a good thing and for the consumer it is - at least in the short term. Supermarkets are offering consumer deals to book buyers that defy belief.

All the books pictured left are currently on sale in UK supermarkets for a fraction of the retail price.

Take a handsome box set of the entire James Bond series by Ian Fleming, in identical editions to those selling for £7.99 in bookshops up and down the country. And all for £15. That's 14 books in all and they come in a nice presentation box.

Or if Jack Higgins is more your style - ASDA have a Jack Higgins box set of three paperbacks for £5. One of the books in the set, The Iron Tiger I saw only yesterday in Wasterstones for £7.99 and the books were identical.

Darkly Dreaming Dexter for £1 (ASDA), Tomorrow Never Dies novelization by Raymond Benson is in ASDA's for £1. Or current bestseller Michael Connelly, three novels in one massive book for £4 (ASDA). Morrisons and Sainsbury's are also in on the act and the average price for a brand new current hardback book varies between £8 and £10.

What's wrong with that? Books being so cheap may even help to encourage lapsed readers back into the fold or actually create readers. However the business model the supermarkets use is not sustainable. The supermarkets are using the same tactics with books they used with groceries all those years ago. And look how many corner shops have gone forever since the supermarkets started to pop up in every town centre. To the supermarkets books are loss leaders and they've got the buying power to buy and then resell the product as cheaply as possible. Traditional bookshops can't do that and many are feeling the pinch as the inevitable happens and supermarkets begin to take business from them.

Supermarkets are also only interested in bestsellers - named authors, celebrity books or high concept works and would never take the time to break a new author, where sales would initially be slow but build up over several books. When the only places selling books are the supermarkets then publishers will no longer be able to afford to take the risk on new authors.

"By selling so cheaply the major three supermarkets in the UK are creating a monopoly by stealth that will drive small publishers and book shops to the wall."

What can be done? Boycott the supermarkets? That ain't going to happen. I try and support bookshops as much as possible but when the new hardback comes out from a bestseller that I follow, I'm in the supermarket. I can save anywhere between £5 and £8 this way. That makes this article, hypocritical I guess and I won't deny that. But money's not that easy to come by and no-one, no matter how much of a book lover, is going to spend pounds more on a title he/she can get cheaper. Mind you The Tarnished Star is £11.64 at Tescos.



And books for a pound - Velocity by Dean Koontz £1 at ASDA.



But if you've read it here are some other things you can currently spend a pound on in the UK:

A quality newspaper and probably get 10p change.
Three quarters of a can of Red Bull.
One and a half tins of Heinz Baked Beans.
A lottery ticket
A quarter of a jar or decent coffee
Two rolls of toilet tissue
Much less than a litre of petrol
Use the public toilets at Harrods - a pound to spend a penny.
A large bag of salted peanuts (caution may contain nuts.)

But on the other hand: INSIDE BOOK PUBLISHING REPORTED IN 2008:

"The first myth is that these giant retailers use books as a ‘loss leader’ – discounting below cost price to lure customers who will then pick up (more profi table) groceries. A few blockbuster books are sometimes used in this way, but the supermarkets actually make a profit on 99 per cent of the books they sell – even on those £3.50 paperbacks and yes, even on Harry Potter."


"The second misconception is that supermarkets only stock a handful of bestsellers. That may have been true a decade ago, but now any large Asda, Tesco or Sainsbury’s has a surprisingly deep and varied book range (Tesco’s biggest stores have up to 5,000 different paperbacks). No less an authority than James Daunt, founder of the upscale London bookshops Daunts, once remarked to me that he personally would be happy to read nothing but books from the shelves of his local Tesco for the rest of his life."


"
This brings me to the third myth, namely that supermarkets are only interested in commercial fi ction by brand name authors, trashy celebrity autobiographies or ‘misery memoirs’. They certainly do a roaring trade in these areas, but they also shift big numbers of literary classics, cookery, history, biography, children’s picture books and even cult fiction. Tesco sold more copies of Ali Smith’s experimental novel The Accidental than Waterstone’s; in 2007 it promoted the Man Booker Prize shortlist."

However since the above points were made those £3.50 paperbacks have now become £1 paperbacks - can there possibly be a profit there? The claim that supermarkets also stock much more than the big sellers I would also refute - I regularly visit both Tesco and ASDA and although their range is wide it is in no way comparable to a dedicated book shop. It's an interesting debate and I'd like to know what Archive readers, book lovers one and all, think of this issue.

Monday, 6 July 2009

CRIME RUNS RIOT AT ASDA

Supermarket giant ASDA have thrown their weight behind the Theakston's Crime Awards. Shock
NEWS!!! - Mark Billingham attacks John Harvey, Val Macdermid bottles Chris Simms and Peter
Robinson mingles.




Crime Novel of the YearAward Shortlist On Special Offer In Asda Stores
The 14 shortlisted titles hit the shelves in a very special 2 for £7 offer!

Holmes and Watson, Morse and Lewis, Daziel and Pascoe - great things often come in pairs. And the Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year is thrilled to announce a brand new partnership with Britain's most popular supermarket: Asda.

Supermarkets and crime novels are two things destined to get the heart racing. The tackle of trolleys, battle for bread and milk mayhem: it's murder. And now customers can also be gripped and thrilled by some of the best crime novels of the year.

As the only literary award voted by the general reading public, the 'people's award' has found the perfect partner in crime with the people's supermarket. Under the bright lights of Asda, the dark currents of crime fiction will rage as the 14 shortlisted crime novels vie for the readers' vote. And Asda will urge shoppers to vote for the 2009 award by selling the shortlist for a criminally low price of £7 for two novels.

After the frozen pea aisle, get chilled to the bone by bagging a Mark Billingham with your beer, a Val McDermid with your McVities or a bit of Daziel and Pascoe with the Tabasco.


Now in its fifth year, the Theakstons Old Peculier award is open to British and Irish paperbacks published in 2008.

Supermarkets can be inspirational to crime authors - and not just because the queues fill them with criminal intent. One of the shortlisted authors is the bestselling (and tall) Lee Child who named his hero Jack Reacher after his wife told him if the novels didn't sell he could get a job reaching things down from supermarket shelves.

The shortlist in full:
Death Message (Mark Billingham)
The Accident Man (Tom Cain)
Bad Luck and Trouble (Lee Child)
Gone to Ground (John Harvey)
Ritual (Mo Hayder)
The Garden of Evil (David Hewson)
A Cure for all Diseases (Reginald Hill)
The Colour of Blood (Declan Hughes)
Dead Man's Footsteps (Peter James)
Broken Skin (Stuart MacBride)
Beneath the Bleeding (Val McDermid)
Exit Music (Ian Rankin)
Friend of the Devil (Peter Robinson)
Savage Moon (Chris Simms).


The novels will be promoted in selected stores nationwide from the 7 - 27 July.

Steph Bateson, Books Buying Manager for Asda said: 'Asda are thrilled to be working with the Festival to promote the Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year Award. Crime is our biggest selling genre and the award represents the best novels within that genre. We are very much looking forward to working with the festival to drive voting and raise national consumer awareness of the Asda book offer.'

Simon Theakston Executive Director of T&R Theakston said: 'The award is going from strength to strength and we are delighted to welcome Asda on board, they have fast become a force to be reckoned within book selling, bringing books to an ever wider audience, and I am looking forward to another exciting award.'
And the winner is...
The winner of the 2009 Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year, as voted for by the reading public, will be announced at the award ceremony hosted by BBC Radio 4 presenter Mark Lawson on the opening night of the Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival on 23rd July 2009.

Previous winners have included Val McDermid, Mark Billingham, Allan Guthrie and also Stef Penney in 2008 for The Tenderness of Wolves (pictured left with Simon Theakston). The winner takes home £3,000 and a handmade Theakstons Old Peculier Cask made by the last cooper in England.

YOU can be there in person for the cheers and the tears. Tickets to the award ceremony and opening party are £15 per person and include the price of canapés and a glass of wine or Old Peculier.

To book call the Ticket Hotline on 0845 130 8840 or Book Online.
Photo Story: The Rivals
With such a high quality shortlist, competition for readers' votes is hotting up between the nominees. Festival photographer Sam Atkins captured a number of the contenders canvassing votes at their local Asda stores.

David Hewson Asda
David Hewson with his book 'The Garden of Evil'

Mo Hayder Asda
Mo Hayder with her novel 'Ritual'

Mark Billingham and John Harvey

Mark Billingham sends a 'Death Message' but John Harvey's far from 'Gone To Ground'

Peter James Asda
Peter James and 'Dead Man's Footsteps'

McDermid & Simms Asda
Val McDermid teaches Chris "Savage [Moon]" Simms the real meaning of 'Beneath The Bleeding'

Stuart MacBride Asda
Stuart MacBride with his novel 'Broken Skin'

Peter Robinson and Asda Team
Peter Robinson tries to win round the Book Buying Team at Asda House to vote for his novel 'Friend of the Devil' but it looks like they have already chosen their favourites... Have you?

Vote Now!
VOTE NOW!

Principal Partners

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LMU Purple Rose

Premier Partners

McCormicks
Harrogate Advertiser

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Marshal Zoing
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Harrogate Chamber of Commerce


Crime Festival LogoLooking to make a late break this July?
Treat yourself for an entire weekend's worth of thrills, chills and kills by booking a Festival Weekend Break Package and enjoying all four days of the biggest and best crime writing Festival in the world.

Weekend Break Packages include 3 nights accommodation in the beautiful Victorian Spa Town of Harrogate, located at the gateway to the spectacular Yorkshire Dales, and tickets to all Festival events* from the announcement of the Crime Novel of the Year Award and Opening Party on Thursday evening to the last event on Sunday.

With prices starting from just £359 per person when sharing double or twin accommodation, why not stay in the UK this summer and experience the cultural delights of the North of England's friendliest and most fun literature festival!

To book now or for more information on accommodation options,
call: 01423 562303 or email:
crime@harrogate-festival.org.uk
____________________________________________________
*Weekend Break tickets include admission to all festival events excepting the dinner event on Saturday 25 July and Creative Thursday places. These must be booked separately.
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The Harrogate International Festival is not responsible for the content of external websites.
phone: +(0)1423 562303

Let's be careful out there......

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