Tourism of World

Countries
italy mexico spain france United States China United Kingdom Germany Austria RussianFederation
Tourist attractions
Disney World’s Magic Kingdom Times Square Trafalgar Square Notre Dame de Paris
Universal Studios Japan The Forbidden City The Great Wall of China Everland, Kyonggi-Do
City
London Bangkok Paris Singapore Hong Kong New York Dubai Rome Seoul BarcelonaDublin
Bahrain Shanghai Beijing Vienna Taipei Berlin Rio De Janeiro Budapest Toronto Kuala Lumpur
Istanbul Madrid Amsterdam Mecca Prague Moscow St.Petersburg Cancun Venice Mexico

2008/09/06

Bookstore tourism

Bookstore tourism is a type of cultural tourism that promotes independent bookstores as a group travel destination. It started as a grassroots effort to support locally owned and operated bookshops, many of which have struggled to compete with large bookstore chains and online retailers. The project was initiated in 2003 by Larry Portzline, a writer and college instructor in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania who led "bookstore road trips" to other cities and recognized its potential as a group travel niche and marketing tool. He promoted the concept with a how-to book and a web site, and groups around the U.S. soon began offering similar excursions, usually via a chartered bus, and often incorporating book signings, author home tours, and historical sites. In 2005-06, the Southern California Booksellers Association and Northern California Independent Booksellers Association embraced bookstore tourism, offering trips to independent bookstores in Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco. The Bookstore Tourism movement encourages schools, libraries, reading groups, and organizations of all sizes to create day-trips and literary outings to cities and towns with a concentration of independent bookstores. It also encourages local booksellers to attract bibliophiles to their communities by employing bookstore tourism as an economic development tool. Others benefiting include local retailers, restaurants, bus companies, and travel professionals. The effort also provides organizations with an outreach opportunity to support reading and literacy. Portzline has traveled across the country to promote the concept. In Fall 2006 he launched the National Council on Bookstore Tourism (NCBT), a nonprofit organization and trade association that will partner with booksellers, libraries, educators, literary festivals, the travel industry and economic development agencies at the national, state and local levels. In 2006 he created a promotional video featuring group "bookstore road trips" in New York City's Greenwich Village and in Los Angeles area "beach towns" and posted it on the NCBT website. Regrettably, by December 2007, Portzline had given up his idea of visiting more than 200 bookstores in all 50 states in 2008 and had also taken down his bookstore tourism website; both actions were due to a lack of funding.