Free Associating About Borders

Nathan Bomey’s column at AnnArbor.com asks where are the Borders Brothers now that their namesake company is foundering?

I learned from his column that, in the first place, Tom and Louis Borders sold the company to Kmart Corp. almost 20 years ago and have had no role in its management since. In the second place, they rarely make public statements about Borders. So asking such a question is purely a contrivance to fill a column – but intriguing just the same:

As the book store chain that bears their name approaches bankruptcy, brothers Tom and Louis Borders are nowhere to be found.

That’s partly because they left Ann Arbor years ago. Louis is an entrepreneur in Silicon Valley, and Tom is involved in a financial business in Austin, Texas.

The Louisville natives started Borders Book Shop on South State Street in 1971. After Louis developed innovative inventory management software, the company transitioned into expansion mode. In 1992, the brothers sold it to retailer Kmart Corp. and stepped out of management of the company.

At the time, Borders had just 21 stores. Today, the company has 25 times as many Borders stores — an extremely costly footprint that is expected to drive Borders Group Inc. into bankruptcy as early as today.

Reading about the establishment of a Ann Arbor bookstore on State Street in the early 1970s prompted memories of my visits to the city in late 1974/early 1975 when Ross Pavlac and I visited Ro and Lyn Nagey. I seemed to remember that State Street was the setting for Ro to spring a little joke on us out-of-towners when we decided to go out for pizza.

We piled into the car and Ro said he was taking us to Pizza Bob’s – and would we rather go to Pizza Bob’s Uptown or Pizza Bob’s Downtown? I naively asked which was closest and Ro said they were each about the same distance from his house. So I arbitrarily picked Uptown. We went there and had our meal.

On the way out Ro asked, did we all want to walk over and see Pizza Bob’s Downtown? I’m not a great one for hoofing around town after I’ve just eaten but that hasn’t kept me from being roped into any number of fannish expeditions and I saw it was about to happen again. Ro led off. Then after taking only a few paces he suddenly stopped. And as proud as if he had arranged it himself he waved to the sign over the nearest building: Pizza Bob’s Downtown was just two doors away.

I checked online and was pleased to see Pizza Bob’s still exists at 814 S. State St., though apparently this was the “Downtown” location because Pizza Bob’s “Uptown” site has gone away.

Learning that the pizza place was in the 800 block of State Street I could see I was never terribly close to any of Borders’ early locations in the 200 and 300 block, and if we even drove past it would have been merely another one of Ann Arbor’s many bookstores.

[Thanks to Andrew Porter for the link to Bomey’s column.]

Pizza Bob’s Uptown

Texas Files for 2013 Worldcon

Bill Parker

Texas in 2013 bid chair Bill Parker reports they have filed the required paperwork with the Site Selection Administrator for the Reno Worldcon. Meeting these requirements by the deadline assures that the bid appears on the mail ballot.

The committee proposes to hold the Worldcon in San Antonio, Texas over Labor Day Weekend, August 29 through September 2, 2013.

Faux Mars Landing Successful

The European Space Agency’s simulated Mars mission made a successful landing, for certain values of successful, reports The Register:

Joyous news from the European Space Agency today, which reports that it has successfully landed three astronauts on Mars. Sadly this is only simulated Mars: the three spacesuited pioneers are at present exploring a large indoor sandpit, having spent the previous eight months inside a wood-panelled simulator pretending they were in transit to the red planet

An accompanying photo prompted this comment from David Klaus:

Even when you’ve already simulated the entire eight-month spaceflight to Mars, entry into the Martian atmosphere, and landing, it’s still kind of cheesy when you do your simulated EVA and flag-plant on a simulated Mars-scape, and through an open door in the simulated Martian horizon behind you there are a bunch of technicians, executives, and politicians in their shirtsleeves and business suits watching you.

It’s kind of seeing the “backstage” at The Truman Show.

Borders Files for Bankruptcy

Borders filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy today, February 16, reports the Associated Press:

The company will receive $505 million in debtor-in-possession financing from GE Capital and others to help it reorganize…

According to the Chapter 11 filing with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New York, Borders had $1.28 billion in assets and $1.29 billion in debts as of Dec. 25.

It owes tens of millions of dollars to publishers, including $41.1 million to Penguin Putnam, $36.9 million to Hachette Book Group, $33.8 million to Simon & Schuster and $33.5 million to Random House.

ConFederation Reunion Is On!

[From the press release] 

M. Lee Rogers and Ron Zukowski proudly prevent, uh, present the ConFederation 25th Anniversary Celebration!

Who:

1. You were an attending or supporting member of ConFederation.
2. You are known to the organizers.
3. Someone known to the organizers can vouch for you.

(The criteria are similar to a fan fund.)

What: A party to celebrate one of Southern SF fandom’s shining moments: the 1986 World Science Fiction Convention held in downtown Atlanta.

When: Saturday June 18, 2011, 12:00 noon to whenever.

Where: Embassy Suites Alpharetta, off Exit 9 of Georgia 400 (Haynes Bridge Road) near North Point Mall.

Why: Why not?!?

How Much: $20 per person. Free for members of ConFederation Executive Committee, SFWA, or ASFA. If cost is a problem, talk to Ron or Mike. Any material surplus will be donated to fan funds–this is a not-for-profit venture.

We realize it’s fairly short notice, but we are trying to work around Dragon*Con and other regional conventions. North Fulton is equally inconvenient to everyone. The area is also accessible via MARTA by train and bus.

The adult beverage situation is BYOB. We will provide as many munchies and soft drinks as we can.

Suites should be available at the hotel. The current rates are around $100 per night. For reservations, call 1-800-EMBASSY.

Please feel free to publicize this event in fandom, but do not publicize it in the local media. It is not open to the general public.

We hope you’ll come celebrate ConFederation with us that Saturday. It should be a fun evening.

It would help if you let us know if you are coming so we can know how many people to plan for. Please RSVP with payment to:

M. L. Rogers
331 Celestial Lane
Hixson, TN 37343-5810

Be there. Aloha.

Scholars Take on Jackson’s Tolkien Movies


Janice Bogstad and Philip Kaveny are the editors of Picturing Tolkien: Essays on Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings Film Trilogy, now available for pre-order from McFarland.

Tolkien scholar and Mythprint editor Jason Fisher recently revealed the Table of Contents on his blog – the full list follows the jump.

Continue reading

Vintage Paperback Show in LA

The 32nd Annual Los Angeles Vintage Paperback Collectors Show will be held at the Valley Inn and Conference Center in Mission Hills, CA on Sunday March 27. The one-day event runs from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Admission is $5.

The show gets its drawing power from a long list of popular writers who come there to sign:

Karen Anderson, Victor Banis, Ann Bannon, Brett Battles, Peter Beagle, Gary Brandner, Joyce Rebeta-Burditt, Stuart Byrne, Louis Charbonneau, Arthur Byron Cover, John DeChancie, L.J. Dopp, Dennis Etchison, Fred Evans, Laura Freas, Bill George, David Gerrold, Mel Gilden, James C. Glass, Tony Gleeson, Donald Glut, Cody Goodfellow, Brett Halsey, Barbara Hambly, Denise Hamilton, Odie Hawkins, George Clayton Johnson, Earl Kemp, Bruce Kimmel, Dani & Eytan Kollin, Michael Kurland, Terrill Lankford, Gary Lovisi, Richard Lupoff, Richard Christian Matheson, Jan Merlin, Larry Niven, William F. Nolan, Charles Neutzel, Patrick O’Connor, Felice Picano, Jerry Pournelle, Tim Powers, Bill Pronzini, Robert Reginald, John Skipp, Harry Turtledove, Stephen Woodworth.

Check the website for their schedules.

[Thanks to John King Tarpinian for the link.]

War Eagles by Conover and Riley

Bill Warren recommends War Eagles: The Unmaking of an Epic by David Conover and Phillip J. Riley, available in both hardcover and paperback from BearManor Media.  Bill writes:

Merian C. Cooper had a busy and productive career as a movie producer all through the 1930s, but his personal favorite remained King Kong; he loved the gigantism of the whole thing, the astonishing imagery. Toward the end of the 30s, he was at MGM, and envisioned a giant eagle with a Viking for a rider, perched atop the Statue of Liberty. Hot damn. He roughed out a story, apparently with historical-fiction novelist Harold Lamb, engaged Willis O’Brien of Kong fame to handle the extensive special effects, which would include a lot of stop-motion animation. The screenplay was written by Cyril Hume, who some 12-15 years later wrote Forbidden Planet. The book includes lots of production drawings obtained from many sources, including a couple of frame blow-ups from the test footage that was shot. These frames are in Technicolor; Cooper, a major backer of the process, was eager to shoot this big movie in color.

The story is somewhat cornball, and the hero (Slim) is very cornball–an eager test-and-military pilot who’s scared of girls–but the script makes the movie sound nothing less than swell, in the glorious old meaning of that word. Slim crashes in Antarctica, in a valley warmed by volcanic heat. Here he discovers the descendants of a lost tribe of Vikings, who speak English, more or less, and fly about on giant eagles. They are periodically menaced by a few dinosaurs. The tribe has a bard who sings legends in what reads like a cross between the usual form “Beowulf” appears in and “The Song of Hiawatha”–but, by George, it works. The climax: a suspiciously Germanic Evil Nation from Europe has developed an engine-killing “death ray” (and engines invulnerable to it); they launch an aerial armada to attack New York, disabling all American aircraft. Slim learns of this and leads his Viking companions to defend New York from the aerial menace–on the backs of giant eagles. Wow.

2011 FAAn Award Winners

The winners of the 2011 Fanzine Activity Achievement Awards were presented on Febuary 13 at E Corflu Vitus in Sunnyvale, CA.

Best Fan Writer: Roy Kettle
Best Fan Artist: Steve Stiles
Best Fanzine: Trapdoor, edited by Robert Lichtman
Harry Warner Jr. Memorial Award for Best Fan Correspondent: Robert Lichtman
Best Fan Website: eFanzines

At the Corflu awards ceremony Art Widner was presented a Lifetime Achievement Award. Also, Spike was chosen Past President of FanWriters of America (fwa) for 2010.