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CrimsonTide4 01-22-2008 10:21 PM

Karibu Books in MD Says Farewell ~ 50% Off All Inventory
 
After 15 years of service within the Washington, DC metropolitan area, Karibu Books, a Black bookstore chain will be closing its doors. We sincerely thank each and every one of you for your patronage and support. We are optimistic that our mission to empower and educate through a comprehensive selection of books by and about people of African descent will continue to resonate within the communities we proudly served.

Since 1993, we have been blessed to help thousands of local, regional and national authors share their incredible stories of faith, hope, love, peace, politics and race. We cannot begin to express our gratitude for the countless authors who have graced our six stores and enriched our customers’ lives.

On Sunday, January 27th, we will be closing our Security Square (Baltimore, MD) and Forestville locations. The remaining locations, Bowie Town Center, The Mall at Prince Georges and Iverson Mall will close Sunday, February 10th. Our Pentagon City store is already closed.

Effective immediately, all inventory at all locations will be 50% off. All fixtures will also be available for purchase on February 10th. See individual store managers for more information.

Again, we respectfully thank you for your loyalty, laughter and love. What an honor and privilege it has been to serve our community!

Sincerely,
Simba Sana
CEO
Karibu Books
http://www.karibubooks.com/NASApp/store/IndexJsp


~~~~~~~~~~
Wish I lived in Maryland! Can you imagine all the books I could buy?

BlueReign 01-22-2008 11:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrimsonTide4 (Post 1586136)
After 15 years of service within the Washington, DC metropolitan area, Karibu Books, a Black bookstore chain will be closing its doors. We sincerely thank each and every one of you for your patronage and support. We are optimistic that our mission to empower and educate through a comprehensive selection of books by and about people of African descent will continue to resonate within the communities we proudly served.

Since 1993, we have been blessed to help thousands of local, regional and national authors share their incredible stories of faith, hope, love, peace, politics and race. We cannot begin to express our gratitude for the countless authors who have graced our six stores and enriched our customers’ lives.

On Sunday, January 27th, we will be closing our Security Square (Baltimore, MD) and Forestville locations. The remaining locations, Bowie Town Center, The Mall at Prince Georges and Iverson Mall will close Sunday, February 10th. Our Pentagon City store is already closed.

Effective immediately, all inventory at all locations will be 50% off. All fixtures will also be available for purchase on February 10th. See individual store managers for more information.

Again, we respectfully thank you for your loyalty, laughter and love. What an honor and privilege it has been to serve our community!

Sincerely,
Simba Sana
CEO
Karibu Books
http://www.karibubooks.com/NASApp/store/IndexJsp


~~~~~~~~~~
Wish I lived in Maryland! Can you imagine all the books I could buy?

Thank you Carla for posting this. I have bought a lot from their stores over the years. I've known you long enough so PM me what you like and I'll send it! Sorry to see them close. :(

Ten/Four 01-22-2008 11:19 PM

I love this store. I have to find some money in my budget and get down there. This will be a perfect opportunity for me to continue building my African American book collection.

CrimsonTide4 01-22-2008 11:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BlueReign (Post 1586169)
Thank you Carla for posting this. I have bought a lot from their stores over the years. I've known you long enough so PM me what you like and I'll send it! Sorry to see them close. :(

I went to the Bowie one back in 2003 when Ideal08 worked there and got close to $200 worth of books. :eek: Good times! LOL

Thank you so much for your offer. That is really generous and kind of you, but I have a cousin in the area who owes me after I created 4 items for our family newsletter. She's already got a list of titles, a short list, but a list nonetheless. :D

Senusret I 01-23-2008 12:46 AM

Darn you for posting this! Don't NOBODY go to the PG Plaza store until AFTER Wednesday night. (I will have gotten all my books by then.) lol :)

And although i do support the store, I kinda scoffed at their press release because I know they don't stock black LGBT books like they could. They ignored not only my attempts to get on their shelves, but LIED to Nikki Giovanni's face when they said "Oh, just send us another review copy and we'll get Lazarus in there!" (The Deltas had an event where both Nikki and I were participants, and she and I were talking about Lazarus in front of the Karibu owner)

And none of my 8-10 friends (male or female) with LGBT themed books have been in their stores, except maybe the ones on Zane's imprint.

CrimsonTide4 01-23-2008 07:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senusret I (Post 1586264)
Darn you for posting this! Don't NOBODY go to the PG Plaza store until AFTER Wednesday night. (I will have gotten all my books by then.) lol :)

And although i do support the store, I kinda scoffed at their press release because I know they don't stock black LGBT books like they could. They ignored not only my attempts to get on their shelves, but LIED to Nikki Giovanni's face when they said "Oh, just send us another review copy and we'll get Lazarus in there!" (The Deltas had an event where both Nikki and I were participants, and she and I were talking about Lazarus in front of the Karibu owner)

And none of my 8-10 friends (male or female) with LGBT themed books have been in their stores, except maybe the ones on Zane's imprint.

I've heard of something similar happening with non-LGBT books, so it's not just you.:(

I saw this posted as a bulletin last night on MySpace so I can only imagine how large your competition is for PG Square, lol.

lovehaiku84 01-23-2008 10:12 AM

Wow, I can't believe that. This guy was a client of one of the lawyers in the office where I work. That is really unfortunate because I thought it was a good chain, but I will be reviewing my budget to see if I can afford to buy a few books (even at 50% off).

nikki1920 01-23-2008 11:38 AM

Wow, that just sucks all over. I went there right after Christmas and scoped some titles, and thought the store looked a bit empty. :( I'm so sad to see them go.

Still BLUTANG 01-23-2008 12:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senusret I (Post 1586264)
Darn you for posting this! Don't NOBODY go to the PG Plaza store until AFTER Wednesday night. (I will have gotten all my books by then.) lol :)

I will be buying out the Bowie town center location on my lunch break then, so you can get everything from PG Plaza... my bad, the "mall at prince georges"

nikki1920 01-23-2008 12:05 PM

its PG Plaza.. lol.

Senusret I 01-23-2008 12:06 PM

I don't care what NOBODY say:

PG Plaza
NATIONAL Airport
Malcolm X Park


The end. lol

Ten/Four 01-23-2008 12:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senusret I (Post 1586436)
I don't care what NOBODY say:

PG Plaza
NATIONAL Airport
Malcolm X Park


The end. lol

This is so true.

nikki1920 01-23-2008 01:09 PM

But its BWI Thurgood Marshall Airport.. lol
That's the only regional change I'll accept.

btb87 01-23-2008 03:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senusret I (Post 1586436)
I don't care what NOBODY say:


NATIONAL Airport

Although I haven't been to DC in a number of years, I still say National Airport. I was working there during the summers when I was in college. It's been so long ago that the Blue line started/ended there.

toocute 01-23-2008 04:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senusret I (Post 1586436)
I don't care what NOBODY say:

PG Plaza
NATIONAL Airport
Malcolm X Park

The end. lol

W.O.R.D.
Especially NATIONAL Airport :rolleyes:

Senusret I 01-23-2008 06:55 PM

Well, I took an afternoon break and went out there with my mom and her coworker, LOLOLOL

Ran into an AKA from Rho Mu Omega.

Bought mostly non-fiction, including THREE from WEB DuBois. Bought Bill Clinton's "Giving." Can't remember the rest.

Was done, but then I turned to the right and saw some AKA and Zeta journals. Sorry AKAs, I bought the last two for my homies from Alpha and Beta Lambda. But Zetas, there were still notecards and journals there.

The customer service was still.....I dunno. I mean, I'm sad because they are about to lose their jobs, but the staff there was never very impressive to me in the first place. I wished them a sincere good luck.

darling1 01-23-2008 07:23 PM

so sad
 
this was a great book store!

darling1 01-23-2008 07:26 PM

bwahahaa
 
it will always be pigeon plaza to me..lol

Quote:

Originally Posted by Still BLUTANG (Post 1586433)
I will be buying out the Bowie town center location on my lunch break then, so you can get everything from PG Plaza... my bad, the "mall at prince georges"


5Knowledge1913 01-23-2008 07:31 PM

Another black business bites the dust.

Ten/Four 01-23-2008 08:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senusret I (Post 1586728)
Well, I took an afternoon break and went out there with my mom and her coworker, LOLOLOL

You were really not playing about getting down there. I guess I'll have to get there tomorrow.

Senusret I 01-23-2008 08:25 PM

^^^ Y'all don't be knowing about me and bookstores! Ladies had BOXES of books leaving that jont.

And bus how this lady from Vertigo Books (not a black bookstore but might as well be) in College Park was peeping books, too. For those who didn't know, bookstores get books from distributors at usually a 60% discount, which is why running a bookstore is tough because there's a slim profit margin. For a bookstore to purchase their books from Karibu at half price, and then resell them at maybe an 80% discount, they're STILL making money.

darling1 01-23-2008 09:38 PM

wow
 
i used to love vertigo bookstore back in the day. they can definitely reap the benefit from this loss.

it is a shame that this is happening. when borders closed, i was floored. i joked with one of the folks that there will probably be a sneaker store put up in its place.

somewhat off topic. there is a definite distinction between the malls that black people frequent and those that non-blacks frequent. its a shame.



Quote:

Originally Posted by Senusret I (Post 1586819)
^^^ Y'all don't be knowing about me and bookstores! Ladies had BOXES of books leaving that jont.

And bus how this lady from Vertigo Books (not a black bookstore but might as well be) in College Park was peeping books, too. For those who didn't know, bookstores get books from distributors at usually a 60% discount, which is why running a bookstore is tough because there's a slim profit margin. For a bookstore to purchase their books from Karibu at half price, and then resell them at maybe an 80% discount, they're STILL making money.


Ideal08 01-24-2008 06:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrimsonTide4 (Post 1586204)
I went to the Bowie one back in 2003 when Ideal08 worked there and got close to $200 worth of books. :eek: Good times! LOL

:( Those were good times. This is just one more thing that makes me miss the DC uhrea. (I'm NOT moving back, y'all, let it go, lol) I think about all the books I have that came from that store. *sigh*

My friend called me last night to tell me about this. I'm both sad and angry about it. Sad because B&N, Borders, etc cannot compete with the selection of AA literature that Karibu had. Oh, the back wall of children's books at the Bowie store. *sigh* I'm angry b/c I'm broke and can't take advantage of the sale. I'm angry at how this all came about. I'm angry because I had some books stolen that now I have to hope Amazon will have. Karibu is somewhere I went each time I visited DC. Now what?

We've (me and other past employees) have been emailing back and forth about this all day. I've been near tears about it. Lemme find the other article...

Ideal08 01-24-2008 06:37 PM

Black Readers Are Jolted by a Chain's Demise
Loss of Karibu, a Result Of Owners' Rift, Leaves A Hole in a Community

By Lonnae O'Neal Parker and Hamil R. Harris
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, January 24, 2008; A01

By early afternoon, word had spread and dozens of customers crowded the bookstore's aisles. One of the nation's largest black-owned bookstore chains, Karibu, will be closed by mid-February, and people brought their shock and sadness to Bowie Town Center, along with their checkbooks.

They pulled titles from the shelves: civil rights biographies, Harlem Renaissance classics. And they lamented.

Freddie Mills, a security officer who was scanning the aisles as his 2-year-old daughter played nearby, said he was "angry, angry, angry."

"Where are we going to get books for our kids?" he said.

This was more than a bookstore; it was community, it was "culture," Mills said. Urban-lit author Omar Tyree, Nobel laureate Toni Morrison and local bestselling erotica author Zane are among the many writers who have done signings for the stores.

"It's like the barbershop, like the black beauty salon," said co-owner Simba Sana. "It's a place where black people can come and lay their heads down."

Independent bookstores such as Karibu are closing across the country, often defeated by financial pressures from large chains and online superstores that sell discounted bestsellers or dwarf smaller stores with their size and marketing muscle.

But Sana said the closings were not caused by financial pressures. "Karibu's demise is a result of the ownership, including myself, failure to resolve conflict in a peaceful way and also a failure to end relationships amicably," he said.

He wouldn't elaborate, but a store manager said the owners disagreed on the direction of the chain.

"Simba wanted the company to go national," said Jonathan Robinson, who has managed the Bowie store, one of six in the chain, for two years. Co-owner Hoke "Brother Yao" Glover "felt it wasn't ready for that yet," Robinson said. He added that last fall, Sana's wife, Sunny, who bought books for the stores, abruptly left -- the two are divorcing -- and that customers began to notice that titles weren't coming in.

Glover could not be reached for comment.

"It's sad," Robinson said. "Two people called me, crying on the phone."

Christopher Chambers, a Silver Spring author and Georgetown University professor who has done readings and moderated panels at Karibu, which is pronounced ka-ree-boo and means "welcome" in Swahili, said he had received more than a dozen e-mails about Karibu by yesterday morning, including one from bestselling author Walter Mosley. By the afternoon, he had 20.

Chambers said the reaction to the news of the closings was "shock."

"Some of these other stores have been hanging on by fingernails from the beginning, small storefront shops that sold incense greeting cards, figurines and books as a sideline. This was a real chain with real brick-and-mortar stores," he said.

Glover began selling African American-oriented books on black college campuses in 1992, and the following year he partnered with Sana to launch Karibu with a pushcart in Landover Mall and a kiosk in the Mall at Prince George's in Hyattsville. By 2005, when it opened its sixth store, in Baltimore, the company had more than 40 employees and sponsored hundreds of in-store and community events.

The Pentagon City store closed after Christmas. The Baltimore location, along with one in Forestville, will close Sunday. The last three outlets, in Bowie and Hyattsville and at Iverson Mall in Temple Hills, are scheduled to close Feb. 10.

When Stephanie Leonard was a youngster, her Girl Scout troop sat at Nikki Giovanni's feet as she read poems at the Karibu in the Mall at Prince George's. Leonard, now a 25-year-old residence hall director at Bowie State University, grabbed a picture book yesterday from the movie "Dreamgirls" and the book "Sex.Lies.Murder.Fame," from her favorite author, Lolita Files. "I couldn't believe it when my sister sent me the e-mail," Leonard said. "I feel like it's a death in the community."

Outside the Bowie store, a woman stopped to read the sign announcing the closing and shook her head. A bookstore closes, and suddenly there aren't enough words.

Dandrea James-Harris, an editorial assistant with Heart and Soul Magazine, said that when friends visit from her native Harlem, Karibu has always been a required stop. She carried Randall Robinson's "Quitting America" and Paul Robeson Jr.'s "A Black Way of Seeing."

She is working on a research project, and she said she buys general titles at Barnes & Noble but always bought works by black authors from Karibu.

James-Harris said she was stunned but won't lose heart.

"I'm so hopeful," she said. "I believe that we will regroup and that something like this will open."

Meanwhile, along with dozens of other customers, she scooped up titles she feared she wouldn't be able to get anywhere else. Overhead, James Brown belted out his most soulful notes -- a bookstore requiem.

CrimsonTide4 01-24-2008 08:53 PM

One of my listserves posted that article and I forgot to post it here on GC.

I wish the two owners could have worked out their differences and let their egos go for the good of the community. They could have expanded and done major good in the Black literary community.

Still BLUTANG 01-24-2008 10:31 PM

i wish they would maintain an online presence. their selection of AA children's books is second to none.

Senusret I 01-24-2008 11:49 PM

Even aside from my sour grapes, this just isn't hitting me like it is everyone else.

I STAY in Borders. I also supported the little black bookstore across the street from my job.

Maybe if I had kids it would be different, since you guys really like their children's books. But I've pretty much found any black books I wanted at Borders.

TheWriter 01-25-2008 12:13 AM

Well that sucks. I really like the fact that Karibu was open in Security Square Mall in Baltimore because it was closer for me than other branches. But then again, everytime I enter Security it has new stores. I prefer Columbia Mall, Towson Mall, myself but(Arundel Mills is to busy). Anyway, what a shame.
:(

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrimsonTide4 (Post 1586136)
After 15 years of service within the Washington, DC metropolitan area, Karibu Books, a Black bookstore chain will be closing its doors. We sincerely thank each and every one of you for your patronage and support. We are optimistic that our mission to empower and educate through a comprehensive selection of books by and about people of African descent will continue to resonate within the communities we proudly served.

Since 1993, we have been blessed to help thousands of local, regional and national authors share their incredible stories of faith, hope, love, peace, politics and race. We cannot begin to express our gratitude for the countless authors who have graced our six stores and enriched our customers’ lives.

On Sunday, January 27th, we will be closing our Security Square (Baltimore, MD) and Forestville locations. The remaining locations, Bowie Town Center, The Mall at Prince Georges and Iverson Mall will close Sunday, February 10th. Our Pentagon City store is already closed.

Effective immediately, all inventory at all locations will be 50% off. All fixtures will also be available for purchase on February 10th. See individual store managers for more information.

Again, we respectfully thank you for your loyalty, laughter and love. What an honor and privilege it has been to serve our community!

Sincerely,
Simba Sana
CEO
Karibu Books
http://www.karibubooks.com/NASApp/store/IndexJsp


~~~~~~~~~~
Wish I lived in Maryland! Can you imagine all the books I could buy?


nikki1920 01-30-2008 01:08 PM

I remember when I went to the Iverson store, it seemed kind of empty.

Couldn't they have compromised and gone regional? No one else can buy books other than the soon-to-be ex wife?

Ceekit 01-31-2008 08:24 PM

I am so mad that I haven't gone yet. I bet the shelves are empty by now. This sucks because I needed some new books for my babies :(

Senusret I 01-26-2011 07:05 PM

I just wanted to bump this to ask you all:

In the three years since Karibu has closed, have you seen any increase in the volume of African American books in mainstream bookstores? As I said earlier, I have always been loyal to Borders so I've noticed the black section getting bigger and bigger, yet I can't say that I've noticed more black children's books.


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