IT’S EMBARRASSING NOW, but on the day I was hired to work at Boston’s flagship Borders store in 1996, I was so happy I danced around my apartment. After dropping out of college, I had worked a succession of crappy jobs: mall Easter Bunny, stock boy at Sears and Kmart and Walmart, a brief and nearly fatal stint as a landscaper. A job at Borders seemed to be a step, at long last, toward my ultimate goal of writing for a living. At least I would be working with books. And the scruffy Borders employees, in their jeans and band T-shirts, felt a lot closer to my ideal urban intellectuals than the stuffy Barnes & Noble employees with their oppressive dress code and lame vests.

The fact that Borders offered me a full-time job, which allowed me to quit two part-time jobs (at Staples and a Stop & Shop) and offered health insurance, was a pretty big deal, too.

For better and for worse, Borders was my college experience. I behaved badlyโ€”fucked, drank, and did drugs with everyone I could. My fellow employees snuck me into bars when I was underage, and then cheered when, during my 21st birthday party, I wound up facedown in the gutter sobbing about how my heart had been ripped in two. I was not alone in my bad behavior: Every week, different employees were hooking up, having affairs, breaking up, recoupling, playing drinking games that involved comically large hunting knives, getting in fights, getting pregnant, and showing up drunk for work.

In the beginning, the store felt like a tight-knit family. As time went on, we became a confederation of hedonists with little regard for one another’s feelings. At one Christmas party that I didn’t attend, a new female employee reportedly gave blowjobs to anybody who wanted one. (Later, at least a couple of men who stood in line for the newbie’s ministrations complained about picking up an STD.) Suddenly, the parties weren’t as fun anymore. One employee hanged himself. Another dropped dead of a heart attack on the sales floor; the story I heard is that he slumped over in the DVD section on the overnight replenishment shift and wasn’t discovered until the store opened for business the next morning. (Turns out, that story was exaggeratedโ€”his body was actually found about five minutes after he died.)

But it wasn’t all an endless cycle of party and hangover. The 20 percent discountโ€”plus an employee credit accountโ€”allowed me to explore books I’d never heard of. It’s hard to remember now, but when Borders began proliferating in suburban parking lots around the country, they had a truly excellent selection curated, at least in part, by each store’s employees. I bought my first title from countercultural press Feral Houseโ€”Apocalypse Cultureโ€”at the brand-new Borders at the Maine Mall when I was a teenager, and it still ranks as one of my most mind-blowing reading experiences. I read my first David Foster Wallace and Matt Ruff books while working at Borders; I explored the lesser-known works of Twain and Melville and Dickens and St. Vincent Millay. I learned who Edward Abbey and Noam Chomsky and Kathy Acker were. I discovered young writers like Banana Yoshimoto and Colson Whitehead and Chuck Palahniuk and Haruki Murakami. Thanks to my coworkers in the music department, which was just as far-reaching as the book department, I learned to love Miles Davis and Glenn Gould and an obscure punk band from way out west called Sleater-Kinney.

At the time, independent bookstores were blaming Borders for a spate of mom ‘n’ pop bookstore closures around the country. I’ll never forget the employee at Bookland in Maine who coldly accused me of single-handedly destroying her small chain when I admitted who my employer was, even as I was buying $50 worth of books. Of course, the accusations had truth to themโ€”small bookstores simply couldn’t compete with the deep discounts the chains offeredโ€”but for what it’s worth, every employee who worked at Borders, at least when I first joined the company, adored literature. We were not automatons out to assassinate local businesses. We wanted to work with the cultural artifacts that were the most important things in our lives, the things that made us who we were. Not all of us could find work at independent bookstores, so we did the next best thing: We went to work for a company that seemingly cared about quality literature and regional reading tastes, and gave its employees a small-but-fair wage for full-time bookselling careers, with excellent benefits. It sure didn’t feel like selling out.

Until suddenly, one day, it did feel like selling out. Because it was. Our displays were bought and paid for by publishers; where we used to present books that we loved and wanted to champion, now mediocre crap was piled on every flat surface. The front of the store, with all the kitchen magnets and board games and junk you don’t need took over large chunks of the expansive magazine and local-interest sections. Orders came from the corporate headquarters in Ann Arbor every Sunday to change out the displays. One time I had to take down some of the store’s most exciting up-and-coming fiction titles (including a newly published book that was gathering word-of-mouth buzz, thanks to our booksellers, called Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone) to put up a wall of Clash CDs. One month, for some reason, the cafรฉ sold Ernest Hemingwayโ€“branded chai.

A tiny, mean ferret of a man became our store manager, and he hired a murderer’s row of cronies from the long line of troubled Borders stores he had tamed into conformity in the past. (He was quickly promoted to district manager and clearly had ambitions to become a mover and shaker in the corporation; I just Googled him to discover he’s now a corporate executive at a small dollar-store chain.) It became a battle between the management (who would push Ann Arbor’s increasingly insulting edicts on us, like employees having their bags checked at the end of shifts by supervisors as though we were all thieves) and the increasingly bitter ground-level employees, who would grumble and moan but go along with their demands every time.

Idiots spread throughout the company, taking control of stores, recruiting from non-book retail backgrounds, doing everything they legally could to stunt attempts at unionization, and encouraging efficiency above all else. The diversity of the titles in stock dwindled as ever-larger shipments of diet books and lawyer thrillers arrived on Ann Arbor’s orders. New employees didn’t care about books and weren’t particularly curious. The store didn’t resemble the interests of our staff or customers anymore; our shelves represented the money that publishers were willing to shell out for real estate. Book lovers stopped buying from us; slithering, pre-offended armies of bargain hunters became our clientele.

Finally, I decided to leave Boston for Seattle, and to extinguish any possibility of applying for a transfer to the Seattle Borders branch, I disseminated among staff and customers a zine I wrote claiming that Borders was a husk of what it had been, that greed had destroyed what was a profitable and culturally useful business. I predicted that Borders wouldn’t exist in 10 years.

I was wrong. It would take 11 years for Borders to go bankrupt and liquidate.

Turns out, at the same time ground-level booksellers like me were railing against Ann Arbor’s dumb decisions, employees at the corporate offices in Ann Arbor were railing against dumb decisions, too. Susanโ€”she requested I not use her real name to preserve her relationships with former coworkersโ€”was an executive at the Ann Arbor headquarters at the same time that I was selling books in Boston.

It came as a relief, even after more than a decade, to hear that her disappointment in the company mirrored my own. Susan started with Borders as a bookseller and quickly rose through the ranks of the company, which was expanding at a frantic pace. The pay was badโ€””working really hard for not a lot of money was the thing I liked the least” about the job, she says, flatlyโ€”but she loved working with books and the sort of people who love books.

Ann Arbor put a lot of time and money into thwarting attempts to unionize stores. Susan helped with that cause, too, though now she isn’t quite sure why. “I’m very pro-union,” she says. Nevertheless, she stayed, despite her family making fun of her for working in direct opposition to her morals.

For Susan, the problem really started near the end of Robert DiRomualdo’s tenure. The Borders chairman and temporary CEO, a former president of Hickory Farms, drove Borders to tremendous profits for a chain of bookstores. The industry has always been a small-margin business on the retail end, but at the height of DiRomualdo’s leadership, Borders stock ran as high as $44.88 a share; in 1999, the company earned $100 million.

But DiRomualdo was uninterested in building a web presence for Borders, Susan says: “I think there were many, many people who had serious concerns about Borders leaders’ decision around the internet.” Executives in charge “didn’t want to put the money into Borders.com. Bob DiRomualdo believed that there was not a way to make money on the internet at that time. I remember at the time thinking that it was a mistake.”

In 2001, Borders would go on to partner with Amazon.com, allowing the online book retailer to handle their internet sales for them, if you can believe it. There’s a photo of Jeff Bezos and then-Borders President and CEO Greg Josefowicz shaking hands to celebrate the partnership. Josefowicz has weatherman hair and a broad smile, and he’s beaming past the camera with the cocksure giddiness of a guy who thinks he just got rid of all his problems because he sold his dumb old cow for a handful of really cool magic beans. But when you pull your eyes away from Josefowicz’s superhero chin, you notice that Bezos is smiling directly into the camera with keen shark eyes. His smile is more relaxed, a little more candid than Josefowicz’s photo-op-ready grin. It’s the face of someone who’s thinking, I finally got you, you son of a bitch.

It’s a photograph of the exact second that Borders died.

While Borders was trying to avoid paying any attention to their website, they were expanding internationallyโ€”a series of ill-fitting launches in the UK, Australia, and Singapore. According to Susan, a lot of employees at Ann Arbor were against the international expansion, instead wanting to shore up the company’s internet presence and prepare for the future. This is the crossroads moment, she says, and the ensuing decline of the company has caused her to reflect on what she could have done differently. “I think the writing was on the wall by then. I went back to a lot of those conversations, thinking about how I used to leave those meetings thinking that this is not the smartest thing to do. And I was never the smartest person in the room,” she says. Then she pauses and laughs. “Or maybe I was.”

Wall Street loved the flash and glitz of Borders’ international expansion, and it paid out well in the short term. Mark Veverka of the San Francisco Chronicle noted in July 1998 that DiRomualdo, who opted to be paid solely in stock, sold 288,850 shares just as Borders unveiled its first failure of a website. That year, Veverka writes, DiRomualdo and five other executives cashed out “1.1 million shares between April 3 to June 1 at prices as high as $34.” DiRomualdo finally left Borders in 2002. He made millions by selling Borders stock that would be worthless in less than a decade. He sits on the World Retail Congress’ World Retail Hall of Fame.

And now nearly 11,000 booksellers are losing their jobs. The last Borders is expected to close later this month.

On Friday, July 22, the day Borders stores nationwide entered the liquidation process, I met with Amanda, a Seattle-area Borders employee who similarly requested her real name not be used for fear that she would be fired and lose access to unemployment benefits. (Liquidators told the booksellers not to talk to the media.) Amanda has been with the company for about a year, and the first day of liquidation was an exhausting experience for her. She says her store topped $50,000 in salesโ€”an average day at the store had been somewhere in the neighborhood of $7,000 to $12,000. As many as 50 customersโ€”none of whom she had ever seen beforeโ€”were lined up outside before the store opened for the privilege of trashing the place.

Up until a week before the announcement that Borders was closing, Amanda says management was “telling us to push the Borders Plus cards,” an extension of the Borders Rewards loyalty program that charged customers $20 a year for a promise of 10 percent off most everything in the store. (Over the last decade, Borders employees were held to strict quotas regarding Borders Rewards and Borders Rewards Plus cards; if a bookseller was heard not offering a Borders Rewards card to a customer at the register, that would be grounds for a warning or even termination.) Amanda says booksellers were told to tell wary customers that Borders would at least be around through Christmas, so they would be able to make that initial Plus charge back in savings before then. She feels guilty for getting those extra $20 out of customers in what amounts to a nonrefundable junk-bond scam. She says she wants Borders Plus buyers to know that booksellers weren’t trying to rip them off and that representatives from Ann Arbor “kept telling us that we were definitely good for another year.”

When I ask Amanda when her coworkers think the company started really going downhill, she says they generally agree that things got really bad two years ago. That was the point when “they didn’t care about hand-selling books anymore,” she says. For the last few months, morale has been terrible. Ann Arbor wasn’t telling anyone what was going on, so employees would just read news reports and try to figure out what it all meant. Once they heard on July 18 that closures were definite, the mood moved from solemn to “manic.” She says, “We just started playing games and having fun. We stopped obeying the dress code and started doing whatever.”

On the day that the liquidation started, “everyone was a little stressed out and frustrated by the very rude customers.” The liquidators shut off the inventory systems, so booksellers can’t tell for sure what books are in stock, and closed the public bathrooms and removed all the chairs, because the stores are no longer a place for customers to browse and linger. (The good news is now they’ll no longer have homeless people drinking Robitussin and stashing their empty bottles around the stores, Amanda says, and booksellers no longer have to worry about walking in on naked men bathing themselves in the bathroom sink.) Almost as bad as the people who are outraged that the Borders has no more public bathrooms and that they can’t order new titles anymore are the customers who are overly concerned for the employees. Amanda says people furrow their brows and ask, “So, what are you doing now?” She understands that they mean well, but “person after person asking about your future gets a little annoying.”

So, uh, what is she doing now? “I definitely wouldn’t go work for Barnes & Noble. I just don’t want to work for a big corporate chain. Basically, I don’t want to work retail.” She’d like to do something with a small publisher or an art gallery. She says most of her coworkers don’t want to go to Barnes & Noble, either, even though most of them want to stay involved in books somehow. Lots of employees are going to use the unemployment benefits to fund more schooling or a move to a new city. She’s sad to see the regular customers go. “We have people who come in every day. Some of them swear they won’t ever give Barnes & Noble their business. I’m telling everybody that they should go to Elliott Bay [in Seattle] to spend their money.” She plans to keep in touch with her coworkers, who have become “a tight-knit family.” She’s made friends at Borders who she thinks she’ll have for her entire life.

The fact that Borders is closing isn’t heartbreakingโ€”it’s been coming for a long time. Amanda thinks customers who prefer Borders to Barnes & Noble like it because it’s “kind of an underdog,” which is maybe a polite way of saying that losing has always been part of the Borders’ DNA. The heartbreaking thing is that this fall, over 10,000 bookstore employees across America will be out of work. The way the publishing industry is going, many of those people won’t be able to find jobs that are even tangentially related to books anymore; they’ll go on to work in movie theaters and grocery stores and as secretaries and child-care providers. They probably won’t be able to spend their days being obsessed with books, and that’s a bad thing for books, which have a hard enough time battling for attention in popular media.

There will always be booksellers, online and in physical stores. But there will probably be far fewer booksellers than there are now. The physical bookstores of the future may not look anything like Borders, which already feel like an exercise in nostalgia with their wasteful, sprawling layouts and quaint maroon-and-tan palette. Barnes & Noble feels like part of the past now, too. You can tell that even Barnes & Noble executives know it because just about every Barnes & Noble now features a huge display of the various iterations of their Nook e-readers, virtually blocking your entry in the front of the store. A helpful, flesh-and-blood bookseller always mans those displays, ready to explain all the nifty things that a Nook can do that physical books can’t. When you think about it, that’s really the most humiliating part of all this; even John Henry wasn’t forced to smile and praise the steam drill that replaced him. John Henry took the dignified way out when he saw the way things were going: His heart exploded, and he lay down and died.

21 replies on “Books without Borders”

  1. I never had much of any use for large corporate book chains anyways. With very rare exceptions, the only thing i ever bought from Borders, B&N, (and Book-A-Million back in GA) were magazines. I have dozens of books, but most of them came from Tower Recs. (when they still existed) Powells, Counter-Culture Media, various other indie/alternative sources, and mail-order.

    It sucks that so many people are losing their jobs, and clearly employee loyalty means shit to HQ, but it’s probably no huge loss when-ever a meag-chain goes under. I just wonder what will become of that vacant hole dt on SW 3rd once occupied by a Borders?

    Btw, why is there a link-ad at the bottom of this page for Borders giftcards? Wouldn’t they be completely worthless by now?

  2. I’m from a relatively small town of 50,000 or so that had a lot of independent bookstores. When Borders moved in, everyone was a little worried. Now that Borders is gone, the independent bookstores are still going strong. It’s sad to see Borders fail, but it’s quite a sight to see how the communities support the smaller independent guys. Borders was always fun to browse but it didn’t have the personal hand-picked feeling that many bookstores (many-many-bookstores in Portland) have. And I think that’s worth something.

  3. I, myself, was very sad when BORDERS closed its doors to me. I LOVE books. I love the smell and feel of the paper pages in my hands. WHY are bookstores drowning in failure??? …. Hipsters and tech-companies and their “NOOKS.” Are we kidding ourselves people, or are we simply TRYING to self-destruct? How many publishers will flounder before we realize that we did it to ourselves. We buy electronic books now. Say goodbye to bookshelves, oh, and hi-liters too.

    Books aren’t even my main concern here, despite the fact that they are a culturally significant form of press, and only the first one ever established…. Now I’m all for saving a tree, but unlike our diminishing job market and economy, trees grow back hippies…. And how about all of those plastics, metals, and wires that will have to be melted down, destroying our atmosphere, or clogging up our soil in land-fills world-wide when your ‘NOOK” decides to die on you? How many jobs will be replaced by technology, and/or outsourced in order to CREATE said technology at a cheaper price?

    BORDERS may have died already, and Barnes & Noble is well on its way to the same dastardly demise…. But I beg you, fellow Portlanders, SAVE Powell’s and DON’T buy a “NOOK.” For all that is culturally respected, PLEASE!

    .

  4. The decision to eschew the internet is a great moment of incompetency in the history of the book business and it has meant the demise of one of the last big book warehouses. I won’t be sad to see it go, aside from the jobs lost.

    My Father has owned and run Longfellows Books in SE Portland as a small used and rare bookstore since 1980- he has experienced the ups and downs of one move and the cacophony of the business cycle but he stubbornly persists. Powells will exist indefinitely; smaller independent/used stores will persist as long as people support them by attempting to buy books at places other than Amazon or BN. Other cities won’t be so lucky so it’s up to lovers of literature to support independent and small bookstores if they value small businesses and independent thought. We shall see what happens.

  5. That comment should have ended better- come on in and see us and we will try to alleviate you of some of your money in return for some beautiful, stimulating books! You can find us online- longfellowspdx.com Best wishes to all the bibliophiles.

  6. Very good article — but I was confused when I started reading and said “.. hey, I already read this…” — and I had, in The Seattle Stranger (August 2, 2011.) I know that’s your sister newspaper (your progenitor newspaper? your sisterdaddy paper?) I wish you had footnoted that fact – still a very good article.

  7. Dear Mr. Paul Constant,

    Should your life be directed by Wes Anderson, or produced by Judd Apatow? Should you be played by Jesse Eisenberg, or Michael Cera, donโ€™t worry we can get Seth Rogen to play your best friend. I am sorry you were so embarrassed by having a full time job with benefits. It was so great when you handed out a zine about corporate greed when you quit. Reading your article I was overcome with a powerful emotion to shit in your mouth and punch you in the face. I temporarily became excited when someone committed suicide, hoping you would boldly go next. Like my favorite rich douchebag fairy tale โ€œInto the Wild,โ€ I wish you would go into the Alaskan wilderness and starve to death.
    You listen to the Decemberists but you are so Coldplay

  8. What crime has Paul Constant committed other than being honest about his feelings and experiences at Borders? What is it about Portland that seems to attract so many passive-aggressive jerks and sociopaths like ajaguarorpossiblyapanther? It’s clear Constant bemoans the passing of the company, and outlines why he thinks it declined. Gee, you’d think he was a member of the Manson family the way his critics react. I found the article an interesting insider’s view of the bookstore.

  9. Agree with the last comment. I read this at The Stranger a month ago and the comments there were about 50x more interesting than what we’ve seen here so far, no exaggeration.
    As for the story, there’s so much to be discussed that it’s hard to know where to begin. Constant’s article only gets into the nitty-gritty in the second part, after all the Empire Records stuff. Borders’ problem was that they became too soul-less and corporate, in addition to their failure to capitalize on the Internet and the e-book phenomenon, as Constant discusses. They never stocked enough books from independent publishers, and they required their employees to push memberships etc. rather than engaging with customers about what they were reading. Brick and mortar businesses are going to need to become more specialized to do something well. Borders and B&N try to stock books, music, movies, calendars, cards, magazines, and more, so they do a poor job of it overall. There’s no saving B&N at this point; their model is too conventionally corporate and outmoded. I only hope people nationwide will buy more books at local bookshops, rather than browsing there and then buying online.

  10. I worked at the same Borders as Paul & there was great shift when wall street started to dictate the way we did business. It was a place for those who love books & music but the overwhelming greed of stock holders for the immediate dollar killed it, the did not understand the business & how it had to be nurtured & grow at a slower pace, the staff got progressively dimmer & Amazon put the nail in the coffin when they took over the web sales. ajaguarorpossiblyapanther you have no Idea what you are talking about, this story was right on. BTW the District manager in question once said that his job was more important than his new born baby now that’s Corporate in all its glory.

  11. I think it was the childish bit about all the awesome shit (drugs/parties/STDs/sex/sex/drugs/we partied so hard) he did before he got to the point about Borders. Mercury “writers” seem to be hard up to solicit their cool-guy/gal reputations in every story, and Paul is leading the pack.

    Don’t get me wrong, fun to read, but totes fucking irrelevant and narcissistic. But they give the paper away free, so fuck it.

  12. B&N will be gone too in under 10 years. One example of how they’re fucking up is all that [other] garbage they sell, besides books and magazines, in order to rake in more dough. Another example is that they charge a stupid amount for their dvds. the store typically charges $24.99-$29.99 for the same domestic mainstream films that you could easily find at EM used for $8.50! I can’t imagine they make a profit from dvd sales. Anyone who’d pay more than $20 for a domestic single-disc dvd is a fucking dummy.

  13. Paul, you nailed it with the GJ/JB photo. You nailed it with your depiction of CC. You made me laugh about the old days at DTX.

    Jaguar, dont you have something better to do? Clearly, you lack any depth to your thoughts and commentary as most of the words in your sentences were names of mainstream actors, directors and rock bands. How about you make a point? Or better yet, how about you go out and get some experiences in life that aren’t vicarious? You have a long way to go if you want to square off with Mr. Constant. He is smart, insightful and frequently hilarious. You are vomit on a turntable.

  14. I used to work for Louis Border’s other creation, WebVan, back in 2000. Man, you talk about high expectations, yet extreme mismanagement. That company crashed and burned within 3 years of evolving. And it was such a great idea that nobody other than a company called Peapod was doing at the time!

    Now, Safeway stores has taken all that customer base for their local delivery service. I can see where WebVan got it’s losing philosophy….

  15. “The front of the store, with all the kitchen magnets and board games and junk you don’t need took over large chunks of the expansive magazine and local-interest sections. “

    When I was waiting in one of these mazes, I knew the death of borders was oncoming. It was the last time I went to a borders, besides the coffee at Seattle’s Best.

  16. I think reprinting stories from the “sister” paper that have no relevance to Portland – considering the Borders downtown closed last Christmas – is the first sign that alt weeklies won’t exist in Portland in 10 years. Sort of like the Willy Week reprinting that hipster trash from the NYC Observer a few weeks back.

  17. @19: Right, because a major book retailer going under, including stores closing in Beaverton, Gresham, and Vancouver, clearly has no relevance for anyone in Portland.

  18. I got hired at our shitty suburban Borders in Michigan back in 1996, too, so I wanted to say thanks to Paul for writing this piece. You and I had pretty interchangeable experiences, up to and including blow jobs at Borders parties. Bizarre. I just went back to Michigan to visit friends and couldn’t help myself from stopping in at the old stomping grounds to take one more look around before it becomes a (wait for it . . .) Walmart. This might not be that big of a deal to those of us who made it out of our crappy towns and now live in (ahem, sort of) cosmopolitan cities, but those of us who grew up with nary an indie bookstore around owe our discovery of culture to these big box chain stores and no amount of cynicism will make me forget it.

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