Network Norwich, 7th August 2008

Norwich Christian resource centre resurrected: Network Norwich, 7th August 2008

The following report was received 3rd Sept 2008, cross-posted on SPCK/SSG: News, Notes & Info:

A new Community Interest Company is on course to resurrect a shop and café within St Michael-at-Plea, Redwell Street, Norwich, the church previously occupied by SSG and SPCK, from July 2004 to May 2008.

The Norwich Christian Resource Centre will be managed by Steve Foyster who will be returning to this venue, having left in June last year to set up a new online shop. His four fellow directors come from Anglican and free church backgrounds.

Since the centre finally closed in May the directors have been in direct liaison with the landlords, Norwich Historic Churches Trust, who are delighted that once again the redundant church will be used for the communities of Norwich, Norfolk and beyond.

Virtually all the ex-shop and café staff, most of whom were unable to find other employment, will return, along with the twenty or so volunteers who make the running of the well frequented café possible.

Regrettably nearly all the shop fitments and café equipment have been removed, though thankfully the bookshelving remains as an integral part of the listed building. Very generous donations are helping to buy new or secondhand replacements and several enthusiastic stakeholders are putting up no-interest three year loans to enable the purchase of new stock. Once the centre is open there will be an appeal for donations of second hand books. The new company has already received over £750 in donations following a recent appeal on the Network Norwich site, as well as a fax machine, PC and inkjet cartridges.

Steve says,

I remember all the blood, sweat and tears that went into the planning of this wonderful centre, when I was involved in 2004. It was always very well stocked with the widest breadth of titles, including a wealth of second hand titles, sought after as far afield as Canada and Finland.

It pleased me most that customers couldn’t pin down any particularly dominant theological strand – Karl Barth rubbed shoulders with Rick Joyner and hoodies hung alongside cassocks!

We were able to hold dozens of after hours events ranging from debates between humanists, bishops, MPs and professors, to an evening with Julie Reinger, the ‘Look East’ weather presenter. The team even re-enacted the famous Communication Problem episode within a Fawlty Towers evening. We knew of many people who came through the doors that would not normally set foot in a Christian shop let alone a church.

Although customers can easily move on to other providers, given the wealth of prayer and enthusiasm for the new venture from hundreds and hundreds of supporters, the new team are confident that NCRC will be more than viable.

Steve and the team hope to start trading on Wednesday 1st October.

Events are already being scheduled:

  • Thursday 16 October: Bishop David Atkinson will be speaking about his new book on climate change ‘Renewing the Face of the Earth’ – admission free with 10% off the book and other relevant titles.
  • Tuesday 21 October: Trafalgar Day supper with guest speaker
  • Mid December: an Advent evening with Arian and Bridget Plass

Many sincere and heartfelt thanks to all those who have prayed about this new venture for so long.


Index of Reports from Network Norwich (most recent first)

 

  • Norwich Christian resource centre resurrected
    A thriving city centre Christian resource centre, bookshop and cafe is set to re-open in Norwich under new management within the next few weeks after a successful rescue plan…
  • Norwich Christian bookshop stripped of stock
    A Christian bookshop in Norwich was yesterday (June 19) stripped of all its stock in the latest chapter of the on-going tale of its takeoever and closure…
  • Norwich Christian bookshop closes its doors
    Norwich’s SSG Bookshop and Resource Centre (formerly SPCK) will close its doors tomorrow (June 14) for the foreseeable future, after its owner filed for a form of bankruptcy in the USA and its Norwich staff were dismissed…
  • Norwich SPCK closure goes on as union steps in
    The SPCK bookshop in Norwich remains closed over two weeks after it first shut its doors following the sacking of all its staff and today (February 21) the telephone lines have been barred…
  • Norwich SPCK sackings e-mail is revealed
    More details have emerged of the sacking by e-mail of the staff of Norwich Christian bookshop SPCK last week…
  • Rescue plan for Norwich Christian literature
    Following the temporary closure of Norwich’s only city centre Christian bookshop and the alleged sacking of its five staff on Tuesday, an alternative plan to preserve the future of Christian literature in Norwich is emerging…
  • Staff sacked as Norwich SPCK bookshop closes
    The future of Norwich’s only city-centre Christian bookshop is uncertain after it closed its doors yesterday (February 5) and all its staff were sacked…
- Compiled by Phil Groom

With the near-total collapse of the former SPCK/St Stephen the Great Bookshops under the auspices of brothers Phil & Mark Brewer and with Sarum College Bookshop in meltdown — or not, depending on your point of view — it would be easy to become despondent over the state of Christian bookselling here in the UK. Is it all really going down the pan?

In a word, no. At least seven, possibly eight, new shops and businesses have risen or are now rising from the ashes of SPCK’s ruin, harnessing much of the expertise of the booksellers treated with such contempt by the Brewers and restoring much of what the Christian communities in those areas have been deprived of.

Melanie Carroll was amongst the first to make a comeback as an independent bookseller in Lincoln with Unicorn Tree Books in the Central Market. Melanie was the manager of both SPCK Lincoln and spckonline.com before both were effectively destroyed by the Brewers: her story emerges bit by bit in the Unicorn Tree Books Blog as well as in her comments posted here.

Leicester managed to break free from the Brewers in November 2007 as reported in the St Paul’s Oadby blog, a story soon picked up by Dave Walker. Questions were raised: was the Leicester shop truly independent or were the Brewers playing fast and loose with leaseholds via a franchise? Eventually, in June this year, the shop’s new owner, the Revd Peter Hebden, put an end to speculation with a declaration via a comment on the SPCK/SSG Blog that the shop was indeed truly independent. The shop is now trading as Christian Resources, Leicester.

In Cardiff, City United Reformed Church — who had hosted SPCK for many years after the rising cost of city rents meant that they were unable afford their previous premises — became so angry over the Brewers’ shenanigans that they simply locked them out whilst they drew up plans for a new shop. Again, the SPCK/SSG Blog comments section became the place where the story was told. Churches Together Bookshop was opened on July 22nd 2008.

Truro Christian Bookshop - Excerpt from the Truro Coracle, July 2008

Truro Christian Bookshop - Excerpt from the Truro Coracle, July 2008

The SPCK/SSG Truro branch changed hands early this year and has been trading independently since 1st February 2008 as Truro Christian Bookshop. This was reported in the July 2008 edition of The Coracle, Truro’s Diocesan newsletter, and once more noted by a visitor via a comment in the SPCK/SSG Blog.

Update: In June 2009 news emerged that Truro Christian Bookshop had been put up for sale due to the manager’s ill-health. The current status of the shop is unknown.

In Birmingham, Annette Anderson, former SPCK branch manager, has established The Gift Centre in the Indoor Market on Edgbaston Street, from where she offers a full range of Christian and inspirational cards and gifts, children’s books, and a selection of church requisites such as incense and charcoal, helping to fill the gap left by SPCK’s closure.

In Norwich, former branch manager Steve Foyster has plans well underway to resurrect the former shop and café as a new company to trade as Norwich Christian Resource Centre. Earlier this month Network Norwich reported that “Virtually all the ex-shop and cafe staff will be re-employed at the new centre, which has been one of Steve’s other hopes over the past months.” More info may be found in the Diocese of Norwich Clergy Mailing, 7 August 2008: Christian Resource Centre set for resurrection.

The gap left by SPCK’s demise in Exeter has been at least part-filled by Bridge Books, a new independent shop opened in July by John & Margaret Robertson in what looks to be a superb location overlooking the river at Okehampton Street, just a short walk away from the city centre.

Finally, we come full circle back to Salisbury: the optimism expressed by Sarum College over the future of their bookshop under the “stewardship” of librarian Jenny Monds may or may not be misplaced. If the shop survives, it will certainly owe that survival at least in part to the demise of SPCK Salisbury; and we can be certain that Salisbury hasn’t seen the last of Sarum’s former bookshop manager, Mark Clifford: booksellers of Mark’s calibre don’t simply crawl away and die — as Mark himself has said, watch this space…

High Street Christian bookselling on the way out? Don’t believe a word of it!

And if you’d like to help liberate another Christian bookshop from the Brewers’ increasingly desperate grip, please consider signing the SPCK/SSG: News, Notes & Info petition, Rescuing Britain’s Christian Heritage: Durham Cathedral Bookshop.

Norwich Books and Music
St Mary’s Works
St Mary’s Plain
Norwich NR3 3BHPhone: 01603 612914
Fax: 01603 624483
www.norwichbooksandmusic.co.uk

Trade account numbers and all ordering arrangements remain unchanged, even at PubEasy where you’ll still find them under the old name…

If you’re in any way involved with the Christian book trade you’re probably aware by now that SCM-Canterbury Press’ distribution division has changed its name to Norwich Books and Music: details on the right for those who may have missed the announcements elsewhere.

It’s always a pleasure to leaf through publishers’ catalogues and AI (Advance Information) sheets, and I’m pleased to say that SCM-Canterbury’s latest, received late last week and mostly previewing titles due in the final quarter, Oct – Dec 2008, didn’t disappoint me.

My PewAn absolute must-buy, sneaking back in from an earlier preview, is Volume 2 of ‘The Dave Walker Guide to the Church’, My Pew: Things I Have Seen From It. Due in August, it should raise a few eyebrows and plenty of laughs as Dave brings us more of his quirky and entertaining take on the church. My advice to clergy is jettison the hymnbooks and replace them with copies of this: your congregation will be too busy laughing at one another and hopefully themselves to notice the organist and choir storming out in indignation, leaving you free to run the show the way you’ve always wanted to with absolutely no one paying any attention whatsoever (9781853118999, August 2008, £5.99).

Update, 13/6/2008: Serious fans won’t want to miss the new Dave Walker Guide to the Church 2009 Calendar, hot off the press today according to the man himself. Far too frivolous for a serious bookshop like mine, of course ;) (Dave’s other books)

Leadership in Mission Shaped ChurchesFrom there it seems an almost natural progression into what promises to be a fresh and invigorating exploration of ‘fresh expressions of church’, Leadership in Mission Shaped Churches: Emerging Theological and Practical Models (9781853118166, November 2008, £16.99). Edited by Martyn Percy and somebody else (the book cover says Richard Turnbull; the AI sheet talks about Louise Nelstrop: go figure), this is billed as filling “a real gap for good, critical reflection on a prominent feature of contemporary church life”. Contributors include Steven Croft and John Hull, both of whom contributed to Church House Publishing’s Mission-shaped Questions.

Theology, Psychoanalysis and TraumaRather more specialised but of undoubted interest for anyone studying theology and counselling in depth is a lower priced edition of Marcus Pound’s Theology, Psychoanalysis and Trauma, part of the Veritas Series published jointly by SCM and Nottingham University’s Centre for Theology and Philosophy. John Milbank is cited describing the book as “the most important sustained reflection on the relation of theology and psychoanalysis to date.”

It originally came out last year in hardback at £60, well out of reach of most cash-strapped students; this paperback release, due September 2008, brings the price down to a more manageable £19.99. The ISBN quoted on the AI sheet (978033441399) is a digit short: it should be 9780334041399.

Those are just three forthcoming from SCM-Canterbury that stood out for me. Can’t help thinking that Dave’s book will prove much more effective in dealing with trauma than the heavy duty tome I’ve finished up with, but any students tempted to cite My Pew in their dissertations would probably be wise to think again…

Finally, a word of thanks to Kevin Allard, SCM-Canterbury’s UK Sales Manager, who helped sort out a wee problem with one of their Study Guide series recently supplied to me by STL. The book came in at a short discount and when I queried it STL told me that reduced discounts from their suppliers inevitably resulted in reduced discounts to us as retailers. I contacted Kevin to find out what the problem was: turned out to be a data entry error at STL which has now been corrected. So next time STL seem to be short-changing you on the discount front, don’t take no for an answer: follow it up with the publisher. As they say at Tesco, every little counts…

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