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Russo has beaten the drum against Amazon and e-books in the past. He wrote an op-ed piece in The New York Times in December blasting Amazon's price-check app that allows shoppers to scan a product's bar code in a store and see how much they'd save by buying through Amazon. He's also critical of the way online booksellers seem to market their books. When people search for books by key words on websites, the results usually direct them toward popular, older and best-selling authors, he said. In independent bookstores, employees can steer customers toward new books by new authors that people haven't heard of before. His new book is intended to give readers a "book book" -- as he calls printed books
-- experience. At book signings and talks for "Interventions," Russo's seen people nodding in agreement when he talks about the importance of independent bookstores and the idea of buying local. He may be onto something
-- core membership of the American Booksellers Association has risen for three straight years after years of sharp declines brought on by online retailers and superstore chains. Russo doesn't want to be known solely as an Amazon or e-book basher. After all, he reads books on his iPad when he's traveling. Rather, he said, he's promoting the idea of diversity of how books are published, how they're sold and how they're read. "I'm fine with online booksellers," he said. "I just don't want them to control the world." ___ Online: Down East Books: http://www.downeast.com/
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