The Binc Gala: Celebrating 30 Years of Amazing Work and Planning for the Future
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| Gala honorary chair and keynote speaker Dominique Raccah, publisher and CEO of Sourcebooks, and Binc CEO Pamela French | |
More than 300 people from across the book world gathered last night in New York City for a gala celebration of the 30th anniversary of the Book Industry Charitable (Binc) Foundation and to raise money for an endowment for the organization to help in its mission of providing a safety net for book and comic store employees, owners, and their stores.
Humorously emceed by author and bookseller Emma Straub, the event included a video appearance by Barack Obama, who said in part, "We need a strong network of bookstores. As the only nonprofit organization in the country that provides emergency financial assistance to book and comic store employees, [Binc is] helping people who are going through a tough time keep food on the table at a time when the cost of just about everything is going up. That's more important than ever. So thanks for everything you're doing and for helping us understand each other and embrace our shared humanity."
Binc CEO Pamela French thanked the many people, companies, and organizations that have enabled the foundation to expand its programs that help book and comic people in myriad ways and to create an endowment. She recalled the lesson she learned working at age 19 as a nurse's aid where the basic rule was to preserve dignity. "While bookselling is a noble profession, it's not always easy. Life throws us curveballs... What you've contributed is allowing us to preserve the dignity of people we all admire and respect. It's so hard to ask for help and your generosity makes it easier."
Gala honorary chair and keynote speaker Dominique Raccah, publisher and CEO of Sourcebooks, praised Binc's "thirty years of heroic work on behalf of booksellers who keep our communities whole... Binc has supported our beloved book community through times of financial hardship, illness, natural disaster, the pandemic, and most recently ICE raids. I can't think of more worthy work than what makes possible every day ensuring readers of all ages have ready access to the books they want and need. This work is what grows the next generation of thoughtful, informed citizens, and booksellers must thrive in order to make it possible. Yet, all too often, the bookstores that are the cornerstones of these communities don't have a financial safety net...
"For thirty years, Binc has been that safety net. I see Binc as booksellers' first responders, lending a hand when they are at their most vulnerable and offering vital resources that keep them afloat. That's why I think we should all be supporting Binc... a key investment in the infrastructure that brings books and readers together."
George Mrkonic, the former Borders president who had the idea of creating an in-house foundation to help staff members in need, was given the Founders Award.
Author and bookseller Ann Patchett was honored for being Binc's first Ambassador, introduced by the current Ambassador, author Amor Towles.
Marco Davanzo, executive director of ComicsPRO, the trade organization for direct-market comics retailers and owner of the Alakazam Comics store, was honored with the Unsung Hero Award.
Evening festivities included a fund-raising auction and the patented Binc heads-or-tails contest.
For more about Binc and to contribute, click here.













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On tour for Young World (Random House Books for Young Readers), Soman Chainani (c.) posed with booksellers (and mothers) Martha Olsen and Melissa Linko on Mother's Day at 
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Cecilia Eudave, among Latin America's literary vanguard of "narrativa de lo inusual" (narrative of the unusual) makes her English-language debut with the haunting novel The Summer of the Serpent, translated from the Spanish by National Book Award winner Robin Myers. Reminiscent of interlinked short stories, Eudave's work presents a polyphonic chorus, many of the voices quite young, who are all residents of an unnamed Mexican neighborhood, as they reveal their versions of what happened during that summer of 1977.
More than 1,000 people from the book industry gathered on Monday, May 11, "to celebrate all things books and the people who make them" at the
Independent Bookshop of the Year
Children's Bookseller of the Year
Individual Bookseller of the Year