CBI Archive
2008 Eisner Spirit of Comics Retailer Award Finalists!
Tuesday, July 29th, 2008 at 4:13 PM EST
Updated: Tuesday, July 29th, 2008 at 5:37 PM EST
It is weird, getting this information was a lot harder than you would think, so since not many places are reporting the finalists, I figured it worthwhile to give the finalists their moment in the spotlight.
Here are the six finalists for the 2008 Eisner Spirit of Comics Retailer Award (click on the store name to go to their website)!
Brave New World Comics - Santa Clarita, California (Atom! and Portlyn Freeman, owners) (This year’s winner)
Casablanca Comics - Portland, Maine (Rick Lowell and Laura O’Meara, owners)
Chapel Hill Comics - Chapel Hill, North Carolina (Andrew Neal, owner)
Happy Harbor Comics - Edmonton, Alberta (Shawna Roe and Jay Bardyla, owners)
Rocketship - Brooklyn, New York (Alex Cox and Mary Gibbons, owners)
Tate’s Comics - Lauderhill, Flordia (Tate Ottati, owner)
Congratulations to all the nominees!






15 Comments
Random Stranger
July 29, 2008 at 4:43 pm
I’m not sure how this award is selected but I have personal experience with one of the finalists and they had a terrible store and the owner was one of those sleazy comic book store guys who give the retail end of the business a bad name.
James
July 29, 2008 at 5:32 pm
Oh, okay, don’t want to be a corrective jerk…
…but Brave New World is in Santa CLARITA, but it’s close enough to Santa CLARA that it’s forgivable.
BNW is a great store, with great owners. They really do care about the customers, and they do a whole crapload of events for our entertainment.
Also, thanks to them, I don’t have to drive to Sacramento or something to participate in “24 Hour Comics Day”. Yes!
Brian Cronin
July 29, 2008 at 5:38 pm
Not a jerk at all, James! The name of the store’s city is a pretty big deal! Thanks for correcting the typo!
James
July 29, 2008 at 5:54 pm
No problem. If you watch 24, we were the town that got exploded by the nuclear bomb, and they got our city name wrong.
There was actually a Facebook group devoted to it: “24 Blew Up my Hometown and Got the %^$ Name Wrong!” or something like that.
Du6bipR
July 29, 2008 at 6:00 pm
Brave New World is a great store. I’ve visited it a few times, as its not in the vicinity of the 6 plus shops in my area. Very cool shop with a great staff. Congrats to its win
Greg Burgas
July 29, 2008 at 8:30 pm
Does anyone know how these stores are selected? I don’t know any of them, so I’m not being snotty, but does someone nominate them? How do the voters vote for them? This seems harder to pick than the comics, because what if the voters can’t get to each store?
CBrown
July 29, 2008 at 9:27 pm
I’m familiar with Rocketship and Chapel Hill Comics. Both are great stores. I live in Brooklyn and visit Rocketship fairly regularly. My mother lives in North Carolina, so when I’m there I make my way to Chapel Hill. Chapel Hill used to be a more standard LCS with a HUGE section devoted to sci fi novels. It was a good enough store, but I was pleasantly surprised a year or two ago to discover they’d completely transformed themselves into a more graphic-novel oriented store; actually, a lot like Rocketship is.
Tungsten Man
July 30, 2008 at 12:12 am
My vote for Chapel Hill Comics, all the way. This place has kept a clean, wonderful, growing store that’s about to move to a new location (!) even closer to UNC’s campus, and they’ve done it the best way possible: friendly, helpful staff, reliable service, and great relations with the community.
I’ve moved over twenty miles away, and even with gas prices as they are and my local store giving discounts on every new issue, I’m willing to haul ass to Chapel Hill to support hands-down the best comics store I’ve ever patronized. These folks got me back into comics as an adult and they did it in NORTH CAROLINA of all places.
Alex
July 30, 2008 at 6:43 am
Greg-
Here’s how it works… First, a store gets nominated. Anyone can nominate a store. I’m not sure if you need X amount, or if it only takes one, but it’s an open nomination process.
Then the nominated stores have to create a presentation. A five-minute video showing your store, a stack of very specific photographs, and a collection of press, special info, whatever you think is important.
These packages are reviewed by a selected group of judges, all industry types. Usually they have the previous year’s winner, a distributor, someone in publishing, and a writer or artist. They select six finalists, and the winner, on a point-based system. Points are given for specific categories, like Variety of Product, Community Involvement, etc…
And that’s how it works!
Greg Burgas
July 30, 2008 at 7:12 am
Cool! Thanks, Alex.
Lee
July 30, 2008 at 8:10 am
By an odd coincidence, I just happened to stop at Casablanca Comics on a recent vacation to Maine (the only one of the finalists I have ever visited). I was immediately impressed by the store, with a great selection of TPBs covering the walls, and a large, clean, well-lit store made the excursion from the normal travel plans well worth it. It made me wish that it were closer to my hometown of Boston, even though there are plenty of great comic book stores here.
Anyway, as I was completing my purchase, I said to the young lady behind the counter, “What a great store you’ve got here.”
She mumbled, “Yeah, gee, thanks,” in a less-than-enthusiastic tone. That was the only bad experience I had in the store.
Anyone in the Portland area (or just visiting) should stop by!
Richard Pachter
July 30, 2008 at 8:16 am
Congrats to Tate’s! Terrific store with great stuff and a very helpful staff.
CBrown
July 30, 2008 at 8:40 pm
Tungsten Man, where is Chapel Hill Comics moving to? Isn’t it already right on the main drag through the UNC campus?
Alex
July 31, 2008 at 5:31 am
It’s moving seven doors down. Same street, same area… just a few yards away, to a bigger space.
Tungsten Man
July 31, 2008 at 2:28 pm
That’s correct - right next to Ham’s, I believe.