Christian Marketplace

Christian Marketplace (formerly known as the Christian Bookstore Journal and the European Christian Bookstore Journal) was the UK-based trade magazine for the Christian retail industry, featuring news, product reviews and interviews. It was published monthly from 2001 to 2012 and was supplied to both Christian and general market retailers.

History

The magazine began in 1996[1] as the Christian Bookstore Journal. It was published on a monthly basis.[1] This was soon renamed to the European Christian Bookstore Journal (ECBJ) and was located at the offices of the unofficial European branch of the Christian Booksellers Association. At this time the magazine was run by John Macdonald who also owned the Christian World Centre bookstore in Manchester, England.

In 1999, with the magazine facing bankruptcy, John MacDonald and SilverFish Publishing entered into a joint venture to replace ECBJ with a new magazine called Christian Bookseller.[1] However, after the publication of the first issue, the parties entered into a dispute, with the result that SilverFish published a new magazine also entitled Christian Bookseller. Edited by Ian Matthews (also edited ECBJ in 1998), the magazine changed its name in March 2001 to Christian Retailer.

SilverFish went out of business in July 2001 and the magazine ceased at this point. However, in August 2001, Ian Matthews, along with another former employee of SilverFish, Phil Whittall, formed a new company called Sojourn Publications and released a new incarnation of the magazine titled Christian Marketplace.[2] The title was eventually sold to Premier Media Group, who also run Premier Radio in 2002 where it was edited by Phil Whittall until August 2006. The editor was Clem Jackson.[3]

The last issue of Christian Marketplace was published in September 2012.[1][4]

gollark: It's still quite small, so you can shove it in a box somewhere and ignore it, or apparently run much of it through a breeder reactor to reuse it.
gollark: The nuclear waste problem isn't even that much of an issue compared to vast amounts of degraded solar panels, it's much lower in volume.
gollark: ħi.
gollark: But only for a year.
gollark: Apparently you can be trusted to drive giant metal death machines down roads at several tens of km/h but not drink alcohol.

References

  1. "Goodbye Christian Marketplace". 13 June 2012. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  2. "New trade magazine, Christian Marketplace, launched in October". Cross Rhythms. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  3. "Press Release". Together Magazine. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  4. "Christian Marketplace magazine to cease publication". Christian Today. 14 June 2012. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
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