As a blizzard blasted the East Coast in late February, a thousand booksellers from impartial bookstores throughout the U.S. packed their winter gear, modified flights and braved snow to get to Pittsburgh by any means attainable. They have been there to attend an annual trade occasion, however this 12 months was not like earlier ones. A spirit of neighborhood and resistance ran via each interplay.
Partially that mirrored a surge within the variety of bookstores within the U.S.: In accordance with the American Booksellers Assn., 422 new bookstores opened in 2025, a 31% bounce from 2024. “Popping out of COVID, individuals realized life is simply too quick to do one thing you aren’t captivated with,” Allison Hill, chief government of the affiliation, advised me. The occasion in Pittsburgh, Winter Institute, was the most important one but, with registration promoting out in 40 minutes and a whole lot on the ready listing.
The power there additionally mirrored the position that bookstores are enjoying at this second in American historical past. Amid worry, frustration and anger, booksellers are offering assets and areas for studying, organizing and respite.
Unbiased bookstores have lengthy been thought of third areas, that place separate from residence and work the place you may construct neighborhood. In my hometown of Austin, Texas, Jean Buckner runs Classic Books and Wine, recommending wine and audiobook pairings. (A latest pairing? “Simply More” by Cynthia Erivo with Artomaña “Xarmant” Arabako Txakolina, 2024.) Reparations Membership in Los Angeles hosts a “Learn the Room” e book membership, the place attendees sit collectively and skim no matter they need. Black Hen Bookstore in San Francisco not too long ago launched a month-to-month pie and board recreation night time. Matter, in Denver, is not only a bookstore, however a revolutionary print store, the place locals can attend printmaking courses. Comma, in Minneapolis; Black Garnet in St. Paul, Minn.; and different native bookstores have been on the forefront of distributing assets to these affected by immigration raids within the space.
Apparently, bookstore chain Barnes & Noble has adjusted its enterprise technique to match that of impartial bookstores, giving every location extra possession over its design and introducing “shelf talkers” and curated workers picks. However the firm is owned by a hedge fund, and lots of readers decide to buy small regardless.
There’s a saying within the e book world that no one opens a bookstore to get wealthy. Most certainly, many of those new bookstores won’t survive past 5 years. It’s a tricky enterprise, one which brings huge financial and political challenges. Margins are razor-thin, typically 1% to three% of income. Each e book sale issues. When Amazon launched within the Nineties, impartial bookstores had 30% of the market share; in the present day, that quantity is round 7%.
However what’s turning into all of the extra clear and necessary is how these shops are constructing these third areas within the shadow of large tech corporations — particularly Amazon. Procuring at an impartial bookstore has, for a lot of, turn into a type of protest.
When Amazon ran a “counter-sale” final 12 months throughout Unbiased Bookstore Day — an annual occasion that takes place the final Saturday of April — the transfer backfired. The large triggered a wave of help for impartial bookstores that gave many their greatest day of gross sales — ever. Persons are extra conscious now that how and the place they spend cash is highly effective. Booksellers see that up shut.
Take Dilpreet Kainth, founding father of Queens Ebook Bazaar in New York. Chatting after a full day of classes, she advised me how she burned out working in company media. “I actually needed to do one thing that may make a distinction and truly help my area people.” She knew she made the suitable alternative when, at her retailer’s South Asian-inspired e book honest, native residents got here as much as her to specific their pleasure.
Or Janine Sickmeyer, who left the tech world to open Storyline in Higher Arlington, Ohio, as a result of she “needed to construct one thing tangible and native — an on a regular basis gathering place the place tales convey individuals collectively.” Right now, her retailer hosts eight e book golf equipment, and members have transitioned from strangers to journey companions. “All of the laborious work feels fully price it,” she stated. “It’s a reminder that this was by no means simply in regards to the books we learn. It’s additionally in regards to the new tales we’re creating with individuals we would by no means have met in any other case.”
Regardless of the financial headwinds, ongoing censorship challenges and a decline in studying charges, the power within the impartial bookstore trade is considered one of defiance — and it’s animating retailers nationwide. Booksellers new and previous are giving it their all to rally their communities round books and to convey individuals collectively. As LeVar Burton stated in his keynote handle at Winter Institute: “Y’all actually do make a distinction on this world.”
Mark Pearson is the chief government and co-founder of Libro.fm, an audiobook firm that shares income with native bookstores.
