
The Next Big Idea Daily Why Bookstores Still Matter
Jan 30, 2026
David Damrosch, Harvard comparative literature professor who mapped insights from 80 global authors. Evan Friss, historian of American bookstores who traces their cultural and political roles. They discuss the sensory joy of browsing, bookstores as community and refuge, literature as a portal across time, and how constraints and storytelling shape understanding.
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Bookstores: Dying Yet Enduring
- Bookstores are simultaneously endangered and resilient institutions shaped by repeated predictions of their demise.
- Evan Friss shows that bookstores keep adapting despite threats from libraries, radio, TV, superstores, and Amazon.
Bookshops Shape Culture And Politics
- Bookstores don't just reflect culture; they shape what people read and can alter political thought.
- Friss gives examples where shops sold radical texts and became hubs for movements like abolitionism.
Bookstores As Political And Safe Spaces
- David Ruggles opened an anti-slavery bookstore that served as an organizing space for activists and was burned down within a year.
- The Oscar Wilde Memorial Bookshop became a sanctuary that prioritized identity-affirming literature over profit.
























