Arts and CultureNew YorkShopping, Style and Beauty

New York’s Best Lesser Known Bookstores

The Bay's best newsletter for underground events & news

This originally appeared on Lonely Planet

While the era of big bookstore chains dominating the business of reading is slowly coming to a close, the scrappy, independent booksellers who stood in defiance for so long seem to be hitting their stride. True, it’s a strange and challenging time to be an independent bookstore; more and more people are buying e-readers and fewer and fewer young people seem to be reading. But not everywhere.

In New York City, where people are so fiercely proud of their cultural institutions, independent bookshops are, if not flourishing, certainly staying the course. Some of these stores like Housing Works BookstoreStrand Book StoreMcNally JacksonBookcourt, and St Mark’s Bookshop are legendary and have been lauded for decades. But it certainly doesn’t end there, and there are many other shops that deserve some literary love. Here is a selection of some of the wonderful but lesser known bookstores where New York City’s locals go (and tourists should go) to get their fill of the written word.

New-Yorks-Best-Lesser-Known-Bookstores-reading

Reading in Central Park, by I.C.U.

Book Thug Nation

What it lacks in size, Williamsburg’s Book Thug Nation makes up for in heart. Started by four booksellers who sold their wares on street corners for years, BTN is rooted in the belief that independent bookstores play a vital role in fostering a city’s creativity. Besides being a community space and having a fantastic collection of used fiction, BTN also has one of NYC’s best collection of zines for sale – underground legend and the godfather of zines, Aaron Cometbus, is one of the owners (read this amazing piece of his called “Punk Rock Love Is”).

Bluestockings

Originally opened as a feminist bookstore on the Lower East Side, Bluestockings has since expanded its focus to encompass the much larger theme of global justice. A worker-owned co-op, the bookstore also acts as a vegan/fair trade café and an activist center. And they’re really nice people. If Angela Davis, Marshall McLuhan, Howard Zinn and Michel Foucault are on your reading list, Bluestockings is the place you want to shop.

New-Yorks-Best-Lesser-Known-Bookstores-blue-stockings

Sleepy bookstore dog at Bluestockings, by istolethetv.

The Complete Traveller Antiquarian Bookstore

Have you figured out how to time travel? (If so please take me along!) Your last stop before jumping into ye olde time machine should be at the Complete Traveller Antiquarian Bookstore in Murray Hill, a specialist in rare and collectible travel books, including long out-of-print travel guides They also trade in rare maps, so that way when we get back to the 17th Century all we’ll really have to worry about is whether or not our 21st century vaccinations will hold up against whatever monstrous diseases they had back then. [Editor’s Note: This place has unfortunately closed but they still have an online store]

192 Books

While they carry books on a wide range of topics, 192 Books excels in the realm of art books, possibly due to their proximity to all the Chelsea galleries. For art lovers, what sets 192 Books apart are their art shows accompanied by books relating to the artists or themes in the exhibition. It’s a multimedia experience, yo – and a free one at that. With all the pretty words and images that one finds at 192 Books, you could easily lose the better part of a day there.

Unoppressive Non-Imperialist Bargain Books

Having perhaps the most impressive bookstore name ever, the West Village’s Unoppressive Non-Imperialist Bargain Books is exactly what the name implies. The books are very cheap: a curated mixture of new and remaindered books, so it’s the kind of store you don’t necessarily go to when looking for a specific title. Instead, you pick up whatever it is that they happen to be stocking at the moment. If you’re a fan of biographies or books dealing with the counterculture, this is your spot.

New-Yorks-Best-Lesser-Known-Bookstores-unoppressive-non-imperialist-bargain-books

Unoppressive Non-Imperialist Bargain Books by Steve Isaacs.

Unnameable Books

Do you enjoy poetry or books about unexpected and quirky subjects? Unnameable Books is for you. Originally called Adam’s Books, until a textbook publisher of the same name threatened a lawsuit, Unnameable Books is Prospect Heights’ favorite bookstore. Unnameable’s following is a devoted one, partially because of its selection of new and used books, partially because of the events it holds and partially because everybody loves the owner, the readily nameable Adam.

Bonnie Slotnick Cookbooks

There’s a fine line between devotion and obsession and Bonnie Slotnick is a woman who walks it. For over 15 years her little bookshop has been selling rare and out-of-print volumes to adoring cookbook aficionados from around the world. Whether you’re looking for vintage issues of Gourmet or a book of 18th century peasant recipes, Bonnie is so dedicated to helping you find what you’re looking for, that she will even help you browse for it by phone! Make sure to call ahead before visiting the West Village shop because her hours change weekly.

WORD

WORD is more than just a store that vends books. It’s to a community space for people who live in the neighborhood and who like to read. From a David Foster Wallace appreciation society, to book release parties, to a basketball league where the teams have bookish names like ‘A Tree Dunks in Brooklyn,’ WORD is in the community business just as it is in the book business. Plus it’s incredibly cute – it’s in Greenpoint, Brooklyn after all.

New-Yorks-Best-Lesser-Known-Bookstores-word

Reflection in the window of indie bookstore WORD, by Rachel Kramer Bussel.

Previous post

We've got tickets to "My Spirital Animal is a Butch Lesbian" featuring Sampson @ Punchline SF!

Next post

New SF Proposal Would Double Affordable Housing Requirements


Broke-Ass Stuart - Editor In Cheap

Broke-Ass Stuart - Editor In Cheap

Stuart Schuffman, aka Broke-Ass Stuart, is a travel writer, poet, TV host, activist, and general shit-stirrer. His website BrokeAssStuart.com is one of the most influential arts & culture sites in the San Francisco Bay Area and his freelance writing has been featured in Lonely Planet, Conde Nast Traveler, The Bold Italic, Geek.com and too many other outlets to remember. His weekly column, Broke-Ass City, appears every other Thursday in the San Francisco Examiner. Stuart’s writing has been translated into four languages. In 2011 Stuart created and hosted the travel show Young, Broke, and Beautiful on IFC and in 2015 he ran for Mayor of San Francisco and got nearly 20k votes.

He's been called "an Underground legend": SF Chronicle, "an SF cult hero":SF Bay Guardian, and "the chief of cheap": Time Out New York.