Wedale Books. Stow, Scotland

The Wedale Bookshop

The Wedale Bookshop

Your braw independent bookshop in the village of Stow, serving the Gala Water valley, Galashiels, Lauder and beyond. On the A7 and the Borders Railway.Two storeys; thousands of stories!

Throughout the bookshop, you will find comfy armchairs to sit and browse through your selection. We also have review publications for you to browse; always without any obligation. If you are not able to make it upstairs, we will of course be happy to bring a selection downstairs for you to look through.

Contact:

The Wedale Bookshop, 231 Galashiels Road, STOW, Scotland TD1 2RE

Telephone: 01578 730 431

Email: hello@wedalebooks.scot
Website: www.wedalebooks.scot
Twitter: @WedaleBookshop
Instagram: @wedalebooks
Facebook: facebook.com/TheWedaleBookshop

In their own words…

How did you come up with the name of your bookshop?

Wedale is the ancient name of the valley where we’re situated in the Scottish Borders, a name sadly seldom used nowadays. This part of Scotland is often a little overlooked as folk zoom through between the south and Edinburgh but there is a rich, fascinating history here and we wanted a name that reflects both where we are located and that we are very much a local bookshop for the Scottish Borders.

Who are you? Owns the bookshop? Bit of a bio and pics, please

Gordy and Tom – Gordy orders the books and Tom keeps the books!

Why a bookshop? What made you want to get into bookselling?

For Gordy, quite simply a life-long ambition. Books were hugely important to him as a child and his parents fostered a love of reading that endures. Having reached a milestone age a couple of years ago, Gordy decided that if he was ever going to try and fulfil his dream, he better get his finger out. So he did.

General background/history of the shop please.

Not quite a year old, the bookshop opened in April 2023 on a part-time basis. We weren’t able to undertake the bookshop in a fulltime capacity – yet – and needed to test the waters, to see if it would be viable. The bookshop is located in small village of around 700 folk but has attracted a regular customer base from across the western Scottish Borders and beyond. We are the only indie bookshop in the Borders that you can reach by rail and we are also located right on the A7! The building is a modern, cabin-like environmentally-friendly construction and has been called “the most beautiful shop they’ve visited” and “utterly charming” by customers. It is also immediately next to the ruins of a medieval church and stands on the site where the village undertaker once made coffins!
      

Do you stock a variety of genres or do you specialise?

We are a small general bookstore with a distinctly Scottish Borders and Scottish heart but with an international outlook. We also demonstrate our environmental, ethical and inclusive ideals throughout the shop and are proud to be an LGBTQI+ safe space.

We have been delighted that our crime, fiction and folklore / witchcraft sections have been particularly successful.

Do you mainly sell new or second-hand books?

Only new. For now.

What makes your bookshop special?

Hopefully, the careful selection of books and the warm, characterful appearance of our store. Customers have been pleasantly surprised by the range and variety of the books on our shelves. We try and stock books which may be a little forgotten or overlooked and also try to showcase books that you might not see in other independent bookshops nearby. We’re lucky to be part of a growing number of indie bookshops in the Borders, so you could follow a trail from bookshop to bookshop, from Jedburgh to St Boswells, Melrose to Stow and you would find hugely different selections in each – that’s one of the joys of independent bookshops! We have also held a number of very successful events in our local community-run venue, the Station House, which is a unique, beautiful location for author events.

Describe your store in three words.

Welcoming. Imaginative. Bigger… (on the inside than it looks from the outside!)

What is the nicest thing a customer has ever said to you?

“Thank you for making the village a happier place in which to live”! You can’t ask for a better commendation, surely?


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Heron & Willow, Jedburgh, Scotland

Heron & Willow

Heron & Willow

Heron and Willow is a family run bookshop in the beautiful town of Jedburgh in The Scottish Borders. We opened in April 2023.

Our curated selection of books and gifts aims to offer something unique. We’re particularly passionate about Scotland, as well as having a dedicated children’s section. Kids are very welcome! We also want Heron & Willow to be a place where creativity takes place, through workshops, projects and free activities.

Contact:

4 Canongate, Jedburgh TD8 6AJ

Telephone: 07780 857138
Email: heronandwillow@gmail.com
Website: www.heronandwillow.scot
Instagram: @heronandwillow
Facebook: www.facebook.com/heronandwillow/

In their own words…

How did you come up with the name of your bookshop?

In Jedburgh there is a river with Herons on it. We used to live in a city and seeing a Heron on a river was a big deal, but to find they just live here a stones throw from our house was amazing. They sometimes sit under a Willow tree and our daughter’s middle name is Willow, so it all came together…

Who are you? Owns the bookshop?

We’re a family business, but it is mainly me (Dean) who runs things day to day. We’re not big at all! But we are in the centre of Jedburgh in a great location in The Scottish Borders.

Why a bookshop? What made you want to get into bookselling?

I think I almost love bookshops more than books. I think they are special places, despite (or perhaps because) each one is different. We opened in April 2023 and this is our first experience of running a bookshop, or any kind of shop. But I think books and stories are really important in lots of ways. I wanted to find something to do in my community that felt useful and worthwhile, and being a bookshop was the thing.

How do you choose the books you stock?

I’m learning the seasonality of the book trade, and that’s especially relevant where we are, as tourism is big in the summer. But essentially, it’s things that I think sound interesting and that would turn my eye if I saw them in a bookshop. In that respect, I think it helps I’ve been a bookshop customer for so many years. That definitely helps with non-fiction and we’ve had lovely feedback on our variety, despite being small. For fiction, I search out less obvious titles and usually just have one copy of everything, turning things over quickly. And I also stock vinyl which has proved to be very popular. New records sit well alongside books – with my background in music it was pretty much the only part of the shop I had confidence in to start with, but the rest is coming on now!

What’s the best thing about being a bookseller?

There are two best things; the first is when a delivery arrives! I usually half forget what I ordered so it’s a fresh joy to unpack the boxes and get them out on the shelves. The other is simply when people come in the shop. Because we aren’t huge I can say hello to everyone as they arrive and I like to hear where they’ve come from if on their travels, or get to know the locals better. I like it best when young children are in, drawing on our play table or discovering the reading nook.


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Independent Bookshops and the Community

Forum Bookshop

Forum Bookshop

I was following a conversation on a group on Facebook (I know, I know) and it was pointed out that people don’t seem to realise the services that local, independent bookshops offer.

Most independent bookshops are a wonderfully curated collection of books for you to spend time in and get that right book for you from the shelf there and then. If the shop doesn’t have that one specific book you are looking for the vast majority of shops can (and are more than pleased to) order that book in for you and it will usually take less than 48 hours for it to arrive.

In fact independent bookshops can offer all the services of the larger bookshops, ordering, pre-ordering, and book searches (and none of these are offered by the supermarkets, petrol stations or other bookselling oddities). They also offer something that you will never find on Amazon, tailored and personal service that actually listens to you as an individual rather than an algorithm.

This carries through to the other services that bookshops offer. Activities, events, social evenings, and much, much more.

A lot of local bookshops also run outreach activities, getting books into schools, including with their authors, and these efforts are becoming recognised as being really important and bookshops are becoming an integral part of the village/town/city once again.

An of example of this is Drake’s Bookshop in Stockton, whilst not only being a Regional winner of Independent Bookshop of the Year, is now in the running for Britain’s Best Small Shop. This is due to the hard work of the owners and staff in putting on an exciting array of events and activities throughout the year, but also for championing reading as an important part of education and championing independent bookshops as an important factor in facilitating this.

So get yourself out there and find a local independent bookshop (you can use the maps to find your nearest) and see what they have to offer you, it will often be much more than you were expecting.


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El Ateneo Grand Splendid, Buenos Aires, Argentina

El Ateneo Grand Splendid, Buenos Aires

El Ateneo Grand Splendid, Buenos Aires

According to British newspaper The Guardian, El Ateneo Grand Splendid is the second best bookstore in the world.

It preserves the splendour and elegance of the former Gran Splendid theatre/cinema, which was designed by architects Peró and Torres Armengol.

Located in the Recoleta neighbourhood, El Grand Spendid theatre opened in 1919 and immediately became a beacon of porteño culture, hosting ballet, opera, and the first “talkies” shown in Buenos Aires. The national Odeon record label – now owned by EMI – was based here, and singers such as Carlos Gardel recorded on the premises.

The venue even gave birth to its own radio station, LR4 Radio Splendid, which began transmitting from the building in 1923.

Av. Sta. Fe 1860, C1123 CABA, ArgentinaThe venue was converted into a bookstore in the year 2000, beautifully preserving the original decoration, including the dome, which was painted with frescoes by Italian Nazareno Orlandi. The store stocks around 120,000 books and there is a bar on what was the stage area of the theatre, where you can drink a coffee while reading.

There are comfy chairs around the shop, making browsing for books here a real pleasure. The basement is dedicated to children’s books, and the upper floor is used for exhibitions and displays.

Contact:

Avenida Santa Fe 1860, C1123 CABA, Argentina

Telephone: +54 11 4813-6052
Business hours: Monday to Thursday 9am-10pm; Friday & Saturday 9am-12am; Sunday 12pm-10pm

El Ateneo Grand Splendid, Buenos Aires

El Ateneo Grand Splendid, Buenos Aires


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Paper Based Bookshop, St. Clair, Trinidad and Tobago

Paper Based Bookshop, St Clair

Paper Based Bookshop, St Clair

Established in 1987, Paper Based Bookshop is one of the oldest bookshops in Trinidad, and the only one specializing in Caribbean literature. Originally tucked into the Shops at The Hotel Normandie, St. Ann’s, Paper Based offers the latest titles and classic reads, in Caribbean fiction, poetry, non-fiction, art and photography, cookbooks, nature writing and others, as well as a proudly curated selection of children’s books.

Established by Joan Dayal, winner of the 2017 Bocas Henry Swanzy Award for Distinguished Service to Caribbean Letters, Paper Based hosts a popular Tea and Readings series, showcasing the talents of emerging and established writers, as well as a yearly Advent Calendar of book recommendations.

In August 2023, Paper Based Bookshop made the momentous move to The Writers Centre, home of the Bocas Lit Fest, at 14 Alcazar Street, St. Clair. Now managed by Bianca Peake, including the same Paper Based team (and Joan herself in a valued advisory role), Paper Based Bookshop remains a cozy hub for all things Caribbean and bookish, with sights set on a new, exciting era of local, community-oriented bookselling.

Contact:

The Writer’s Centre, 14 Alcazar Street, St. Clair, Trinidad and Tobago

Telephone: +1 868-628-3197
Email: info@paperbasedbookshop.com
Website: paperbased.org
Twitter: @paperbasedbooks
Instagram: @paperbasedbookshop
Facebook: www.facebook.com/PaperBasedBookshop

Paper Based Bookshop, St Clair

Paper Based Bookshop, St Clair


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Java Bookshop, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Java Bookshop, Amsterdam

Java Bookshop, Amsterdam

The Java Bookshop is an independent bookstore with a wide selection of Dutch and English world literature. Our collection also includes non-fiction books, thrillers, children’s books and cookbooks.

We are happy to offer the broadly interested reader personal and expert advice. You can choose a book in a relaxed atmosphere.

Would you like to order a book? Come visit, call or email! We can have most titles delivered the next working day.

Contact:

Javastraat 145, 1094 HE Amsterdam, Netherlands

Telephone: +31 20 463 4993
Email: info@javabookshop.nl
Website: www.javabookshop.nl
Twitter: @JavaBookshop
Instagram: @javabookshop
Facebook: www.facebook.com/javabookshop

Java Bookshop, Amsterdam

Java Bookshop, Amsterdam


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College Street Books, Ammanford, Wales

College Street Books, Ammanford

College Street Books, Ammanford

Established in 2004 in the Carmarthenshire town of Ammanford, we provide a friendly, personal service to walk-in customers and online shoppers alike. We are known for our excellent stock of local history books and books from Wales in general, but we stock quality fiction and non-fiction for a broader audience, too. We offer an out-of-print book search service, and our long experience and local knowledge give us an edge in this area when it comes to Welsh publications. For new publications, we can supply any book which is in print.

Contact:

15 College Street, Ammanford, SA18 3AB

Telephone: 07434 975578
Email: collegestreetbooks@btconnect.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/College-Street-Books-474200226018325/

College Street Books, Ammanford

College Street Books, Ammanford


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