small bookstores

8 Great Small Bookstores in the Northeast

What could be better than browsing through some of the most unique small bookstores in the Northeast? Finding that special book and then continuing your day by exploring some of the most charming towns in the area.

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Island Bound Bookstore

Block Island, R.I.

Located next door to the Block Island post office, the Island Bound Bookstore is open year-round. Owner Susan Bush capitalized on this prime location, selling books for day trippers to take to the beach or pick up to pass the time on a rainy day. Discover the extensive collection of books, including those about the history of the island and plenty of books for children vacationing with their family.

Island Bound Book store has hosted several famous visitors including Frank McCourt and the great Walter Cronkite. Surround yourself with the fresh sea air and enjoy your book.

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Northshire Book Store

Manchester, Vt.

Located in the heart of the Green Mountains in a town that looks like a Norman Rockwell painting, you will find the Northshire Book Store.

The book shop is in a building that was the Colburn House Hotel for over 100 years. ā€œOur store is full of nooks and crannies, making your search for just the right book a charming adventure,ā€ said co-owner Nicole Ihasz.

 Between the in-house books and their extensive online collection, the booksellers at Northshire have access to over 10 million titles. After finding the perfect book, check out their amazing array of gifts including art supplies, Mount Mansfield maple products and the interesting Angry Goat Pepper Co.

Titcombā€™s Bookshop

Sandwich, Mass.

Sandwich is the oldest town on Cape Cod, home to the Heritage Museum and Gardens, the world-famous Sandwich Glass Museum and Titcombā€™s Bookshop.

Titcombā€™s features three floors of unique books and gifts. The main floor has a mix of today’s bestselling books; the top floor has used books, a remarkable collection of antiquarian books and old Life magazines; and the basement is packed with enough toys to fill Santaā€™s workshop.

Over the years, Titcombā€™s has hosted visits by many celebrity authors including Jeff Kinney, Jodi Picoult and, the ā€œFonzā€ himself, Henry Winkler.

The Book Barn

Niantic, Conn.

The Book Barn is unusual in the best way. Here you can wander around tiny gardens and a series of buildings that look like sheds stuffed with an inventory of 400,000 used books.

ā€œWe have regular visitors from Japan, Norway, France and India, which just shows how far people will go to get a bargain,ā€ said Glen Shea, who has been selling books for over 20 years.

The Book Barn buys used books. Park your car, fill up a cart with your old books and strike a deal with one of the booksellers. Summer is the busiest season, when they sometimes purchase between 10,000 and 15,000 books a week, according to Shea.

River Run Bookstore

Portsmouth, N.H.

River Run has the distinction of not only being a novel bookstore, but it will also help you with the tools to write your own book. In addition to books, owner Tom Holbrook sells used typewriters.

Customers bring in their battered old typewriters, and Holbrook repairs and sells them in his store. ā€œStrange as it may seem, young people are the biggest buyers of the typewriters,ā€ he said. ā€œI had one 10-year-old girl who saved her own money to buy a typewriter.ā€

About a third of River Runā€™s books are used, with the balance being new titles. While searching the shelves, you pass through an arch made of old discarded books. Itā€™s a special shop enjoyed by the residents and visitors to the seaside town of Portsmouth.  

Brattle Book Shop

Boston

When it comes to describing the contents of Bostonā€™s Brattle Book Shop, bookseller Zach Marconi said it best: ā€œHere you can buy 10,000 books for as little as $1 each or buy one book that costs t$10,000.ā€

In a tiny plaza outside the bookstore are bins stuffed with used books at bargain prices. Upon entering the store, you can continue your browsing on three floors. The first two floors are filled with used books, and the top floor offers rare books for your library at home. The stock changes every day so you never know what you can find.

ā€œI have customers who come into the store every day,ā€ said owner Ken Gloss. ā€œIf somebody is home sick, they will call and find out what new books are in. When it comes to books, they donā€™t want to miss anything.ā€

Willis Monie Books

Cooperstown, N.Y.

In Cooperstown, you will find plenty of books about baseball. But at Willis Monie Books, you will find the largest stock of out-of-print baseball books in the country.  Although customers come to this small bookstore searching for all types of books, including Americana, art, history, fiction and thousands of mystery titles.

The business sells used books only. Monie and his son, Willis Monie Jr., are members of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America. And if you canā€™t find that special book youā€™re looking for, Monie has over 100,000 books listed online that he can search for you.

Mockingbird Bookshop

Bath, Maine

Bath is known for its shipyard, which produced destroyers for World War II in as little as 17 days. Today Bath draws tourists to its Maritime Museum and unique shops like the Mockingbird Bookshop.

The cozy store offers a very diverse collection of books, greeting cards and stickers. ā€œWe get a great deal of business from tourists in the summer looking for that special gift,” said owner Terri Schultz. ā€œWe have all styles of literary gifts, art supplies and handcrafted gifts.ā€

One of the special services is offered by Schultz’s 8-year-old daughter, Olivia, who said: ā€œI love hanging out in the back of the shop making bookmarks to sell at our store,.” Is there a better gift than a bookmark crafted by the child of a bookseller?

If you like books, youā€™ll love these literature-themed road trips in the Northeast.

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What is your favorite small bookstore? Tell us in the comments.

44 Thoughts on “8 Great Small Bookstores in the Northeast

  1. As others have mention, the Montague Book Mill. “Books you don’t need, in a place you can’t find”.
    I don’t go for books, I go to the Lady Killigrew coffee and food shop. Best coffee in the valley. Nice to sit by the windows overlooking the river that runs by, especially in the spring when the water’s running high, or the fall when the trees reflect in the quieter stream.

    Ask for coffee with a shot of cocoa in it.

  2. Odyssey Bookshop in So. Hadley, MA deserves mention also. Also, Brookline Booksmith in Brookline, MA.

  3. This is a well written piece. Quite informative, especially for those of us who might want to sell some used books in the future.
    It gives the reader an idea of different book stores on and off of the beaten path.
    Everyone should remember that with any article there are always different choices-same as ice cream flavors.
    I am looking forward to another piece by this author.

  4. Books & Co in the Whitneyville neighborhood in Hamden, CT. 13,000 like-new used books, the best selection of greeting cards, featuring local artists & photographers, and a huge ever-changing selection of fair trade gift items, locally made art and crafts, and the best coffee bar in town!

  5. Bearly Read Books in Sudbury!! Particularly the wonderful collections in both History and Science Fiction – covering the subjects of what has happened, and what might happen. Also, comfy chairs and knowledgeable proprietor.

    1. I was going to suggest that store, too. We loved it. We lived closer to Northshire Books, which we also loved.

  6. Friends of the Library, 141 Boardman Road, Poughkeepsie NY,12603. There is an extensive selection of used books, DVDs, and audiobooks at great prices, $2.00 or less, with excellent volunteer staff. Come and visit.

  7. After you visit Willis Monie Books, if you still have room in your car for more books, visit Hobart Book Village of the Catskills, Main St./State Route 10, Hobart, NY, where you’ll find Adams’ Books, Blenheim Hill Books, Creative Corner Books, Liberty Rock Books, LionEyesBooks, More Good Books, NY Books & Ephemera, and Quarry Books. Two humongous sales are held on the weekends of Memorial Day and Thanksgiving Day.

  8. Yellow House Books in Great Barrington MA; Odyssey Bookshop in South Hadley MA; Symposium Bookstore in Providence RI

  9. The Montague Bookmill, just 12 miles north of Amherst, MA, is a hidden treasure trove of used books. Housed in a moderately-renovated 1834 gristmill, its comfy upholstered chairs, 40,000 books and deck overlook a waterfall and rippling millstream. A magical peace of place envelopes book lovers here. It’s adjacent to the Lady Killigrew Cafe and the Watershed Restaurant, as well as a music shop, creating a destination unto itself.

  10. You missed Watchung Booksellers in Montclair, NJ. It’s one of the leading Independent Bookstores in the country. Great books, great staff and a wonderful place to spend hours browsing. Kudos to them for staying open during Covid and figuring out how to get books into people’s hands throughout the pandemic.

  11. Check out The Next Chapter in Huntington LI NY. The manager from the famous but now out of business Book Revue decided to continue with an independent bookstore in the community. Good selection of both used and new books.

  12. You should add “An Unlikely Story” in Plainville, Massachusetts which is owned by author, Jeff Kinney. Small but great selection and the staff is always willing to chat and make recommendations.

  13. How could you possibly leave Jabberwocky, in the seaside town of Newburyport, Massachusetts off of your list of great bookstores. Looks like AAA doesnā€™t get out of their Newburyport office much, despite their helpful presence at the other end of town!

    1. Ditto…I was also going to recommend Jabberwocky, great selection, good food nearby, well worth a trip.

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