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New chapter for racially diverse bookstores: Steady growth, wider reach

Nikki High quit her corporate job last year to fulfill her dream of creating a BIPOC bookstore – a safe space where all readers can access a wide selection of books by writers of color. She named Octavia’s Bookshelf after prize-winning science fiction writer Octavia E. Butler and opened it in February in the writer’s Southern California hometown of Pasadena.  

BIPOC writers deserve exposure year-round, Ms. High says, not only during Black History month. “These are important stories that we should all be reading.”

Why We Wrote This

The pandemic reading boom brings an uptick of new BIPOC bookstores. They offer stories by people of color – “important stories that we should all be reading,” says one owner who opened her dream store last month.

It is a buoyant but uncertain time for independent bookstores. Many are thriving on the pandemic-driven surge in reading and support for local business and, of 203 bookstores opened in 2022, 40 were owned by people of color, reports the American Booksellers Association.

At the February opening, Ms. High saw the community she envisioned take shape. Students, local poets, curious neighbors, and entire book clubs turned up in a line that snaked down the block.

“Ms. Butler would probably see Octavia’s Bookshelf “as a strong sign,” notes Lynell George, the author of “A Handful of Earth, A Handful of Sky,” a book about Ms. Butler.  “It’s a flag in the ground. We’re still here – our stories matter.”

When Nikki High quit her corporate communications job last year to open a bookstore in Octavia E. Butler’s Southern California hometown, it made perfect sense to name it after the prize-winning science fiction writer.

Ms. High was a kid growing up in Pasadena when Ms. Butler was a young adult. She likes to imagine they crossed paths in grocery stores or the large central library they both considered a haven. As a teen, Ms. High read “Kindred,” Ms. Butler’s 1979 classic novel about time travel and slavery. And she turned to it again and again as an adult. She recommended “Parable of the Sower” to book-loving friends long before it hit bestseller lists and was singled out for its prescient themes of climate change and racial and political tensions.

Octavia’s Bookshelf opened Feb. 18 in a former yoga studio not far from Ms. Butler’s childhood homes and in sight of the bus line the famously car-averse writer used to take around the city.

Why We Wrote This

The pandemic reading boom brings an uptick of new BIPOC bookstores. They offer stories by people of color – “important stories that we should all be reading,” says one owner who opened her dream store last month.

Ms. High has a five-year lease and a plan that has been percolating for years: create a safe space where all readers can access a wide selection of books by writers of color, from icons like Ms. Butler and James Baldwin to up-and-coming authors of children’s books, memoirs, and short stories. 

Writers of color deserve exposure year-round, Ms. High says, not only during February, when Black History Month displays turn up at larger bookstores, only to disappear the rest of the year: “Books aren’t just written for a specific type of person or group. These are important stories that we should all be reading.”

JENNA SCHOENEFELD/SPECIAL TO THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR

Nikki High left her corporate career to open Octavia’s Bookshelf in Pasadena, California. Her dream is to create a safe space where all readers can access a wide selection of books by writers of color.

Octavia’s Bookshelf opens at a buoyant but uncertain time for independent bookstores. Many are thriving, thanks to a pandemic-driven surge in reading and support for local businesses. 

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