With new stores in Wilmington, Dover, independent bookstores make a resurgence in Delaware

In September, Dawn Fair did something no one had done in Delaware’s Kent County for more than four years: She turned on the lights and opened a bookstore.

It had been her dream all her adult life to open a bookshop, Fair said — a plan that became reality after the pandemic gave her the spur she needed to change careers. When she opened the doors of Dawn’s Books and Stuff, she found a literary populace quite eager to see her.

“They were all happy that there's finally a bookstore in Dover,” she said. “The closest store was a Barnes & Noble in Christiana,” she said, a 40-minute drive on a good day.

During the intervening span, Kent had effectively been a dry county, at least where bookstores were concerned. The last full-service bookshop, Acorn Books in Smyrna, had gone away in May of 2019.

Acorn’s owner, Ginny Jewell, told The News Journal a story that had become grimly familiar: Her little shop just couldn’t compete with online sellers like Amazon. Not while paying $40,000 in commercial rent.

Owner Dawn Fair opened Dawn's Books and Stuff in September 2023 at 2296 Forrest Ave. in Dover. The store is likely the first full-service bookstore in Kent County since the closure of Smyrna and Dover's Acorn Books in 2019.
Owner Dawn Fair opened Dawn's Books and Stuff in September 2023 at 2296 Forrest Ave. in Dover. The store is likely the first full-service bookstore in Kent County since the closure of Smyrna and Dover's Acorn Books in 2019.

The state’s largest city faced a similar situation. After beloved longtime shop Ninth Street Book Shop shut down in 2018, Wilmington was likewise left without a full-service bookseller.

But since the pandemic, there's been a perhaps surprising resurgence. The local bookstore has come back with a vengeance, not just in Delaware but across the country.

Less than a month after Dawn’s Books and Stuff opened in Dover, an ambitious bookstore called Huxley & Hiro arrived in downtown Wilmington with great pomp and a visit from the mayor.

“There’s something about a bookstore that flies in the face of the idiocy that’s taking place in so many parts of the country these days,” Wilmington Mayor Mike Purzycki said at Huxley’s October opening. “A bookstore symbolizes the stretching and enlarging of the American mind and not the constriction of it.”

Claire van den Broek (left) and Ryan Eanes (right) opened Huxley and Hiro in October in downtown Wilmington.
Claire van den Broek (left) and Ryan Eanes (right) opened Huxley and Hiro in October in downtown Wilmington.

The surge in bookstores began amid lower rents and higher interest in reading during the pandemic. Huxley co-owner Claire van den Broek believes that people pent up during the pandemic also craved a physical place to go, and that bookstores meet the needs of a young generation tired of spending time trapped at home with screens.

“We think that there's demand for a space like a bookstore,” she said. “We certainly see among younger generations, like Gen Z, that they're interested in coming into physical bookstores. … They want a space where they can physically meet, or they can browse. They want that experience that generations before them have had for many years.”

A wave of independent bookstores are opening all over the country

The demise of the corner bookstore was always a little exaggerated, perhaps — even amid the rise of online booksellers such as Amazon.