New Words co-founder Gilda Bruckman |
New Words bookstore
Location: 186 Hampshire Street, Inman Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Opened: April 1974
Closed: October 6, 2002
I actually remember going here back in the 1980s....
Here's a selection from the obituary for New Words bookstore--from The Phoenix. (The same article also discusses the demise of Sojourner's, a feminist newspaper that started in 1975.)
Just as important, New Words was the only place that sought links among women’s literature, political writing, and the nascent feminist movement. While mainstream bookstores, even sophisticated ones, boasted at best a shelf or two of "women’s books," New Words championed rising feminist authors such as Dorothy Allison, Marge Piercy, and Alice Walker, and poets such as June Jordan and Adrienne Rich, according their work the same respect and cultural importance that the mainstream routinely bestowed upon, say, Norman Mailer, John Updike, or Hunter Thompson.
These days, New Words, true to form, is still offering something its customers would never find at Barnes & Noble or even Amazon.com: "Grief counseling," says management, only half-joking. That’s because on October 6, New Words closed the doors of its long-time digs at 186 Hampshire Street in Inman Square. It is the end of an era for the oldest continuously operating women’s bookstore in the US. But its founders, who still run the store, stress that it is also a new beginning for New Words. The management is in the middle of a long-term plan to transform the bookstore into the Center for New Words (CNW), a nonprofit literary, educational, and cultural center that, for now, continues to offer readings and live performances in its old space. By next year, plans call for a new, bigger, and more accessible CNW somewhere in Cambridge, where readings and events will be the focus.
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