Insight

The Intersection of faith, culture, and politics
Friday
February 6th, 2026Insight
As winter settles in and daylight fades early, Americans long have turned to books for comfort, curiosity and company. The good news this holiday season is that the bookstores which make that habit possible are rebounding, too.
In the late 1990s, many book lovers often looked with scorn upon the likes of Barnes & Noble and the now-defunct Borders, favoring the dusty shelves of their preferred independent book haunt.
Fast-forward to now and bookstores of any kind have been harder to come by in many communities. The old bookstore wars are over. In an age of Amazon dominance, readers have learned to root for anyone selling physical books, and that enthusiasm appears to be paying off.
Barnes & Noble is leading the charge, opening nearly 70 new stores this year with plans to add another 60 in the new year.
“2025 has been a fantastic year for us,” Barnes & Noble CEO James Daunt told CNBC on Dec. 15. To be sure, not all Barnes & Noble locations are built alike, with some maintaining a smaller footprint wedged into strip malls while others maintain the standalone, bulky presence many identify with the brand. Examples of both versions can be found peppered through Chicago and its suburbs.
Discussing what may be behind this positive news, Daunt said the naysayers might tell you books do really well during a recession. He had a more hopeful perspective, crediting strong releases from the publishing world and a growing thirst for book supply among the public. While COVID was awful in so many ways, it appears pandemic lockdowns had the effect of igniting a love of reading in lots more folks — making it possible for the bookstore ecosystem to grow.
“Once you get into the habit of reading books — and that clearly happened during the pandemic — you retain that habit,” Daunt said. He also noted that tariffs, which have hindered so many other industries, have had “virtually no impact” on books.
These good habits aren’t just bolstering big brands like Barnes & Noble, they’re leading to a resurgence of independent booksellers, too. The American Booksellers Association reported that more than 420 new bookstores opened this year, part of a rebirth of bookshops after the initial Amazon/big-box shock that caused so many to go under.
We found it interesting to follow the timeline of this evolution by tracking ABA’s membership, which peaked in 1995 with 5,500 members across 7,000 stores before dropping as of 2009 to 1,401 members across 1,641 locations. The group’s most recent numbers from 2022 — 2,178 members at 2,593 locations — reflect an ecosystem that is rebounding modestly postpandemic.
We couldn’t be happier. To read is to learn, to feel, to expand your horizons beyond the tiny corner of the world you occupy. To come to the realization that you are but one small part of a much bigger world without ever leaving your sofa.
And if more people are coming to this realization, all the better for us all.
(COMMENT, BELOW)
Chicago Tribune
(TNS)
Previously:
• 12/04/25: In praise of the handwritten card
• 10/16/25: From The Free Press to CBS, Bari Weiss' principles are stellar journalistic ideals
• 10/03/25: Kamala Harris should have thought more of her fellow Americans
• 09/30/25: Google's admission of censorship during COVID shows jawboning cuts both ways
• 09/09/25: Biometric privacy laws must evolve with the times
• 09/09/25: Biometric privacy laws must evolve with the times
• 08/26/25: What Justice Barrett's words on disagreement can teach us
• 08/21/25: Who's afraid of a healthy school lunch?
• 08/06/25: Joe Rogan belonged on Time's list of best podcasts
• 07/22/25: At a Coldplay concert, a kiss cam catches a cuddle and ruins lives
• 06/26/25: Want to know how a socialist mayor would govern New York City? Just ask Chicago
• 06/11/25: Hoping for a bond market crash to take down MAGA?
• 05/06/25: The Biden health saga should remind the media to tell the truth
• 05/06/25: Dems are doubling down on vulgar language. To what end?
• 02/25/25: Antisemitic fears in Windy City coalesce around a controversial puppet
• 02/05/25: Want a low-stress job with lots of time off? This state says it wants to recruit you
• 01/28/25: We are in a mental health crisis. A 'moonshot' is needed
• 11/07/24: Trump's win was a stunning repudiation of the chattering classes
• 03/21/24: Crypto's improbable comeback is cause for cheer --- and prudence
• 02/20/24: Don't write off fake meat just yet
• 11/23/23: Critical thinking is losing out to TikTok. A Thanksgiving intervention might help
• 11/23/23: Did the maker of Oreos surreptitiously cut the creme-to-cookie ratio?
• 11/15/23: David Cameron, a former British PM, makes a surprise return as Suella Braverman gets the chop. Is there a lesson here for the US?
• 10/23/23: Turns out it's bad business to jack prices just because you can
• 09/28/23: Here's why President Joe Biden should not have joined the UAW picket line
• 07/28/23: Surprise! Some good news from the IRS
• 06/07/23: Supreme Court just fired a shot at delinquent property taxes
• 05/05/23: Can't force an unprofitable grocery store to remain open
• 03/06/23: A powerful paper comes clean about its 'China virus' coverage
• 02/08/22: Facebook flops and The New York Times buys a puzzle. What's going on?
© 2026 Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.