How A Family Bookstore Became A City Landmark
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In this episode, I chat with Andrea and Jordan Minter, third-generation managers of Russell Books in Victoria, British Columbia. Ww trace how a packed Montreal dining room helped spark a business that grew into one of Canada’s most beloved independent bookstores.
We talk about what it’s really like to manage a high-volume shop that carries new books, used books, antiquarian and rare books, remainders, and signed copies. Andrea and Jordan explain how daily trade-ins and estate buying shape the shelves in unpredictable waves, why regulars keep coming back to browse, and how modern systems make it possible to shelve new and used editions side by side without losing track of inventory. If you care about book curation, bookselling instincts, and the quiet craft behind a great browsing experience, you’ll leave with a clearer picture of what keeps an indie bookshop thriving.
Then we get into the fun: the surprising items found inside secondhand books and the behind-the-scenes story of Russell Books’ Guinness World Record book tower built for their grand opening in 2019. We close with what they’re reading right now and a few Victoria travel tips for hiking trails, coffee shops, bakeries, and the local food scene. Subscribe, share this with a fellow book lover, and leave a review wherever you listen.
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