Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Vaughn's Book Store. / 42.38194°N 83.12583°W / 42.38194; -83.12583. Vaughn's Book Store is a commercial building and former bookstore located at 12115–12123 Dexter Avenue in Detroit. It was the first Black -owned bookstore in Detroit. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2023.
In 1971 it was moved to the Michigan Theatre in downtown Detroit. In 1983 King purchased the abandoned Advance Glove factory, which has since housed the store's collections. [6] [11] Later [ when? ] , two smaller stores were opened: John K. King Books North in Detroit's Ferndale suburb and The Big Book Store in the Cass Corridor neighborhood ...
Harvard Book Store, Cambridge. The Bookmill in Montague. Globe Corner Bookstore † in Cambridge. Grolier Poetry Bookshop in Cambridge. Harvard Book Store in Cambridge. Lucy Parsons Center in Boston. New Words Bookstore † in Cambridge. The Odyssey Bookshop in South Hadley. Schoenhof's Foreign Books in Cambridge.
Crowley's. Crowley Milner and Company, generally referred to as Crowley's, was a department store chain founded in Detroit, Michigan, in 1909. After several years of financial difficulties, the company ceased operation in 1999 and its assets were sold.
Century House (publisher) Charter Communications (publisher) Cheap Street Press. Chelsea Publishing Company. Robert Clarke & Company. Creative Age Press. Crocker & Brewster. Crowell-Collier Publishing Company. Cupples & Leon.
At the end of a strip mall in Lakewood sits the city’s newest (and only) independent bookstore. Owner Shannon Grover has taken steps to make The Lakewood Bookstore feel homey. The back room of ...
W. Wheels (novel) Categories: Detroit in fiction. Novels set in the United States by city. Novels set in Michigan. Books about Detroit.
Founded by Milton and Lenore Marwil in 1948, Marwil Bookstore was Detroit's oldest independent bookstore. The store was family owned until 1983, when it was sold to Lily Kramer. The original location on Woodward was left behind in the early 1970s in favor of a new space on Cass and Warren housed in a 3,000-square-foot (280 m 2) retail storefront.