Bookshop.org Announces Shortlist for New Futures Programme

It includes BAME, neurodiverse, LGBTQ+, and visually and hearing impaired as well as mental health advocates.
A bookshop.org store. Image by Book Culture.

A bookshop.org store. Image by Book Culture.

Bookshop.org Announces Shortlist for New Futures Programme

Bookshop.org, the ethically conscious book-buying platform on a mission to support independent bookshops, and The Booksellers Association (BA) have revealed the shortlist for New Futures, a new programme to select, reach, and foster entrepreneurs from underrepresented communities across the UK to open a new independent bookshop.

The New Futures initiative encouraged applicants from a wide range of backgrounds, including individuals who identified as Black and other marginalised ethnicities, LGBTQIA+, working class, physically disabled, neurodiverse, sufferers of mental health issues, and those with learning disabilities, amongst others.

Receiving 32 application from all over the UK, the shortlisted entrants include Black collectives, indie publishers, mental health advocates, visually and hearing impaired individuals, trained nurses, PhD students, members of the queer and transgender community, bilingual lovers of literature in translation, and more.

The New Futures full shortlist and their vision:

Jacaranda – Brent, London

A shop in which the work of Black, Brown and marginalised people whether by gender or sexual orientation are centred and exalted.

Black Feminist Bookshop – South-east London

A bookshop, events and social space built on the works and legacies of Black feminist writers.

The Otaku Project – Cardiff, Wales

A welcoming space for those keen to discover and connect over Manga and graphic novels from a neurodiverse bookseller.

GCL Books – Alton, Hampshire

A bookshop that seeks to be a catalytic force in their community to support mental health – particularly for young people.

Yellow Bird Book Club – Beeston, Nottingham

A bookshop drawing inspiration from Afro-Caribbean heritage to help children find unique and inclusive books.

Atypicalreader – Edmonton, London

A plan for a children’s bookshop in one of the most ethically-diverse areas of London.

Elizabeth Yates – Carlisle, Cumbria

An accessible, inspiring community bookshop – from a hearing and visually-impaired entrepreneur – with the help of the Word Dogs!

Olive’s Book club – Newcastle, Tyne and Wear

A working class, queer bookshop in Newcastle from a nurse deeply embedded in the local writing and LGBTQ+ community.

Bookwyrm – Durham, Co. Durham

A bookshop and craft space from a couple (queer, trans) who are deeply connected to both their LGBTQ+ and writing community.

Books Bakes Blethers – Dunfermline, Scotland

Baking meets book in a bookshop run by a member of the LGBTQ+ community in Dunfermline.

Ellen Tout – Canterbury, Kent

An event and drag-inspired bookshop from a queer couple in Canterbury.

Therapy In Progress – West Croydon, London

A bookshop for the BAME community from a social health care worker.

OKHA, the queer + Black book club – Stratford, London

A bookshop that seeks to make stories from the African, Caribbean and Afro-Latinx fam accessible to all.

7 Pages – West Sussex

A bookshop from a Turkish / Spanish-speaking book-lover.

westwords – Greenock/Gourock, Scotland

A community bookseller in Inverclyde from an entrepreneur overcoming chronic health issues and supporting other sufferers.

Community Books – Maida Vale, London

An inclusive bookshop in an area on London with dramatic wealth inequality from an Irish/Indian heritage entrepreneur wealth inequality. 

The shortlist was selected by novelist, screenwriter, and journalist Nikesh Shukla; founder and CEO of Beautystack and The Stack World Sharmadean Reid; HarperCollins’s Talent and Audience Development Manager Nancy Adimora; The Bookseller Editor Philip Jones; indie booksellers at Independent Bookshop of the Year Sevenoaks Bookshop Fleur Sinclair; and Mairi Oliver, owner of Lighthouse Bookshop – Edinburgh’s Radical Bookshop.

The 16 shortlisted candidates will now receive a series of hands-on sessions through a concentrated education programme from industry partners in retail, technology, and the book trade—including The Booksellers Association, Gardners, The Bookseller, Midas, and publishers including Simon and Schuster and Faber & Faber.

The aim of the education sessions is to support candidates as they build a viable business plan for a multichannel bookshop. The programme will include sessions on market analysis, marketing strategy, logistics and operations, team management, financials, curation and merchandising, digital marketing, PR activity, and more.

Nancy Adimora, Talent and Audience Development Manager, Diversity & Inclusion at HarperCollins Publishers, said: “I was blown away, not only by the quality of the submissions we received, but by how they reaffirmed the need for a programme like this. I’m incredibly proud of this shortlist and I’m looking forward to the next phase of this programme which will see applicants receiving the support needed to turn their ideas into reality.”

The New Futures finalists will be announced this spring during The London Book Fair, which will take in person at Olympia London between 5-7 April 2022.

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