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| Sandmeyer's Bookstore |
By tradition, the Word of the Year for readers eight days into 2026 should always be "resolutions;" or, perhaps more specifically, "reading goals." The Guardian's illustrator Tom Gauld pre-emptively addressed this last Sunday with his take on "The Five Stages of Grieving for an Overambitious Reading Resolution."
Sandmeyer's Bookstore, Chicago, Ill., however, is opting for a more positive approach: "Make us part of your reading goals this year! Join the 26 books in 2026 challenge! Stop in the store to sign up!"
Another evergreen New Year's tradition, of course, is predicting the future. The Bookseller asked several industry leaders to gaze into the bookish crystal ball and share their prophecies on "what lies ahead for the book industry in 2026."
"Predictions are a fool's errand in today's world," Penguin Random House UK CEO Tom Weldon observed. "So instead of forecasts, here is a hope and a belief. I hope the industry seizes the National Year of Reading as a moment to act together--to spark curiosity and to create a new generation of readers who see books not as relics of the past, but as companions to a world where technology is today's reality.... And my belief? Books are the ultimate invention.... Our task now isn't just to publish brilliant human-led content, but to reach those who don't yet call themselves readers. If we do that, we won't just celebrate 2026, we'll build a lasting legacy for the future of reading. I believe we can. I hope we will."
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| At Prologue Bookshop, Columbus, Ohio |
Meryl Halls, managing director of the Booksellers Association of the U.K. & Ireland, said: "As we head into 2026, I find myself repeating a familiar message. Bookshops of every kind continue to adapt with impressive agility and creativity. They innovate commercially yet stay true to their core principles: serving their communities, promoting reading for pleasure, and distributing the U.K.'s creative industries. With the National Year of Reading approaching, booksellers are ready to play an active and visible part, and bookshops will cement their role as the best place to discover and experience a love of reading, whether newly discovered or reignited. This moment feels made for them....
"Booksellers have a habit of finding a way through. They come out stronger and more united each time. We believe they will do so again. Yet the constant need for them to step up, while it can feel that others fail to step up for them, is exhausting. That fatigue is a real danger as we look to the year ahead; our job is to continue to energize our sector and allow them to inspire each other and excel in their crucial role."
In Canada, a recent CBC News article proclaimed " 'The Internet Is Dead.' Long Live Print", noting: "There is a communication technology that allows you to get your art and ideas out without depending on a corporate middleman. You can't be shadowbanned. You can create unmoderated, unmediated communities. The production cost is almost unfathomably low. And it's about 600 years old. The technology in question, of course, is print."
Tara Bursey, a veteran zine-maker who also runs Partizanka Press, distributing zines from around the world, told CBC News that in the past several years, she has seen a new interest in zines from teens and people in their 20s. She attributes the movement to a sort of "digital fatigue," even though zinesters aren't avoiding modern technology entirely.
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| At Roebling Books, Covington, Ky. |
"You have people who are very young coming to zines through the internet, seeing them online and then wanting to make them and... they're integrating digital tools," Bursey said. "And I think right now we have the best of both worlds, and the community is growing."
She added that in an age when the digital communication tools are becoming less reliable, and more and more tightly controlled, a return to old-school print is a resistance movement: "I think people are really interested in moving back to the physical as a way of reclaiming their voices and reclaiming agency in a very overly digitized world."
In 2007, I wrote my first New Year column for Shelf Awareness, citing something called the Edge World Question Center and its "Edge Annual Question," which asked: "What are you optimistic about? Why?" Among the 160 responses from "a who's who of interesting and important world-class thinkers," author Walter Isaacson observed: "I am very optimistic about print as a technology. Words on paper are a wonderful information storage, retrieval, distribution, and consumer product....
"Imagine if we had been getting our information delivered digitally to our screens for the past 400 years. Then some modern Gutenberg had come up with a technology that was able to transfer these words and pictures onto pages that could be delivered to our doorstep, and we could take them to the backyard, the bath, or the bus. We would be thrilled with this technological leap forward, and we would predict that someday it might replace the Internet." The more things change...
In that same column, I shared my optimism about indie booksellers' long history of adaptability, both to print and digital options, adding that in the new year I would be looking for stories with that in mind: "Some of these will be fresh tales you've never heard before, while others will be classics with a new twist. I'll find happy endings where I can." That quest continues in 2026. --Robert Gray, contributing editor