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Millennials May Ensure the Antiquarian Book Show Has a Future

photo of Klein family
KABIR BHATIA
/
WKSU

Millennials may be saving Akron’s Antiquarian Book & Paper Show. As WKSU’s Kabir Bhatia reports, young people were a big part of this weekend’s event.

The book show didn’t happen last year due to waning interest from sellers. But this year, organizers took to social media and drummed up enough support that attendance actually increased compared to 2016. Patti Russell, a millennial and fourth-generation bookseller, helped organize the show and says young people are returning because of a renewed appreciation for shopping retro, small, and local.

“You see that with record shops, vintage clothing shops, book stores, restaurants even. I think I read an article that [said] millennials are killing chain restaurants because they want to go to the local mom-and-pop place.”

The Antiquarian Book & Paper Fair (as it was known then) started in 1983. This year, the Northern Ohio Bibliophilic Society added items such as posters and postcards. The result was a crowd that was about 25 percent millennials like Ziwei Zhou, who lives in Fairlawn but grew up in China.

"I actually like [to] physically have a book in my hand better than having my phone. First thing, it hurts my eyes. And when we were raised -- when we were very young -- we were just reading books. So this kind of brings the feelings back."

And on a purely practical level, Russell says reading print off of a page as opposed to a computer screen is much easier on the eyes.

She adds that the society plans to be back at the John S. Knight Center for the 36th Antiquarian Book & Paper Show next year, instead of waiting till 2020 as originally planned.

Kabir Bhatia is a senior reporter for Ideastream Public Media's arts & culture team.