
Boston-area bookstores to visit
The intrigue: The region is home to bookstores that cater to nerds, romantics, cat lovers and all sorts of hobbyists who enjoy reading.
Bookstores with cafes
A Sanctuary Cafe: Seating is limited in this cat cafe that sells books, but their pastries are worth the wait.
Beacon Hill Books & Cafe: Stop in for tea time and grab a book on Beacon Hill.
Just Bookish: A bookstore in Fields Corner with a small cafe.
Protip: Order an empanada.
Lovestruck Books: A romance-themed bookstore in Harvard Square with George Howell, serving coffee, treats and wine.
Trident Booksellers & Cafe: Back Bay's 40-year-old bookstore and cafe.
The cafe serves breakfast, lunch and dinner, as well as booze.
Porter Square Books: The Cambridge bookstore recently expanded, moving into a larger space owned by Lesley University.
The bookstore has a coffee shop, Page & Leaf Cafe.
There's also a Porter Square Books in Boston's Seaport neighborhood, but no cafe.
Specialty bookstores
All She Wrote Books: The intersectional feminist queer bookstore in Somerville grew out of a pop-up, which first launched in 2019.
Pandemonium Books and Games: This Central Square game store sells science fiction, fantasy, horror and other books.
The store also hosts events, from beginner D&D sessions to Yu-Gi-Oh! weekly tournaments.
Read My Lips: The diverse, romance pop-up bookstore sets up shop at breweries and other public-facing spaces, from the Charles River Speedway to Lovestruck Books.
Side Quest Games & Books: What began as a pop-up is now a brick-and-mortar in Bow Market that sells indie games and a range of fantasy and sci fi books.
Side Quest often hosts role-playing game events and book clubs.
Other brick-and-mortars
Brattle Book Shop: This Boston bookstore celebrates 200 years in 2025.
Brattle carries used books, rare books, maps, prints, postcards and other items.
Brookline Booksmith: Coolidge Corner's beloved independent bookstore.
The bookstore has a used books collection and a section for gifts and accessories (great for holiday shopping).
Bryn Mawr Bookstore: Cambridge's nonprofit bookstore has been around since 1971 and carries more than 30,000 books.
Commonwealth Books: This Downtown Crossing spot carries books on arts, history, architecture, philosophy and other subjects, as well as antique prints and maps.
The COOP: This cooperative bookstore serves the Harvard and MIT communities but is open to all.
Locals also stop in to use their bathrooms.
East End Books Boston: This Seaport shop is the sister store to the original East End Books in Provincetown.
Frugal Bookstore: The Nubian Square shop sells a range of books, from children's titles to science fiction, graphic novels and African American studies.
Harvard Book Store: The Harvard Square staple has been independently run for nearly a century.
The business planned to open a section location in Boston's Prudential Center, but they halted the expansion.
More Than Words: More Than Words, a nonprofit serving youth, sells books, clothing and gifts in its South End store.
More Than Words opened a shop in Central Square recently, taking over the space once owned by Boomerangs.
Over The Tunnel Books: Consider this more of a book nook than a store, but the basement bookstore below EBO & Co. Grocery has seats to peruse their collection.
Papercuts Bookstore: This Jamaica Plain bookstore carries various genres of books and hosts author events.
Parkside Bookshop: This South End bookstore also hosts book clubs, date nights and food pop-ups.
Rodney's Bookstore: Rodney's is a beloved Harvard Square bookstore that sells used books and prints.
Rozzie Bound: This Roslindale cooperative bookstore has a small, but diverse collection of books in terms of subject matter, race and gender.
Customers often order books to have shipped directly to Rozzie Bound.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Digital Trends
15 hours ago
- Digital Trends
Did you pull six cards in Pokémon TCG Pocket? Here's why
I play Pokémon TCG Pocket every day, and I have since it launched. With somewhere north of 6,000 cards in my collection, it's my most-played mobile game to date — so when I pulled six cards instead of five, it blew my mind. After opening hundreds of packs, I only expected five cards. The sight of a sixth one had me Googling whether it was a bug or something I'd missed. As it turns out, the most recent update (the addition of the Wisdom of Sea and Sky packs) added a slight possibility that players could pull six cards instead. It's like a regular pack plus one card, and that last pull often contains a baby Pokémon like Pichu, Cleffa, or Elekid. The feature is a nod to Pokémon Gold and Silver, just like the pack itself. With Ho-Oh and Lugia as the respective legendaries of the two games, it's no real surprise they make an appearance as the card art — but Gold and Silver also introduced the idea of 'baby' Pokémon, pre-evolutions to existing favorites. Recommended Videos When you draw a sixth Pokémon card, the animation is slightly different, but it took a couple of times before I actually noticed the tweaks. The change is subtle, so you might not realize it until you're staring down at six cards in total. Players have roughly an 8.33% chance to pull a sixth card out of a normal pack. Each of the two packs offers a different set of Pokémon, with the Ho-Oh set offering Magby, Smoochum, and Tyrogue, while the Lugia set offers Pichi, Elekid, and Cleffa. So far, it seems like the six-card draws are the only way to organically obtain a baby Pokémon (not counting Togepi, which can appear in any set). That means the actual chance of drawing some of these cards, like the coveted 1-star Pichu, is close to 1%. If you want to get your hands on them, you'll need to play regularly and take advantage of hourglass draws, too. The good news is that the dev team just awarded players an extra 10,000 Trade Tokens, and you can exchange 60 of these for 60 Pack Hourglasses. You can also exchange 100 Trade Tokens for 1,000 Shinedust for trading with other players, so it's slightly easier to get your hands on the cards you're missing. All in all, you have around a 29% chance to pull a baby Pokémon as your sixth card. Aside from the adorable card art, these picks offer something else, too: the potential for a free ability. While their attacks don't inflict damage, they do give you an edge. For instance, Cleffa can use Twinkly Call to put a random 'mon in your hand, while Magby can use Toasty Toss to attach a fire energy from to a Pokémon on the bench. All of the baby Pokémon only have 30 HP, so they're vulnerable to even weak attacks. They aren't currently able to evolve into higher-stage Pokémon, either, so playing them is a bit of a risk. These are great for early-game rushes, but you need a strategy in place to get them off the field once they've served their purpose. That holds especially true in Pokémon TCG Pocket with its much faster-paced gameplay. This update feels like one of the best ones yet, and while it isn't confirmed, the chance to pull better cards feels slightly higher compared to earlier sets. It's a good time to be a Pokémon fan, especially with Pokémon Legends: Z-A launching soon and Pokémon Champions just around the corner.

Business Insider
a day ago
- Business Insider
Critical Role's Matt Mercer is giving up control of a core pillar of the crew's booming business
Critical Role's chief creative officer and longtime game master, Matthew Mercer, is making a big change at the team's nerdworld business. When the team's fourth campaign kicks off on October 2, it won't be Mercer sitting behind the game master's screen. Instead, helming the campaign — a long-term staple of Critical Role's streaming business — will be Brennan Lee Mulligan of " Dimension 20" fame. The two men have forged a formidable alliance, guest-starring on each other's shows while cornering a sizable chunk of the tabletop touring business. The eight-member CR crew has filled arenas from Wembley in London to megashow venues in Australia, while "Dimension 20" sold out Madison Square Garden for their January gig. "We've been enormous fans of Brennan's for many years now, and when it came to giving both Matthew Mercer and the world of Exandria a bit of a breather, Brennan felt like the perfect storyteller to take our community somewhere entirely new," Critical Role CEO Travis Willingham said in a press release. The show's fourth campaign will air on CR's streaming platform, Beacon, and its YouTube and Twitch channels. The campaign will also be set in a new world, not Mercer's world of Exandria, in which the first three campaigns occurred. "What a gift, a privilege, and an honor to be invited behind the screen of Critical Role for this next epic adventure," Mulligan said in the press release. "Every collaboration we have had together has brought nothing but sheer joy, and Campaign 4 will be no exception." CR has not announced if its fourth campaign will still use "Dungeons & Dragons," the Wizards of the Coast-owned system that the crew first started playing on stream. The CR team is now promoting "Daggerheart," its answer to the "D&D" juggernaut. Its main cast has rolled out content on-stream to promote the now sold-out game. "We're not just turning a page — we're starting a whole new book," Marisha Ray, CR cofounder and the team's creative director, said in the press release. Ray also teased new content in a June interview with Business Insider backstage at the crew's Melbourne show. There'll be more "fun, out-of-the-box" content airing on Beacon for CR subscribers, she said. "We have a lot of ideas for shows and stuff that we want to do. It's really just making sure that not just the cast, but also the production team, isn't overextending itself too much," Ray told BI. "And we really want to do more shorter-run series as well with 'Daggerheart,'" she added. "I think it lends itself very well to short-run series as well as genre-bending, and doing more things that we can experiment with." CR has not said if all the cofounders will participate in the crew's fourth campaign, which may mark a significant departure from 10 years of streaming together. Still, the CR cofounders are being kept busy with their two Amazon-backed animated series. "The Mighty Nein" drops on November 19 on Prime Video. Meanwhile, "The Legend of Vox Machina," which raised more than $11 million in its initial Kickstarter funding run, has been renewed for a fifth and final season. The fourth season of "Vox Machina" is slated for 2026.
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
Harley-Davidson's Most Exciting New Motorcycle Could Also Be Its Most Affordable (by a Country Mile)
Available in both street and trail versions, this scrappy little bike is unlike anything else the brand has ever made. Over the weekend, I had the pleasure of attending Harley-Davidson Homecoming, the brand's annual celebration of music, motorcycle culture and H-D's hometown of Milwaukee. Highlights included a sneak peek at the Product Development Center, an exclusive tour of the H-D Museum, seeing Chris Stapleton perform and joining a bunch of badass female bikers (including Karen Davidson) for the Cancer Research Institute-supporting Women's Ride. However, the biggest surprise of the festival for me was seeing what Harley's electric sub-brand, LiveWire, has been working on, which is a dramatic departure from everything else they've built. Still in development, this new electric platform would not only be super affordable but especially exciting and interesting, too. Here's why. Bold new direction See, up till now, LiveWire has been pretty focused on replicating gas-powered bikes in electric form. On the surface, that makes sense, and what they've managed to produce so far with bikes like the Del Mar and Mulholland has been impressive. However, they've also had their struggles, and it's become clear there's a somewhat limited audience for electric bikes that by and large cost north of $16,000. That's what makes these new prototypes so compelling. Rather than trying to mimic the appeal of its traditional offerings, they're making a whole new play that's markedly more affordable and approachable. Road and trail Looking much more like a cross between a Super 73 and Honda Grom than anything Harley makes, the as-yet-unnamed prototype will be available in both street and off-road versions. LiveWire calls them '125cc equivalents' (which squares with the Grom comp) and says they can go 0-30 mph in roughly 3 seconds, with a top speed of 53 mph and range of 100 miles. The bikes also possess a trait that holds huge appeal for city dwellers — the two batteries can be removed and brought inside for recharging, so you don't need your own garage to power them up. Bonus: Lifting the seat not only accesses the batteries but also a bit of additional storage space. While they did not let us ride the bikes at the festival, I did get a chance to swing a leg over them and was pretty pleased. The 30-inch seat height is quite accessible, especially when the shocks relax as you sit, making it easy to put your feet on the ground. Combined with a weight of roughly 215 pounds, that makes the promise of easy handling seem pretty realistic. Priced to sell LiveWire says the trail model is intended for backyards, pump tracks and campgrounds, while the street edition is ideal for urban errands and just general ripping-around fun. Both versions could be available in a range of colors, together with a wide-ranging accessories package that would really let riders make the bike their own. While the brand has not officially said anything about what they might cost, the rep at the event offered up a potential figure: $5,000. If that comes to be, that would make these LiveWires a bit pricier than a Grom but roughly half the price of the most affordable gas-powered Harley-Davidson model, the $9,999 Nightster. That just might be the most compelling selling point of all. Now managing editor, Steve has served in a variety of roles with GP since 2019. Having previously written and edited for such publications as Men's Health, Men's Journal, Esquire and ESPN, he enjoys covering a range of topics — but mostly those pertaining to cycling, snow sports, pocket knives and motos — and dreams of a utopian world in which everyone's bike seat is at the proper height.