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Best bookstore in America? The Raven in Lawrence, Kansas

 A customer browses the selection at Raven Book Store on Thursday, Sept. 30.
Carlos Moreno
/
KCUR 89.3
A customer browses the selection at Raven Book Store on Thursday, Sept. 30.

Publishers Weekly, an international news website of book publishing and bookselling, selected The Raven as this year's best bookstore out of five finalists.

On Tuesday, Danny Caine was in Bayfield, Wisconsin, for a spring meeting of the Midwest Independent Booksellers when he heard the news: Publishers Weekly named The Raven Book Store as Bookstore of the Year.

“It was a thrill,” said Caine, co-owner of the store and author of the book “How to Resist Amazon and Why” and three collections of poetry. “I'm up here surrounded by the bookstore community, which is wonderful,” he said.

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Publishers Weekly announced the five finalists in March, saying they “are not only beloved by writers and the publishing community but also play a significant role in their communities.”

During a virtual awards ceremony, Caine accepted the award on a split-screen with some of The Raven’s other co-owners in Lawrence, Kansas.

“This is the biggest book industry trade publication saying we're the country's bookstore of the year. That’s enough for us,” he said. “The real reward is getting to do this work with this team and trying to make our bookstore — and perhaps the world — a better place.”

According to Publishers Weekly, members of the book industry, including authors, publishing professionals, and other booksellers, stated that “with creativity and panache” the Raven “supported authors and books during the pandemic ... in fact, sustained the indie bookstore industry.”

The Raven (named after the Edgar Allan Poe poem) first opened in 1987 in downtown Lawrence, specializing in mystery books. It morphed into a more general interest store after Caine bought it in 2017. Last year it moved into a larger space at 809 Massachusetts St.

Along with a new location, Caine also shares ownership of the store with his staff.

“In January, I sold about half the store to seven employees. So we’ve got seven employee-owners now in addition to me,” he said. “That's been really interesting and wonderful to try out the employee-owned model and just to try out a little bit more equitable of a structure for our business.”

He added, “It just feels like an exciting way to take the store into the future and try to retain employees and help people start a career in the book business if they want to. It’s been really meaningful and rewarding for me — and I’m sure for all the other new owners, too."

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Laura Spencer caught the radio bug more than a decade ago when she was asked to read a newscast on the air on her first day volunteering for KOOP, the community radio station in Austin, Texas.