Encyclopedia > Powells.com

  Article Content

Powell's City of Books

Redirected from Powells.com

Powell's City of Books is a bookstore[?] in Portland, Oregon, located on the edge of Downtown and the Pearl District[?], with its main entrance at the corner of 10th and Burnside. Powell's is a huge bookstore; the store comprises an entire city block, and has multiple stories. Their store contains over 68,000 square feet ( 6,300 m2), contains over a million volumes, and has about 40,000 visitors per day.

Powell's sells both used and new books. These are shelved together so that customers can consider both the used and new versions of each book.

The store was founded by Walter Powell, whose son, Michael Powell, had started a bookstore in Chicago, Illinois. Michael Powell soon joined his father in Portland, building the bookstore to what it is today.

Some of the store's actions have made big news in Portland. In 1992, the Oregon Citizens Alliance[?] qualified Ballot Measure 9, an anti-gay rights measure. Among the opposition to the measure, the bookstore was an active campaigner. However, a prolonged dispute between Powell's employees and Michael Powell over the organization of the employees tarnished Michael Powell's reputation as a champion of liberal causes.

In addition to City of Books location, Powell's Books also has several smaller stores: a technical bookstore a few blocks east of the main store, a generic store in Beaverton, another in Portland's Hawthorne area[?], a store with cooking and gardening materials two spaces east of the Hawethorne store, a travel bookstore located in Pioneer Courthouse Square[?], and a store at the Portland International Airport.

External Links



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Explorer

... 1520), discovered Brazil and Madagascar Juan Sebastian del Cano[?] - completed the first circumnavigation, started by Magellan Diego Cao, (died c. 1486), explored the ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 34.4 ms