Bookstores In Fayetteville To Visit
Bookstores are wonderful places. You can go to a bookstore, and each member of your family can separate in a different direction depending on their interest.
Whether it be fiction or nonfiction, something scary or maybe a travel book thereās really something for everyone in a bookstore.
Bookstores could also be a place where you can meet your favorite author, as many of them host book-signing events at stores.
Nowadays, bookstores are social places, and many of them have Starbucks or other coffee shops where you can get pastries, sip coffee, and read your favorite book.
And letās not forget the magazines, bookstores have more magazine variety than any other place. You canāt quite get that many magazines to choose from at the grocery store. While so many magazines are online, sometimes itās still good to pick up a copy and physically turn the pages.
There are huge chain bookstores, which are great. And then there are the mom-and-pop bookstores that we all adore and love.
Letās take a look at the bookstores Fayetteville has to offer.
2nd & Charles Bookstore
2nd and Charles bookstore is a great place to get not just books new and used but a lot of fun stuff from pop culture. They have music and vinyl and they have Funko pops of all kinds. They even have Magna toys and games. Youāll love 2nd & Charles right here in Fayetteville.
Barnes & Noble
Barnes & Noble bookstore is located in Glenford Commons at 121 Glen Ford Dr. in Fayetteville. Their store hours are Sunday 10 to 9 Monday through Saturday 9 to 9.
Barnes & Noble has everything you would ever want thousands of books, and a big store to separate from your family, and of course coffee and pastries in the onsite Cafe.
Plenty of parking with easy access to the bookstore.
City Center Gallery & Books
City Center Gallery & Books is the only bookstore in Historic Downtown Fayetteville. There are thousands of books in the store, and with access to used bookstores all over the country, they can find just about any book you want.
They also have a selection of art by local artists, including Bob Rector, Johnny Horne, Cindy Burnham, and Caroline Merino Morrozoff. Their paintings, postcards, and photographs show Fayetteville from a point of view that only a local artist can.