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Bourne Bookshop set to open in the Burghley Centre on Saturday




A couple who have lived in Bourne all their lives are throwing open the doors this weekend to their dream - a new independent bookshop for the town.

Karen and Peter Smith have invested a significant amount of their personal savings into their Bourne Bookshop venture, which is located in the town’s Burghley Centre.

“We’re excited it has finally come to fruition,” said Karen, who previously worked for a local agricultural firm and will be the shop’s full-time manager. She expects to employ two or three part-time staff.

“I love meeting people and have always enjoyed books so this is the perfect combination for me,” she added.

Bourne Bookshop joins a growing number of successful, independent bookshops across the country that are bucking the trend for ebooks and online purchasing.

“Things have come full circle and people increasingly want to read real, printed books and browse before they buy,” explained Karen.

Peter and Karen Smith outside Bourne Bookshop in the Burghley Centre
Peter and Karen Smith outside Bourne Bookshop in the Burghley Centre

“We really want to make it work and have been overwhelmed by all the messages of support we’ve had from local people while preparing the shop.”

Karen and Peter took a long time to find exactly the right premises with good footfall and were supported in their quest by InvestSK.

“We are very happy with our location in the Burghley Centre,” said Peter, who has three grown-up children and one grandchild.

He plans to support Karen on the business side and in the shop at weekends but will continue his job as a market development manager for a national agricultural firm.

“It’s around five years since there was a bookshop in Bourne and we decided now was the time to plug this gap in the local market,” said Peter.

“This is an independent family business and we are treating it as a serious business venture,” he added.

The shop will only sell brand new books, along with a few other specialist lines including jigsaws and some children’s toys.

“We’ll have about 2,000 fiction and non-fiction books in stock at any one time covering all genres, as well as a good children’s section,” said Karen.

“We’ll also have a next-day ordering service and, as things develop, will adjust the range of titles we stock according to what our customers like and ask for.”

The shop had two preview open days during the Bourne CiCLE Festival weekend and is being officially opened by Coun Brenda Johnson, the Mayor of Bourne on Saturday (September 7) at 9am.

Initially it will be open six days a week between 9am and 6pm but Karen says opening times may become more flexible, according to customer needs.

“We’ll also be looking to open on Sundays and some late evenings, especially at times of the year like the run up to Christmas.”

Jon Hinde, head of economy and skills at InvestSK, said: “It’s a great boost to the town to have another new independent retailer on the high street, and one that provides an offer not currently available.

“This will help to increase footfall in Bourne while also diversifying the current offering in the Burghley Centre and town as a
whole.”

Opened in 1989, Bourne’s Burghley Centre has undergone a new lease of life in recent years. As well as a variety of independent shops it is now home to several high street names including a Marks and Spencer foodstore, Specsavers and Subway.

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