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Volunteers hand books down a human chain in Southampton.
Volunteers hand books down a human chain in Southampton. Photograph: The Southampton Collective
Volunteers hand books down a human chain in Southampton. Photograph: The Southampton Collective

Southampton bookshop enlists human chain to move to new store

This article is more than 5 years old

More than 2,000 books carried by volunteers to October Books’ new premises

About 250 people formed a human chain to help a community bookshop in Southampton move to a new store after a rent increase left them unable to afford their old premises.

Volunteers gathered on Sunday to carry more than 2,000 books the 150 metres to the new location, a former bank building that October Books managed to buy with funds raised from donations and loans, where the stock will be kept in the old vault.

“It was a tremendous show of support and community and we’re moved and incredibly touched by it. We are of, and for, our community and it is truly heartening to see that reciprocated,” said Clare Diaper, who works at the bookshop.

Jani Franck, who took part in the human chain, told the Southern Daily Echo: “It’s amazing. The power of community coming together and achieving something like this. October Books have done really well. I’m in awe.”

A bookshop volunteer said she was ‘incredibly touched’ by the show of support. Photograph: Amy Brown

October Books was founded in 1977 and the people behind it describe it as a “radical bookshop cooperative named after the Russian Revolution”. It had been based at the previous premises for 15 years before the move.

They said on Monday that changing site became necessary because the rising rent was becoming unaffordable. The team announced a funding drive and asked for donations, as well as for repayable loans from the community and from financial institutions.

In August, they revealed they had raised £487,800 to buy a former NatWest building and later called for volunteers to help transport its stock.

“There is something about radical bookshops, especially long-established ones like October Books,” said Ian Rothwell, the investment manager at Cooperative and Community Finance, which provided money for the project, said at the time.

“They have a special place in the hearts of local people and now, by opening up the old bank to community use, that bond will become even stronger.”

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