The Reader’s Feast: A Bookstore Ahead of Its Time
Shelves of books in the interior of a bookstore

Bookshelves at The Reader's Feast - GLBTQ Archives, Central Connecticut State University


By Eve Galanis

There was once a place in the west end of Hartford where on any given day you could find a music performance, an activist meeting, a poetry reading, a community gathering, or simply meet up with your neighbors and have a coffee. When it opened its doors in 1983, The Reader’s Feast was the most progressive independent bookstore in the area. For over two decades, it provided a space for literature, community, food, and comradery.

A Progressive Community Bookstore

Two women facing the camera, smiling. One woman has her arm around the other woman. Bookshelves are in the background.

Carolyn Gabel-Brett and Tollie Miller, owners of The Reader’s Feast – GLBTQ Archives, Central Connecticut State University

Along with 30 investors, Carolyn Gabel-Brett and Tollie Miller founded The Reader’s Feast with the goal of creating a community resource with books that highlighted different points of view and diverse cultural perspectives. The bookstore offered a unique selection, including feminist, gay, lesbian, Spanish language, and progressive political literature. Half of the establishment was a restaurant selling local goods and café fare which helped finance the bookstore events.

The Reader’s Feast served as a space for events such as book and poetry readings, musical performances, theater, political organizing, and community gatherings. It was also involved with local schools—student art hung on the walls and the store hosted educational workshops and field trips.

The bookstore exalted itself as a place to celebrate diversity and promote social justice. The owners and staff participated in Pride events and the space was used to organize social justice rallies and activist group meetings. In this way, it served as a bridge between the public and the progressive community. It was intrinsically connected to the feminist, LGBTQ+ rights, and labor movements and a place for gay and trans people that was safe, sober, and supportive—a space of visibility and affirmation. Moreover, it offered free financial literacy courses and other community workshops and sponsored events such as a fundraiser in 1985 for the liberation of South Africa.

The Reader’s Feast Legacy

Two people playing musical instruments and smiling. One woman sitting down, playing a drum, one man standing up holding an unidentified instrument. There is a person in the foreground facing away from the camera.

A concert at The Reader’s Feast – GLBTQ Archives, Central Connecticut State University

After 12 years of ownership, Gabel-Brett and Miller decided to move on to other projects; at which time Barbara Mase, Roberta Collins, and Valerie de Palma took over the bookstore. Unfortunately, with the rise of online commerce and digital media, The Reader’s Feast closed its doors in 2007. As a communal space ahead of its time, however, its memory has had a lasting impact on the Hartford community.

 

Eve Galanis is a historian, teacher, and artist based in Connecticut. Her research is primarily centered on historical justice and intersectional critical theory. She currently teaches history and philosophy at Classical Magnet School in Hartford.

Learn More

Websites

Brede, Scott, and Lucy Nalpathanchil. “Examining Connecticut’s LGBTQ History.” Connecticut Public Radio, May 31, 2019. Link.
Connecticut Historical Society. “Historic Timeline of Connecticut’s LGBTQ Community,” 2019. Link.

Newspapers

McClurg, Jocelyn. “Reader’s Feast Managers Leaving for Other Pursuits.” Hartford Courant, May 19, 1995. Link.

Documents

“The Reader’s Feast Bookstore Papers (1983-1995),” n.d. GLBTQ Archives, Central Connecticut State University.

Books

Love, Barbara J. Feminists Who Changed America. Illinois: University of Illinois, 2006.

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