Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm still mad about the Rockville B&N moving locations. I hate the new store. Rio is fine, but it's not a good as the original Rockville location.
Where did it move to? It's still showing as Congressional on their website.
That's the new 2020 location. It was a double decker store at Montrose Crossing, - where Burlington is now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm still mad about the Rockville B&N moving locations. I hate the new store. Rio is fine, but it's not a good as the original Rockville location.
Where did it move to? It's still showing as Congressional on their website.
Anonymous wrote:I'm still mad about the Rockville B&N moving locations. I hate the new store. Rio is fine, but it's not a good as the original Rockville location.
Anonymous wrote:I've always love B&N. I worked at one in college. It's a large, bookstore -- what is not to like?
I think here was a time when it was perceived as being the enemy of the local independent bookstore, but I think the industry has changed so much thanks to Amazon that it no longer breaks down alone that dichotomy. I still go to local bookstores a lot more often than Barnes & Noble, but I also go to B&N every few months because if I'm running errands somewhere with a giant bookstore, I'm going to wind up popping in that bookstore because I love books. I also often shop for Christmas gifts there because the one I go to happens to have a massive manga and sci-fi section and my spouse and kid love those. None of our local bookstores have those options.
Anonymous wrote:I'm still mad about the Rockville B&N moving locations. I hate the new store. Rio is fine, but it's not a good as the original Rockville location.
Anonymous wrote:Haven't been in a Barnes & Noble in ages. May have to check one out.
"Daunt has gotten attention for a strategy that delegates authority to local store managers, letting them choose what books to stock and to promote. No longer does the New York headquarters cut a check from a Big Five publisher to place the season’s hot new memoir on front tables nationwide. If you go to a Barnes & Noble in New England, you might find a section on shipwrecks right at the front of the store. A store in the Florida Panhandle will have shelf after shelf of Bibles. A store in Washington, D.C., has, well, a lot of books about Washington, D.C."
Gift Link https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/03/barnes-noble-popularity/686369/?gift=5g79qpiegVsh0s79kpMrY_4iYOxLVbK6q6N4j7TfQ-U&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share