Bookstores, Indigo, Retail

Memories of World’s Biggest Bookstore

Eye Weekly has a brief history of the World’s Biggest Bookstore in downtown Toronto. Apparently, it used to be a bowling alley. (Bring your own tenpins and a bowling ball and it still could be.)

The writer, Marc Weisblott, traces the evolution of the WBB from its awe-inspiring early days when it dwarfed all the other book stores (which were all 5’x11’ or smaller and sold flour and sugar too) to its Indigo-owned present day, when barnlike stores are the norm and one of the WBB’s biggest-selling titles is Mood Your Change – How to Mind Your Think by Feeling Your Toes (or something like that), which Weisblott takes as a marker of the store’s current identity.

Weisblott lumps the WBB in with such much-loved icons as Sam the Record Man and Honest Ed’s, but its history, while varied and quirky, has brought it to its present state of fluorescent lighting, grubby lino flooring, and Conrad Black via LongPen. Meanwhile, as Weisblott points out, the Yonge and Dundas intersection on which it squats is rapidly cleaning itself up. How long before the condo developers come calling?

So do you want to save the WBB? Do you want to save things just because they’re old and rich with history, or do you have to actually like them too?

2 Responses to “Memories of World’s Biggest Bookstore”

  1. angel guerra says:

    Tear the junk yard down and erect another junk yard on the site in true Toronto fashion.

  2. Lex Ferenda » Big Books says:

    […] Quill and Quire […]

Have your say:




Q&Q's photo pool

To add your own photos to Q&Q's Flickr pool, simply e-mail them to us, and they will be automatically uploaded. Use your e-mail subject line to give the photo a title, and any text in the body of the message will be attached as a description.

THE LATEST:

Monty Reid at Rasputin's

Steven Michael Berzensky

Marisa Alps and Amanda Lamarche

Elizabeth Bachinsky and George K. Ilsley

Jordan Scott

Ryan Arnold

lane 070

Jordan Scott

Karen Connelly

Karen Connelly and Deborah Campbell

Anthony De Sa in Ottawa

Anita Stewart



Doretta Charles

the table

View all photos