Harriett's Bookshop Owner Buys Her Philadelphia Building
Jeannine A. Cook, owner of Harriett's Bookshop, has purchased the four-story building at 258 E. Girard Avenue in Philadelphia from landlord Sang Casenta for $700,000, "ensuring the future of the world-renowned bookshop," the Inquirer reported.
"I'm still in shock," Cook said. "I'm so excited that people are excited. I hope it ignites a faith for people to go forward with their dreams. It's really about putting one foot in front of the other."
Cook began renting the storefront in 2019, with plans to use it as office space for her then-consulting business before deciding to sell books as a second income stream. In 2020, she opened Harriett's Bookshop, which "has since become one of the Philadelphia area's most influential bookshops, a community meeting space, and a center for advocacy against anti-Blackness and for self-care," the Inquirer noted. She has also opened other bookshops, including Ida's in Collingswood, N.J., and Josephine's in Paris, France.
"Everything that Jeannine does is wonderful and impacts not just the Philadelphia community, but people around the world," said Marc Collazzo, executive director of the Fishtown Business Improvement District. "She's the only one who does what she does and she chose Fishtown to bring that vision to life."
The idea to purchase the building first occurred to Cook two years ago when she saw so many Black-owned business closing because owners couldn't keep up with rising rents. "I couldn't get this idea that I felt like a sharecropper out of my head," Cook said. "I had a vision for something different, but I had no idea about how I was going to pull that off."
Cook launched a GoFundMe campaign in 2021 that ultimately raised the $200,000 she would use to secure a down payment. Last year, she approached Casenta about the possibility of buying the building, but the landlord wasn't ready to sell yet. As Cook looked at other buildings in Fishtown and neighboring Kensington, she "stayed positive, continuing to work closely with Casenta to solve plumbing issues, including a major flood during Black Friday weekend," the Inquirer wrote.
Negotiations to sell the building finally began this past spring. "If anyone was going to buy this building from me, I wanted it to be her," Casenta said. "There is always a lot of excitement in her shop."
In addition to Harriett's 500-square-foot first floor, the 250-square-foot basement, and garden in the back, the building has three apartments that Cook will maintain as rentals. She is renovating Harriett's, plans to open a café, and hopes to unveil the initial stages of her progress during the Philadelphia Book Crawl on September 24. "Up until now, Harriett's has been a gallery space," Cook said. "In this next iteration, she will feel more like a home."