Mayday Books

Coordinates: 39°10′03″N 86°31′45″W / 39.16750°N 86.52917°W / 39.16750; -86.52917

Mayday Books
Non-profit collective
Industry Retail
Founded 1975 (Minneapolis, Minnesota)
Headquarters 301 Cedar Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55454
Products Books
Website maydaybookstore.org

Established in 1975, Mayday Books is a volunteer-run, non-profit collective bookstore in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Its organizational mission is to provide leftist political books and magazines and a space for political organizing for the Minneapolis/Saint Paul metropolitan area.[1] Mayday Books carries a selection of new and used political books, magazines, zines, T-shirts, postcards, and select CDs and DVDs.

Numerous political organizations use the collective's space for their public meetings. The collective regularly hosts author readings, film screenings, political discussions, organizational meetings, and occasional celebrations.[1][2] Among the many prominent activist groups that meet at Mayday Books, the Iraq Peace Action Coalition (IPAC) meets in the store space, where in 2008 it planned the permitted anti-war march against the Republican National Convention on September 1, 2008.

Mayday Books will mark its 40th Anniversary this year and invites organizations and individuals to provide memories, flyers, newsletters, photographs and information to help celebrate this enduring cultural institution. E-mail at maydaybookstore@gmail or send snail mail to 301 Cedar Ave, Minneapolis, MN 55414.

History

Mayday Books was founded in 1975 on the corner of Selby and Western in St. Paul, Minnesota. By 1980 Mayday had moved to Franklin and Chicago in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Eventually, in the early 1990s, internal differences over store organization and political program resulted in a split with the breakaway group forming Arise Bookstore. Subsequently, in 1991, Mayday moved to its present location on Cedar Avenue in the West Bank neighborhood of Minneapolis.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Amend, Alex. Mayday Bookstore: Serving Minneapolis' Progressive Leftist Community Since 1975. The Wake Magazine. 2 April 2008.
  2. Stratton, Jeremy. "The Grass" speaks of memory and forgetting. Twin Cities Daily Planet. 11 May 2009.


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