
Pioneered the book superstore model with massive selection, café culture, and pricing power over publishers. Hit 30% market share by the early 2000s. Built the first mainstream destination where middle America could browse thousands of titles in one place.
Amazon crushed them online, capturing 50% of book sales by 2019. The company burned $1.4B trying to compete with Kindle through the Nook. Four CEOs in 10 years whipsawed strategy — stores filled with toys and gift cards instead of books. By 2019, losing $600M annually.
Private equity firm Elliott bought the chain in 2019 for $660M. New CEO James Daunt (who'd turned around UK chain Waterstones) decentralized operations, gave store managers autonomy, and returned focus to books. Now opening 30 stores annually despite shrinking book market.