100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Stalwart book exchange business to shut just shy of 40th anniversary

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Why this retro truck is selling 36-cent ice creams

A retro ice cream truck with retro prices will help locals beat the heat at a Sunshine Coast beach this weekend, helping a charity More

Photo of the day: summer stunner

Helen Browne was ready to capture a stunning start to the day at Mooloolaba at just the right time. If you have a photo of More

$450 a day: wave of cruise ships welcomed

Five cruise ships are set to visit the Sunshine Coast over the next two months, bringing about 4000 passengers to the region. Their arrival off More

Jane Stephens: give nutrition a sporting chance

Move. Sweat. Play. Enjoy. Now would you like fries with that? Junk food attached itself, sucker-like, to sport a couple of generations ago. I well recall More

Men’s health beach gathering shut down over permit

The leader of a weekly beach gathering that has been shut down because it does not have a permit hopes to engage with Sunshine More

Application submitted for eight workers’ cabins on rural block

There are indications that an application for eight rural workers' cabins on a small rural-zoned property may be for supported accommodation in a farm-like More

Monday was the same as too many days for Nambour Book Exchange owner Darren Bailey.

“I’ve had two people in. And then a friend rang me up and he came in to see me. That makes three,” he said.

The quiet days do not just outnumber the good days at the exchange, they have obliterated them, forcing Mr Bailey to make a decision he has been postponing for years.

He has decided to close the 39-year-old business, which, hidden downstairs next to one of Nambour’s busiest street corners, has been one of the town’s best-kept secrets.

Mr Bailey used to be a paramedic based in the old ambulance station on Howard Street but took on the book exchange about 15 years ago when his parents retired.

Do you have an opinion to share? Submit a Letter to the Editor at Sunshine Coast News via news@sunshinecoastnews.com.auYou must include your name and suburb.

Although he had hoped to nurse the exchange to its 40th anniversary next year, he has decided to close the doors for good in September.

“I’ve just struggled to make ends meet. I may as well sit on the dole and get the same money as I do for 40-50 hours on a stool,” he said.

“I do try and help the homeless in Nambour, maybe given them a fiver, but I’m having a harder time than some of them, I think.”

Mr Bailey has battled to make sense of the diminishing number of customers. A fondness for the shop on social media has not translated to feet thought the door, let alone sales.

“I’ve put my post up (about closing), I’ve got 70 cares or sad faces. By the end of the day, I’ll probably be the top post on the page, but it’s the same every time. They don’t come in,” he said.

The Nambour Book Exchange is shutting up shop in September. Picture: Shutterstock

While much has changed in the town over the years, and businesses have come and gone, the book exchange has been a constant.

However, Mr Bailey said it had also become difficult to compete with the plethora of op shops in the town that can sell donated books for only a couple of dollars.

“We’re over-run with op shops. There’s 20 of them now. A bloke came through here last year and he said we’ve got 30-something disability services, 20 coffee shops, 20 hairdressers,” he said.

He feels that he is also fighting a changing world. He saw two children bawling when their mother, a customer of the vape store next door, refused to buy them two $2 comics.

“She’s spent $50 in the vape shop but she’d rather watch her two kids cry their eyes out because she wouldn’t spend $2 on them,” he said.

Mr Bailey has already started lightening the load at the book exchange, which held thousands of titles, in preparation for closure.

He has scheduled a farewell sale for September 16 to 30 but in the meantime is offering freebies with each purchase to move some titles on.

Others are destined to meet as sad an end as the exchange.

“I’ve had a talk to someone about taking them but they’ll probably just be landfill,” he said.

“I’ve cleared out some sections. Do you think people will notice if they don’t come in?”

Help us deliver more news by registering for our FREE daily news feed. All it requires is your name and email at the bottom of this article.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

Hidden
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share