Skip to content

Novels and nightcaps: 7 bookstores that double as bars

Sept. 26, 2024
7 min read
Hanloh_Facebook_4
The cards we feature here are from partners who compensate us when you are approved through our site, and this may impact how or where these products appear. We don’t cover all available credit cards, but our analysis, reviews, and opinions are entirely from our editorial team. Terms apply to the offers listed on this page. Please view our advertising policy and product review methodology for more information.

From #BookTok to celebrity book clubs to high-profile literary film adaptations, it's safe to say that reading hasn't been this cool in years. So it's not a big surprise that our favorite nerdy pastime has also begun to seep into the world of nightlife.

For years, bookshops have housed cozy cafes where you could while away the hours with your new purchase over a latte or a mug of Earl Grey. But lately, many bookstores are getting their liquor licenses and doubling as bars, each with its own unique perspective. You can pair a Burgundy with Baudelaire in Paris, sip some Irish whiskey as you tackle "Ulysses" in Melbourne, or read about American history over a local cider at one of the most architecturally significant intersections in the U.S.

Related: Best credit cards for book lovers

Here are seven bookstore bars we're adding to our reading list this year.

Rough Draft Bar & Books: Kingston, New York

ROUGH DRAFTS BAR AND BOOKS/FACEBOOK

Unsurprisingly, New York City is a major hub for literati lounges, with standouts including the East Village's Book Club Bar and the Black woman-owned Liz's Book Bar in Brooklyn. For one of the most charming examples, however, head 100 miles up the Hudson River to the state's first capital, Kingston. Rough Draft Bar & Books sits on the "Four Corners" — the only intersection in America where all four buildings were constructed before the Revolutionary War.

Rough Draft's stone building dates to 1774, and it has housed the Kingston Academy, a cabinetmaker, a newspaper and a radio station. Now, it falls somewhere between a neighborhood bookshop and a rustic tavern, where you could imagine the Founding Fathers drinking a pint while trading edits on their pamphlets. The rotating list of beers, wines and ciders skews local and creative, meaning you might find drinks like beet-infused rosé cider from Wayside Cider in the Catskills.

Leopold's Books Bar Caffe: Madison, Wisconsin

LEOPOLD'S BOOKS BAR CAFFE/FACEBOOK

Open until midnight seven days a week, Leopold's describes itself as a "night owl-friendly neighborhood bookstore." The hours are perfect for a shop just a few blocks from the University of Wisconsin campus. Travelers will particularly love the selection here: Shelves are arranged not by genre but by country of origin. For example, Japanese cookbooks share space not with other cookbooks but with novels and poetry collections from Japan for a fuller picture of the culture.

That worldliness extends to the wines sold, with bottles from unexpected spots like Lebanon, Macedonia, Georgia and India. (Join house sommelier MJ Hecox for Friday "office hours" to learn more and try samples.) The bar — lined with an exuberant tropical-plant-and-macaw wallpaper — serves a wide assortment of cocktails, ranging from Black Walnut Manhattans to gelato-based Grasshoppers to an assortment of clever $5 shots.

Swans Bar at Maison Assouline: London

MAISON ASSOULINE/FACEBOOK

Assouline's often triple-digit statement coffee table books are a culture lover status symbol, so it's no surprise that the publisher's London flagship store is something of a scene. Sitting on Piccadilly near the Royal Academy of Arts and Fortnum & Mason, Maison Assouline occupies a Grade II-listed former banking hall from 1922 and houses the utterly elegant Swans Bar.

Daily Newsletter
Reward your inbox with the TPG Daily newsletter
Join over 700,000 readers for breaking news, in-depth guides and exclusive deals from TPG’s experts

You can order posh classics like the Dirty Gibson (with a honey-balsamic-onion garnish) and the 72 British pound ($96) Eau de Martini, which comes with a caviar bump. There's also a selection of travel-themed cocktails inspired by destinations like Italy's Lake Como and Australia's Byron Bay, which come topped with garnishes like edible surfboards and cityscapes.

Buck Mulligan's: Northcote, Australia

BUCK MULLIGAN'S/FACEBOOK

Named for a character from James Joyce's "Ulysses," this Melbourne bookstore bar in the inner suburb of Northcote has one main focus: Ireland. Shelves are lined with classics, contemporary novels, plays and poetry collections originating from the Emerald Isle. The Celtic theming continues behind the bar, which aims to have the city's largest collection of Irish whiskeys — plus bottles from Scotland, Japan, the U.S. and even Tasmania.

If you're not looking to sip whiskey neat, there's a compact collection of cocktails, including Irish coffee and a hot toddy, which you can order with traditional or peated whiskey. Look out for special events, like a fiddle-fueled St. Patrick's Day party and a complimentary glass of Redbreast Potstill (with book purchase) on Bloomsday — a day dedicated to Joyce.

La Belle Hortense: Paris

BRIANSCANTLEBURY/GETTY IMAGES

The medieval streets of Le Marais are perfectly suited for flaneurs. If you need a place to recuperate after all that gloriously aimless wandering, you can't do much better than this blue-fronted "cave/librairie/bar litteraire." The divided shelves showcase books on top (rare editions, novels, cookbooks, biographies) and bottles of wine on the bottom.

The move is to wait for one of the red stools and belly up to the zinc-topped bar. There, order a glass of whatever the staff recommends alongside a charcuterie plate. The place is cramped, cozy and more than a bit bohemian, and you can often catch book launch parties, photography exhibits, lectures and even jazz sets.

Cafebreria El Pendulo: Mexico City

CAFEBRERIA EL PENDULO/FACEBOOK

Popular among tourists and locals alike, this Mexico City mini-chain has branches around the city, a few of which have their own cafes. After dark, you'll want to head to the location in the Zona Rosa (the city's gayborhood) for a drink at the on-site Bukowski's Bar. It pays homage to bohemian writers and their relationships — the good, the bad and the ugly — with alcohol. (The eponymous poet Charles Bukowski infamously romanticized his alcoholism.)

The venue also doubles as an inviting jazz and blues club. Different nights of the week mean music by the house jazz trio, Broadway standards by a pianist or even an open-mic night.

Bad Animal Books: Santa Cruz, California

BAD ANIMAL

The "bad animal" in question? Humans, of course. It refers to Dionysus, the Greek god of wine and partying, and his influence over people in Euripides' "The Bacchae." The heady references abound at this Santa Cruz used bookshop and natural wine bar. It focuses on the humanities and especially "the wild side of the human animal — the excessive, psychedelic, revolutionary, fierce, transgressive, uncanny and uncivilized," as the website describes it.

Its wine list is mostly natural, organic and small-batch, with bottles from Hungary, Greece and Georgia. The shop is also home to a pop-up called Hanloh Thai Food, helmed by culinary artist-in-residence chef Lalita Kaewsawang. Regulars can join a wine club, which offers two bottles per month, notes on how to pair with food and literature, discounts on books and free monthly tastings.

Related reading:

Featured image by HANLOH/FACEBOOK
Editorial disclaimer: Opinions expressed here are the author’s alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, airline or hotel chain, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities.

TPG featured card

Rewards rate
3XEarn 3X Miles on Delta purchases.
1XEarn 1X Miles on all other eligible purchases.
Intro offer
Open Intro bonus
Earn up to 125,000 Bonus Miles
Annual fee
$650
Regular APR
19.49%-28.49% Variable
Recommended credit
Open Credit score description
Excellent to Good

Pros

  • Delta SkyClub access when flying Delta
  • Annual companion ticket for travel on Delta (upon renewal)
  • Ability to earn MQDs through spending
  • Various statement credits for eligible purchases

Cons

  • Steep annual fee of $650
  • Other Delta cobranded cards offer superior earning categories
  • Earn 100,000 Bonus Miles after you spend $6,000 or more in purchases with your new Card within the first 6 months of Card Membership and an additional 25,000 bonus miles after you make an additional $3,000 in purchases on the Card within your first 6 months, starting from the date that your account is opened. Offer Ends 04/01/2026.
  • Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card Members receive 15 Visits per Medallion® Year to the Delta Sky Club® when flying Delta and can unlock an unlimited number of Visits after spending $75,000 in purchases on your Card in a calendar year. Plus, you’ll receive four One-Time Guest Passes each Medallion Year so you can share the experience with family and friends when traveling Delta together.
  • Enjoy complimentary access to The Centurion® Lounge in the U.S. and select international locations (as set forth on the Centurion Lounge Website), Sidecar by The Centurion® Lounge in the U.S. (see the Centurion Lounge Website for more information on Sidecar by The Centurion® Lounge availability), and Escape Lounges when flying on a Delta flight booked with the Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card. § To access Sidecar by The Centurion® Lounge, Card Members must arrive within 90 minutes of their departing flight (including layovers). To access The Centurion® Lounge, Card Members must arrive within 3 hours of their departing flight. Effective July 8, 2026, during a layover, Card Members must arrive within 5 hours of the connecting flight.
  • Receive $2,500 Medallion® Qualification Dollars with MQD Headstart each Medallion Qualification Year and earn $1 MQD for each $10 in purchases on your Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card with MQD Boost to get closer to Status next Medallion Year.
  • Enjoy a Companion Certificate on a Delta First, Delta Comfort, or Delta Main round-trip flight to select destinations each year after renewal of your Card. The Companion Certificate requires payment of government-imposed taxes and fees of between $22 and $250 (for itineraries with up to four flight segments). Baggage charges and other restrictions apply. Delta Basic experiences are not eligible for this benefit.
  • $240 Resy Credit: When you use your Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card for eligible purchases with U.S. Resy restaurants, you can earn up to $20 each month in statement credits. Enrollment required.
  • $120 Rideshare Credit: Earn up to $10 back in statement credits each month after you use your Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card to pay for U.S. rideshare purchases with select providers. Enrollment required.
  • Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card Members get 15% off when using miles to book Award Travel on Delta flights through delta.com and the Fly Delta app. Discount not applicable to partner-operated flights or to taxes and fees.
  • With your Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card, receive upgrade priority over others with the same Medallion tier, product and fare experience purchased, and Million Miler milestone when you fly with Delta.
  • Earn 3X Miles on Delta purchases and earn 1X Miles on all other eligible purchases.
  • No Foreign Transaction Fees. Enjoy international travel without additional fees on purchases made abroad.
  • $650 Annual Fee.
  • Apply with confidence. Know if you're approved for a Card with no impact to your credit score. If you're approved and you choose to accept this Card, your credit score may be impacted.
  • Terms Apply.
  • See Rates & Fees