Home 5 Articles and Reports 5 At the Age of 44 Al Saqi Books is closing down, why?

At the Age of 44 Al Saqi Books is closing down, why?

Al Saqi Books closed after 44 years in London

London’s Al Saqi Books has decided to end its 44-year journey. As a result of economic conditions. The bookshop’s owner and director, Salwa Gaspard, attributed the closure to lockdowns and supply chain breakdowns.

The decision was also influenced by the cost of books from Arab countries, in addition to the economic conditions in the UK.

 Al Saqi Books was founded in 1978 by André and Salwa Gaspard and their companion Mai Ghoussoub. The couple started the bookshop in Bayswater, London, after moving from war-torn Beirut.

Expats from Arab countries became interested in it soon after it became popular. It was also popular among Arab visitors.

There have also been many difficulties faced by the bookshop. Some of them are censorship crackdowns, attacks during the second Gulf War, and after the publication of Salman Rushdie’s controversial The Satanic Verses, inventory depletion during the Lebanon war in 2016. 

Announcing the decision, the bookshop tweeted, “Bidding farewell to an iconic London bookshop: Al Saqi Books stood for the freedom of thought and expression, cultural diversity, and empathy.

Recent News

06Aug
Kamala Harris Reflects on ‘107 Days’

Kamala Harris Reflects on ‘107 Days’

Simon & Schuster is to publish 107 Days, the memoir by former US vice-president Kamala Harris about her campaign for the presidency in 2024.  The publisher pre-empted world, audio and first serial rights to the work from Creative Artists Agency. Jonathan Karp, CEO of Simon & Schuster, has edited the memoir along with Dawn Davis, […]

06Aug
David Grossman Breaks His Silence

David Grossman Breaks His Silence

The award-winning Israeli author David Grossman has described his country’s campaign in Gaza as a genocide and said he now “can’t help” but use the term.   “I ask myself: how did we get here?” the celebrated writer and peace activist told the Italian daily La Repubblica in an interview published on Friday.   “How […]

05Aug
Nobody Left Empty-Handed in Medina

Nobody Left Empty-Handed in Medina

As the final pages of the 2025 Medina International Book Fair turned, the city bid farewell to days alive with dialogue, discovery, and the quiet hum of turning pages. Over the course of its run, 300 publishing houses from more than 20 countries gathered beneath one roof, transforming the fair into a living crossroads of […]

Related Posts

Kamala Harris Reflects on ‘107 Days’

Kamala Harris Reflects on ‘107 Days’

Simon & Schuster is to publish 107 Days, the memoir by former US vice-president Kamala Harris about her campaign for the presidency in 2024.  The publisher pre-empted world, audio and first serial rights to the work from Creative Artists Agency. Jonathan Karp, CEO...

David Grossman Breaks His Silence

David Grossman Breaks His Silence

The award-winning Israeli author David Grossman has described his country’s campaign in Gaza as a genocide and said he now “can’t help” but use the term.   “I ask myself: how did we get here?” the celebrated writer and peace activist told the Italian daily La...

Nobody Left Empty-Handed in Medina

Nobody Left Empty-Handed in Medina

As the final pages of the 2025 Medina International Book Fair turned, the city bid farewell to days alive with dialogue, discovery, and the quiet hum of turning pages. Over the course of its run, 300 publishing houses from more than 20 countries gathered beneath one...

Previous Next
Close
Test Caption
Test Description goes like this