High street (new) book retailers are having a hard time due to books being available cheaper over the internet. ebay does well for second hand. This despite availability of tea, coffee and cake and newspapers.
I don't know if there's a solution to this, and I say this holding up my hands and confessing that I am, or was, part of the problem. Some years back one of the leisure parks near me opened up a vast Borders, a cathedral of books complete with cafe, all the bells and whistles. Trouble was that they priced themselves out of the running - the prices of the books were bordering (
) on the absurd - I made many an expedition there and spent countless hours scribbling down the details of books that I would go home and order online for a fraction of the cost ... sometimes for 1p, in fact, for a book that may have cost the best part of a tenner (or more) back in the shop. I may have played a minuscule part in the ultimate downfall of Borders, but I'm afraid that in this filthy capitalist pig world we sadly live in, if a business can't deliver competitively it's going to go tits up sooner or later.
Browsing in bookshops (new or secondhand; chain or independent, whatever) is one of life's great joys, always has been, and I desperately want to see bookshops thrive; but I've no answers as to how they can do that in today's climate.