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How Melissa Started Beacon Hill Books

Beacon Hill Books and Cafe in Boston has become a community magnet and tourist must see.

I heard about Melissa Fetter’s project long before I met her.

In the late 1970s and early 80s Beacon Hill in Boston had three bookstores, all have been closed for many years. In 2020, a whisper of a plan to bring a new bookstore was heard in the neighborhood. It seemed too good to be true: An entire nineteenth-century building on the main business street was to be turned into Beacon Hill Books and Cafe!

Look for tours of the store on WSG’s Instagram!

AND! Beacon Hill Books and Cafe Instagram!

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Melissa Fetter had a mid-life pivot and built Beacon Hill Books and Cafe in Boston during the middle of the COVID Pandemic.

Here we are in 2024. The store and cafe have been open for over two years and have blown the doors off all expectations.

In the best of times, commercial renovation in Boston is time-consuming, expensive and unpredictable. Add COVID and an extra year of construction and a myriad of other surprises, and you’ve got yourself a master class in frustration. But, as you will see she persevered, and we all benefit. Melissa’s story is remarkable, and her pivot is inspiring.

Inside Beacon Hill Bookstore in Boston

Why put a bookstore on Beacon Hill?

Melissa had lived in the Boston area in the early 1980s while her husband was in graduate school here. She spent thirty years living in other places, such as California and Texas. In 2020, her husband returned to Boston to teach, and Melissa found herself an empty nester in a basically new city. What to do?

Like all good entrepreneurs with some time on their hands, she looked around to see what the city was lacking. She narrowed her focus down to her new neighborhood, Beacon Hill and discovered there was no bookstore. But she also didn’t see a beautifully designed events venue, or a perfect little cafe that sells popovers.

Beacon Hill Books and Cafe in Boston Beacon Hill Books and Cafe in Boston
Beacon Hill Books and Cafe

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As she tells me in our interview above, she had no lifelong dream to open a bookshop. She saw a need and went about filling it. She said that the whole concept was fully formed in her mind from the get-go. She wanted an entire building on Charles Street for her concept. She wanted it to be a destination for tourists and a venue for events. She wanted a cafe with inventive cuisine (she brought in renown chef Colleen Suhanosky). She already had the look and feel in mind for the store and cafe. She set about making it happen, even through COVID.

Books and gifts for sale in Beacon Hill Bookstore in Boston

Lead by example

Beacon Hill Books and Cafe is a top-down enterprise. Melissa has approximately sixty people working for her. She has instructed her team to greet customers upon entry into the store. Eye contact and friendly acknowledgment are a must. The staff is always ready to answer questions and help find the perfect book.

The merchandising at BHB is irresistible. The quality is high and the items are useful! For instance, note pads and note cards are neatly wrapped in a cellophane sleeve, gift cards, tote bags are beyond well-designed, mugs, teas, and candles with their custom scent. Everything is created in the perfect greens and blues with a special font. The new umbrella lined in the Sister Parish design that covers the shop's walls is especially fetching. She also had a character-mascot and a book created for the children: Paige the squirrel. Available as plush animal! Adorable.

Visit Beacon Hill Books

Age is not a hurdle

I hope you’ll watch our interview above because Melissa does a wonderful job of addressing exactly what Women’s Survival Guide is all about as it applies to her journey. She is proud of herself for creating Beacon Hill Books and Cafe and comfortable that she was the age she was when she took the risks she did. Like all the women I have interviewed, Melissa sees her age as an asset and not an anchor. Aside from gaining confidence, wisdom, and experience through life, she is not afraid of failure and not embarrassed by the idea of it. The same cannot be said for most of us when we were in our 20s, 30s and even 40s. Losing the fear of embarrassment is a wonderful side effect of menopause, I think! (Maybe we just don’t remember anything?).

THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT BEACON HILL BOOKS AND CAFE:

  • The cafe has outdoor seating in their adorable courtyard most of the year with heaters and blankets.

  • The interiors were designed using the fabrics and wall coverings by Sister Parish Design.

  • There is a children’s area on the top floor with tiny doors to open, a train that circles the ceilings of two rooms, tiny chairs, and reading nooks.

  • There is a separate young adults area next to the children’s section.

  • There are small nook-rooms for intimate reading and looking for design, cooking, travel and young adults

  • Beacon Hill Books and Cafe has become a community magnet and tourist must-see with an Instagram following of over 87,000.

  • We are so grateful to have both Melissa and her bookstore in our neighborhood. They are a gift!

I will post tours of the store on WSG’s instagram @ womenssurvivalguide!!


ICYMI


And…

nominated Bebe Stockwell’s latest song, Minor Inconveniences in Horizon Newsletter’s Songs that mattered most in 2024very exciting and so grateful!

Herizon Music: The Newsletter
Women Writers Wrap 2024: Songs That Mattered Most & Why
Rather than publish my own “best of” list this year, I curated songs that mattered most to women Substackers who positively impacted my year with their words and wisdom…
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Yours in books and music, Happy Hanukah, Merry Christmas!!

xo,

Kim

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Women's Survival Guide
Women's Survival Guide
I interview women passionate about what they do in the now-what phase of life with positivity and humor as important ingredients.