20th century Walter Powell founded Powell's in 1971. His son, Michael Powell, had started a bookstore in
Chicago, Illinois, in 1970 which specialized in used, rare, and discounted books, primarily of an academic and scholarly nature. In 1979, Michael Powell joined his father in Portland, right after his father's store was not offered a lease renewal; within a year, they found the location that became its current headquarters. Powell's opened its first branch store, in a suburban shopping center named Loehmann's Plaza near
Washington Square. The new branch was not a replica of its City of Books location; Powell was concerned that the "edgy" neighborhood of its headquarters location was limiting its customer base, so the new store was "fairly fancy" with white shelving, a tile floor, and banners over the aisles. Powell's established its Internet presence in 1993, beginning with email and
FTP-based access to its technical bookstore; it has since expanded to incorporate fiction and other genres as a traditional
ecommerce site. Their website was established in 1994, before
Amazon.com, and has contributed substantially to the chain's recent growth. The City of Books location grew to its current size after an expansion that opened in 1999; it included a new entrance facing the
Pearl District which featured the "Pillar of Books", a
Tenino sandstone carving depicting a stack of eight of the world's great books, on a base with the inscription "Buy the book, read the book, enjoy the book, sell the book" in Latin.
21st century In 2002, Powell's was cited by
USA Today as one of America's 10 best bookstores. In January 2008, Powell's announced plans to expand the downtown City of Books by adding as many as two floors to the store's southeast corner. The expansion was due to add at least of new retail space. Plans submitted to the Portland Design Commission in November 2008 called for a rooftop garden atop the new addition and an "art cube" over a redesigned main entrance. In March 2010, Michael Powell confirmed plans to hand over management of the business to his daughter Emily as of July. In October 2010, Powell's announced it had bought 7,000 books from the library of author
Anne Rice; Powell's offered these
association copies on their website. The bookstore was revealed as a charter member of the
Google eBooks service when the news was announced by Google on December 6, 2010. In June 2011, Powell's participated in
Google Offers during that service's first month of operation; according to
TechCrunch—which characterized Powell's as a "Portland institution"—"5,000 Powell’s vouchers sold out in a matter of hours", making it "most popular deal in the month." Starting in May 2012, Powell's began offering access to
print on demand books via the
Espresso Book Machine. In early 2013, Emily Powell announced that Miriam Sontz, the company's chief operating officer, would take over as chief executive officer. In 2016, CNN rated it one of the "coolest" bookstores in the world. CEO Miriam Sontz retired in January 2019. Patrick Bassett, a veteran business consultant, is the CEO since October 2020. Emily Powell remains president and owner. In 2024, Powell's held its first-ever used book sale out of its Northwest Portland warehouse, drawing over 10,000 attendees, some reporting wait times of over four or five hours to get in. Powell's held a second annual sale in July 2025.
Logos File:PowellsBooksLogoOld1.png|Pre–2005 File:PowellsBooksLogo2000s.png|2005–2013 File:PowellsBooksLogo2013-14.png|2013–2014 File:Powell's City of Books (logo).png|2014–present == Locations ==