Sisterwrite was founded by Lynn Alderson, Mary Coghill and Kay Stirling in 1979. It was Britain's first feminist bookshop and a workers' co-operative.
Its specialist subjects were feminism, lesbianism and books written by Black women, disabled women and Irish and Jewish writers. They also imported feminist books from Women Books in New York and US publishers.
The bookshop was also a women’s centre and became a hub for the local lesbian community. Sisterwrite made their books widely available through sending out a catalogue.
During the era of Section 28, certain books were kept under the counter for fear of reprisal from the authorities.
The bookshop contained a cafe called Sisterbite and is mentioned in the Booker Prize-winning novel “Girl, Woman, Other” by Bernadine Evaristo, who was a regular visitor to the bookshop.
Sources:
Radical Bookshops Listing, Radical Bookshop History Project (November 2023) [Available online here, accessed 8.7.2025]
Radical Bookselling History Newsletter, Issue 6, ISSN 2752-3977 [https://www.leftontheshelfbooks.co.uk/pdf/Radical-Bookselling-History-Newsletter-Issue-6-May-2023.pdf, accessed 8.7.2025]
Islington's Pride Website [https://islington.humap.site/map/records/sisterwrite-bookshop, accessed 8.7.2025]
Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sisterwrite, accessed 8.7.2025]
The Radical Bookseller, No. 75, 1991























































































