The Nouvelle Librairie nationale, rebranded as La Nouvelle Librairie in 2018, was a bookstore located at 11 Rue de Médicis, in the 6th arrondissement of Paris.
Opened in July 2018 under the leadership of François Bousquet with an identitarian, far-right orientation, the bookstore ultimately closed again in May 2024 due to financial difficulties.
After founding Le Faisceau in 1925, Georges Valois severed ties with Charles Maurras and Action française. The Nouvelle Librairie nationale became Valois's property, renamed Librairie Valois, and briefly served as a publishing house for Le Faisceau authors and fascist theorists (1925–1928). By 1927, Valois distanced himself from fascism, pivoting the bookstore towards social and economic theory until its closure in 1932 during the Great Depression[citation needed].
The bookstore faced multiple acts of vandalism.[6]
In April 2024, François Bousquet announced the impending closure of the bookstore.[7] Financial challenges led to its final closure on May 28, 2024.[8]
Éditions de La Nouvelle Librairie
In August 2019, the Éditions de La Nouvelle Librairie was established, gaining prominence within identitarian right-wing circles with over 100 titles published by 2022.[9]
In 2022, plans to publish Derniers écrits avant le massacre, a collection by Gabriel Matzneff, were canceled due to "death threats" against staff, as announced by the publisher.[9]
References
^Paris, No. 1 (Jan.–Feb. 1912) to No. 5-6 (July 1913); second series, No. 1 (Jan.–Feb. 1914)..
^Géraud Poumarède (1994). "Le Cercle Proudhon ou l'impossible synthèse". Mil neuf cent: Revue d'histoire intellectuelle. 12.