Now, readers who want to support independents have a timely alternative to big-box blitzes: Bookshop.org is hosting a two-day Anti-Prime Day event with free shipping on all orders. The deal also stacks with another promotion for Banned Books Week, offering shoppers 20% off select frequently challenged titles with checkout code BBW25. The result is good for the reader (generous discounts) and even better for your fellow book lover, because every purchase sends money back to actual local bookstores.
What the Bookshop.org Anti-Prime Day Deal Includes
The headline offer is straightforward and far-reaching: free shipping on all orders, no code necessary. If you have been hoarding a cart or cushioning a gift, this bypasses one of the biggest excuses people offer for why they’re not seeing something through to checkout (shipping fees) while keeping your dollars in the indie ecosystem.

At the same time, Bookshop.org is celebrating Banned Books Week by offering 20% off on all banned and challenged books with code BBW25 at checkout. Frequently appearing titles on these lists are contemporary classics and book award winners like Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye, Art Spiegelman’s Maus, or Maia Kobabe’s Gender Queer. The two-day spread also coincides with the most popular online sale dates, so readers can shop without guilt and still save.
Why It Matters for Independent Bookstores
Bookshop.org’s model is set up to redirect online sales to physical booksellers. Shoppers can choose an independent local store to receive supporting funds; if no store is selected, the money goes into a revenue pool for all participating independents. Since its launch, the platform has distributed more than $30 million to independent bookstores — a significant lifeline as street-front shops are increasingly stretched by rising rents and changing foot traffic, not to mention the price pressures of algorithmic retail.
For their part, the American Booksellers Association has reported that an increasing number of stores are using hybrid strategies — hosting author signings in conjunction with staff-curated reading lists and through online sales — to remain adaptive and relevant. Free-shipping days on a platform that pays indies can be a margin-friendly way to compete with mass retailers’ convenience while delivering the cultural and community benefits local shops offer.
Context: On Banned Books and Reader Demand
Banned Books Week is organized by a coalition that includes the American Library Association and seeks to draw national attention to attempts to remove or restrict access to books. The ALA recently announced a record surge in censorship attempts, including thousands of unique titles challenged in the past year, many of them targeting works by or about LGBTQ+ people and people of color. PEN America has also recorded thousands of school book removals in a small number of states.

Discounting besieged titles serves to do more than add a deal badge; it helps supply catch up with the spike of curiosity and demand. Librarians often see it happen with controversies: Readers are pushed to seek out the offending books. This visibility, in turn, possibly results in sustained backlist sales for publishers and authors. For readers, it’s a good way to build a home library of culturally significant works more cheaply.
How to Make the Bookshop.org Offer Go Even Further
First, select a local bookstore from the site so that one store profits from your purchase. Next, add whatever titles you’ve had your eye on — from new releases and preorders to staff-picked paperbacks. If you’re browsing the censorship-themed sale, apply BBW25 at checkout for 20% off wherever applicable (free shipping will be applied to the entire order).
Stockpile gifts and book club selections, which may be heavy (and therefore costly to ship) outside promotions. If you’re unsure, consider National Book Award winners or Indie Bestseller lists; try some Banned Books Week roundups and recommendation posts for ideas that offer a marriage of literary merit with timely relevance.
A Prime Day Alternative with Purpose for Book Lovers
Free shipping is the single most powerful motivator for online shoppers, according to consumer research conducted by retail trade groups. By introducing it at a focused, high-traffic shopping time, Bookshop.org cuts through the friction that plagues readers and directs revenue to independent stores, which are investing in author events, school partnerships, and neighborhood culture. It’s a small change in where you click that can deliver outsize local impact — plus a pile of new books on your doorstep for less.