Tucked away inside the historic, labyrinthine lanes sits a true literary sanctuary: Beware of the Leopard Books. As the city's largest and longest-running secondhand bookshop, it has been a beloved fixture of Bristol's independent retail scene since it opened its doors in March 1991.
The Atmosphere & Vibe: Named after a famous, deadpan line in Douglas Adams’ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy ("...the plans were on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying 'Beware of the Leopard'"), the shop perfectly embodies that exact brand of quirky, eccentric British charm. It physically occupies two small units directly facing each other across a narrow, covered market walkway.
The layout is delightfully ramshackle but deceptively well-organized. Books are crammed onto floor-to-ceiling shelves, stacked in teetering towers on the floor, and squeezed into every spare inch of available space. It is the quintessential "treasure hunt" bookstore where you don't go to find a specific title—you go to let a book find you.
What You'll Find Inside: Run by long-time proprietor David Jackson, the shop’s massive inventory of roughly 15,000 titles covers just about every imaginable topic.
The Fiction Unit: This side of the walkway is a haven for storytelling. It features massive troves of classic literature, crime thrillers, and a particularly strong showing of vintage science fiction and fantasy.
The Non-Fiction Unit: Directly opposite, you'll find everything from local history, transport, and military studies to academic disciplines like theology, science, and art history. The Hidden Gems: Keep an eye out for old comic annuals, vintage maps, sheet music, and a smattering of highly collectable antiquarian and first-edition books.📍
Visitor Essentials: Location: Units 66–69 & 77, The Covered Market, St Nicholas Market, Bristol, BS1 1LJ
Opening Hours: Monday to Saturday, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm Best Combined With: A lunchtime trip to the market's famous food stalls (like Matina or Chilli Daddy) right around the corner.
Whether you're a student looking for cheap classics or a casual browser escaping a rainy Bristol afternoon, Beware of the Leopard is a nostalgic reminder of what independent bookshops used to be—and a comforting sign that physical reading culture is still alive and well in the Old City.

