History & Culture · Southern Tier
Hobart Turned Main Street Into a Book Village
Hobart's identity pairs Delaware County farm country with a cluster of independent bookstores and a literary festival on Main Street.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Hobart’s local identity is unusually legible: a farm-country village that made books part of its public face. Great Western Catskills describes Hobart as a small town between Bloomville and Stamford with agricultural history and a present-day connection to books. It says the Book Village has seven bookstores, each with a different focus, plus an art gallery and shops with handmade goods, art supplies, vintage books, toys, and other finds.
The same tourism page notes the Festival of Woman Writers. Hobart shows how local identity can be built from reuse and habit: old Main Street storefronts, rural Catskills setting, and a civic identity organized around browsing, reading, and gathering.
Book Village is the handle, but Main Street is what makes it work. The bookstores give people a reason to slow down instead of passing through.
That makes Hobart feel both small and intentional. It is still a Delaware County farm-country village, but its public face now includes books, art, handmade goods, and events.
The West Branch valley setting keeps that identity grounded. Hobart is not trying to feel like a city book district; it is a rural Main Street that found a reason for people to browse and linger.