Kenny's Bookshop episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 14, 2026 · 44 MIN

Kenny's Bookshop

from Between the Shelves

Kennys Bookshop & Art Gallery in Galway is one of the most celebrated independent bookshops in Ireland, widely recognized not just as a retail store, but as a global pioneer in e-commerce and a major cultural institution. The story begins with a university romance. Desmond Kenny, a native Galwegian, and Maureen Canning, from Mohill, County Leitrim, met on their very first day at University College Galway (UCG). Upon graduating, they married. With few jobs available during World War II, the young couple decided to open a bookshop—a move friends and family considered an act of financial madness. With a £100 bank loan and books donated by relatives, they opened Kennys Bookshop on November 29, 1940, on High Street, Galway. They rented two rooms, living in the back room and running the shop out of the front. To survive, they had to be incredibly inventive: they operated a lending library, ran a second-hand schoolbook exchange, and Desmond traveled on the road selling books directly to county libraries. In the 1950s, Maureen began introducing locally handmade Irish crafts (rugs, sweaters, ceramics) to add color to the shop. This naturally attracted visual artists. In 1953, they hosted their first art exhibition, hanging paintings directly over and among the bookshelves. By 1968, the art collection demanded its own space. Desmond and Maureen converted the living room of their family home in Salthill, effectively opening the first commercial art gallery in the West of Ireland. Their inaugural formal exhibition featured legendary Irish painter Seán Keating. . By the 1970s, five of the Kennys' six children had entered the family business, each expanding a different arm of the trade (such as establishing a dedicated Book Bindery in 1974). The shop became a famous gathering place for local poets, bibliophiles, and international authors. Famous faces like Edna O'Brien, John McGahern, Seamus Heaney, Kate O'Brien, and Frank O'Connor were frequent visitors, and Kennys began a tradition of photographing every writer who walked through their doors. In the early 1980s, the family bought the High Street building they had been renting for 40 years, along with the building behind it on Middle Street, connecting them into a massive, multi-story literary maze. Their expertise in Irish literature led to the US Library of Congress appointing Kennys as its official Irish book supplier. Long before major multinational corporations came to dominate internet commerce, Kennys made history. In the summer of 1994, collaborating with Barry Flanagan (founder of Ireland On-Line), they launched Kennys.ie. It was Ireland’s first ever e-commerce website and only the second bookstore in the entire world to sell books online. They beat Amazon to the web by a full year. Because they already had an international database and a product that was easily shippable, the digital venture exploded, allowing them to ship rare, second-hand, and new Irish books to collectors across 150 countries In 2006, after 66 years on High Street, the family made the monumental and emotional decision to close their historic city-center doors to pivot fully toward their massive online trade and wholesale operations. In 2009, Kennys consolidated everything—their retail shop, the art gallery, and their vast warehouse of hundreds of thousands of volumes—into their current premises at Liosbán Retail Park (just outside Galway city center). True to the spirit of the shop, the matriarch Maureen Kenny fully backed the move before her passing, famously stating, "You have to move with the times." Liosbán Retail ParkTuam RoadGalwayH91 N5P8IrelandTel : +353 (0)91 709350Email : [email protected]"Every bookshop has a story. Between the Shelves tells them. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Kennys Bookshop & Art Gallery in Galway is one of the most celebrated independent bookshops in Ireland, widely recognized not just as a retail store, but as a global pioneer in e-commerce and a major cultural institution. The story begins with a university romance. Desmond Kenny, a native Galwegian, and Maureen Canning, from Mohill, County Leitrim, met on their very first day at University College Galway (UCG). Upon graduating, they married. With few jobs available during World War II, the young couple decided to open a bookshop—a move friends and family considered an act of financial madness. With a £100 bank loan and books donated by relatives, they opened Kennys Bookshop on November 29, 1940, on High Street, Galway. They rented two rooms, living in the back room and running the shop out of the front. To survive, they had to be incredibly inventive: they operated a lending library, ran a second-hand schoolbook exchange, and Desmond traveled on the road selling books directly to county libraries. In the 1950s, Maureen began introducing locally handmade Irish crafts (rugs, sweaters, ceramics) to add color to the shop. This naturally attracted visual artists. In 1953, they hosted their first art exhibition, hanging paintings directly over and among the bookshelves. By 1968, the art collection demanded its own space. Desmond and Maureen converted the living room of their family home in Salthill, effectively opening the first commercial art gallery in the West of Ireland. Their inaugural formal exhibition featured legendary Irish painter Seán Keating. . By the 1970s, five of the Kennys' six children had entered the family business, each expanding a different arm of the trade (such as establishing a dedicated Book Bindery in 1974). The shop became a famous gathering place for local poets, bibliophiles, and international authors. Famous faces like Edna O'Brien, John McGahern, Seamus Heaney, Kate O'Brien, and Frank O'Connor were frequent visitors, and Kennys began a tradition of photographing every writer who walked through their doors. In the early 1980s, the family bought the High Street building they had been renting for 40 years, along with the building behind it on Middle Street, connecting them into a massive, multi-story literary maze. Their expertise in Irish literature led to the US Library of Congress appointing Kennys as its official Irish book supplier. Long before major multinational corporations came to dominate internet commerce, Kennys made history. In the summer of 1994, collaborating with Barry Flanagan (founder of Ireland On-Line), they launched Kennys.ie. It was Ireland’s first ever e-commerce website and only the second bookstore in the entire world to sell books online. They beat Amazon to the web by a full year. Because they already had an international database and a product that was easily shippable, the digital venture exploded, allowing them to ship rare, second-hand, and new Irish books to collectors across 150 countries In 2006, after 66 years on High Street, the family made the monumental and emotional decision to close their historic city-center doors to pivot fully toward their massive online trade and wholesale operations. In 2009, Kennys consolidated everything—their retail shop, the art gallery, and their vast warehouse of hundreds of thousands of volumes—into their current premises at Liosbán Retail Park (just outside Galway city center). True to the spirit of the shop, the matriarch Maureen Kenny fully backed the move before her passing, famously stating, "You have to move with the times." Liosbán Retail ParkTuam RoadGalwayH91 N5P8IrelandTel : +353 (0)91 709350Email : [email protected]"Every bookshop has a story. Between the Shelves tells them. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

NOW PLAYING

Kenny's Bookshop

0:00 44:47

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Between the Shelves?

This episode is 44 minutes long.

When was this Between the Shelves episode published?

This episode was published on June 14, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Kennys Bookshop & Art Gallery in Galway is one of the most celebrated independent bookshops in Ireland, widely recognized not just as a retail store, but as a global pioneer in e-commerce and a major cultural institution. The story begins with a...

Can I download this Between the Shelves episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!