There are a number of cafรฉs and bookstores in Durham. Many cater their spaces to certain audiencesโteenagers picking up fantasy novels and frappรฉs, young professionals typing away as they stir iced lattes, older readers sipping hot tea over lengthy memoirs.
Daughters Coffee & Books doesnโt forget about the toddlers.
Toward the back of the new South Durham cafรฉ is a children’s corner stocked with used picture books, building blocks, and even a toy espresso machine for kids to mimic the baristas working across from them.
The concept ties closely with the shopโs name; owner Nicole Grinnell chose โDaughtersโ because of her close relationship with her mother and sister. Both Grinnell and her sister have their own daughters.
โMy idea was if there’s a safe little corner for them to either read or have a little toy that they can play with while Mom enjoys a cup of coffee, even for five or 10 minutesโthat could be the best five or 10 minutes of her day,โ Grinnell says.
Itโs not just the childrenโs nook creating a family-friendly environment. Itโs also the colorful titles on the shelves, the handwritten menu on the wall, and the floral illustrations drawn by Grinnellโs friend, artist Adina Stephens, stretching across the shopโs front windows. Whether youโre five years old or 50, Daughters welcomes you.
Grinnell, who opened the cafรฉ in April, says she hasnโt followed a traditional path. She never graduated college and felt stagnated working โjobs that didnโt feel like careers.โ But through it all, she always had her books.
A collective space for local readers
Grinnell has โnever been unhappy in a bookstore.โ So when she sat down to really think about what she wanted to do with her life, she decided to open her own.
Daughters is located in Greenwood Commons near Parkwood in the space formerly held by Bull City Brewhouse. While Grinnellโs original vision for the space was focused entirely on books, she decided to embrace a cafรฉ concept after seeing that the location already had a bar built in.
Although there are several bookstores in downtown Durham, the closest available to Parkwood residents is the Barnes & Noble at Southpoint Mall.

โAs far as an independent bookstore, we’re the only one for miles,โ the storeโs bookseller, Frances Gasior, says. โI think that weโre catering directly to the neighborhood.โ
Gasior keeps various perspectives, audiences, and agesโespecially childrenโin mind as they add to the shopโs collection.
โFor Pride we found some really cute glossaries of terms so that younger queer people can maybe put some language to their feelings, to their unknowns. And then for Juneteenth, we tried to focus on Black excellence,โ says Gasior.
Grinnell says Daughters currently sells about 2,000 items, of which Gasior estimates at least 60 percent are used (or โpre-loved,โ as the sign labeling the shelf reads). If shoppers canโt find a book, the shop will place an order for them with a 10 percent discount off the retail price.
Grinnell collaborates with her staff to add to the store’s inventory. Her team also works to craft the cafรฉโs menu, which is sourced from Carrboro Coffee Roasters and Ninth Street Bakery.
Along with standard coffee shop fare, Daughters offers a variety of specialty drinks. While some, like its โCinnamon Bun Bookstore Brew,โ are always available, the shop also offers a literary-themed seasonal menu.
In spring, that included a โDaughter of the Forestโ brown sugar and rosemary cold brew with vanilla cold foam and โThe Love Hypothesisโ raspberry and vanilla iced matcha latte. Grinnell says the cafรฉ is currently preparing to launch its summer specials.
Although Daughters is relatively new to the area, Grinnell hopes to cultivate it into a collective space for local readers. The cafรฉ hosted its first big event, a book signing with Raleigh-based author Annie McQuaid, on June 1.
โSomething that I wasn’t expecting when we announced that we were opening and after we opened was how many local authors there were who were looking for a place to sell their books, a place to market them, [and] a place to meet with people in the community,โ Grinnell says. โSo that has been a big need in the community that we have been looking to help fill.โ
As Daughters builds its presence in South Durham, Grinnell says future events will include a โcoffee and conversationโ session with a group of local writers and other authors collaborating with the shop to raise support for local nonprofit work.
Grinnell knows that if readers want a coffee and a book, they can make the drive to Southpoint or downtown. But she also knows that locally accessible, independent businesses like hers bring something special to their communities.
โThis is all of our livelihoods and it needs to succeed,โ she says. โThere’s just another personal care that you get from coming to an independent store like ours.โ
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