We hope you enjoy this slideshow of scenes from our 23rd Anniversary celebration!
[slideshow]
12.13.2011
12.03.2011
Thank you for 23 years (and still counting!)
Thanks to everyone who came to the bookstore for our Sirius Reader Party! As always, it was a great pleasure to see so many friendly faces and spend time talking with everyone throughout the day. We had delicious food, including cheeses from the Cellars at Jasper Hill and from Bonnieview Farm, and even a visit from strolling musician Michael Kennedy. We'll be posting photos soon, as well as more information about our upcoming move, but for now, we'll leave you with our anniversary video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRjuL7kKM7k&feature=autoplay&list=HL1322960730&lf=mh_lolz&playnext=1
Video directed, edited, and produced by Claire Greene
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRjuL7kKM7k&feature=autoplay&list=HL1322960730&lf=mh_lolz&playnext=1
Video directed, edited, and produced by Claire Greene
11.14.2011
Wake up, little blog!
Whew, it's been much too long since we've blogged here, but we're making a resolution to do better from now on. (Who says you can only make resolutions at New Year's?)
Thought 2011 is not over yet, the yearly lists are coming out now, and we'd like to share two of our favorites:
The New England Independent Booksellers Holiday Catalog is a list of some of the top choices of booksellers around our region.
Thought 2011 is not over yet, the yearly lists are coming out now, and we'd like to share two of our favorites:
The New England Independent Booksellers Holiday Catalog is a list of some of the top choices of booksellers around our region.
The Association of Booksellers for Children (ABC) has also put out their annual catalog of Best Books for Children, and it must be said, there is a great crop of children's books this year.
9.15.2011
Banned Books Virtual Read-Out!
Join Claire, Sandy, and hundreds of other readers across the country in a Banned Books Week Virtual Read Out. This year, Banned Books Week is September 24 - October 1, but you can celebrate early by recording yourself reading an excerpt from your favorite banned book and adding it to the Banned Books Week YouTube channel. If you need help with your video, feel free to stop by the store! We will have a camera available next week and the week after for recording banned book readings.
Here are our videos to give you a little motivation, because if we can do it, so can you!
Claire, reading from The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SMyPl8k7sYI
Sandy, reading from Sylvester and the Magic Pebble:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oRSgKMVqKKM
The American Library Association list of Frequently Challenged Books.
Here are our videos to give you a little motivation, because if we can do it, so can you!
Claire, reading from The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SMyPl8k7sYI
Sandy, reading from Sylvester and the Magic Pebble:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oRSgKMVqKKM
The American Library Association list of Frequently Challenged Books.
8.17.2011
Canceled: Wallace Stegner Weekend
Despite the amazing agenda lined up for the 2nd Annual Wallace Stegner Weekend at the Highland Lodge, the event has been canceled due to small registration numbers. We are hopeful that the event will happen again, so if you had planned to go make sure to sign up early next year-- and tell all of the Stegner enthusiasts in your life!
8.12.2011
A peek into 2012
As much as we're enjoying the here and now, our minds are often on the coming months as we read advance copies of books to be published and peruse catalogs for Fall 2011 and Winter/Spring 2012.
We'd like to share a bit of our excitement for one event taking place next year--the release of our dear friend Howard Frank Mosher's new book, The Great Northern Express, on March 6, 2012! Howard has been talking about this book for a couple of years, a memoir of his travels around the country while on book tour. He stopped by Galaxy this week for an informal photo shoot and was joined by a special friend. On his way to Hardwick, he spied a small turtle in the road and decided to bring him along. (Those of you who have read Walking to Gatlinburg will understand the significance of this particular critter.) Howard is very hopeful that his picture, along with the turtle, on the steps of The Galaxy Bookshop, will grace the jacket of The Great Northern Express.
In keeping with tradition, The Galaxy Bookshop will host the premier event for The Great Northern Express--Howard's first stop on his book tour about a book tour--on March 6, 2012, at 7 p.m. Mark your calendars!
In keeping with tradition, The Galaxy Bookshop will host the premier event for The Great Northern Express--Howard's first stop on his book tour about a book tour--on March 6, 2012, at 7 p.m. Mark your calendars!
7.08.2011
Picks from the Pros
The fine members of the New England Children's Booksellers Association (NECBA) read and review advance book galleys at a furious pace each season in an attempt to cover as many new children's books as possible. The reviews are shared with others via listserv so that we don't all have to read every book, as much as we might want to. These reviews are then gathered, analyzed, catagorized, and finalized into the Spring (or Fall) Review Project by one of the intrepid booksellers of NECBA--this year, the amazing Carol Chittenden of Eight Cousins book store in Falmouth, Mass.
For the Top 10 (or A Baker's Dozen), you can view the snazzy poster, or get the full list, with reviews, here. I'm excited to say that I have two reviews included in this list, including Katherine Hannigan's True...(sort of), which is one of the Top 10 (a.k.a. Top 13) picks of the Spring List! While I'm at it, I will throw my wholehearted support behind these other Top Picks, which I read and loved: The Penderwicks at Point Mouette (the Penderwick family is always a delight to spend time with, and I'm so happy that there are two more books to come), Okay for Now (Gary Schmidt is an amazing writer and he perfectly captured the humor and tragedy of Doug Swieteck's eighth grade year), Blink and Caution (a fast-paced novel about two teens forced to trust one another when they separately stumble into a very dangerous situation), and Delirium (falling in the dystopian fiction genre, envisioning a world in which falling in love has been outlawed).
Of course, in the immortal words of Levar Burton, "You don't have to take my word for it."
For the Top 10 (or A Baker's Dozen), you can view the snazzy poster, or get the full list, with reviews, here. I'm excited to say that I have two reviews included in this list, including Katherine Hannigan's True...(sort of), which is one of the Top 10 (a.k.a. Top 13) picks of the Spring List! While I'm at it, I will throw my wholehearted support behind these other Top Picks, which I read and loved: The Penderwicks at Point Mouette (the Penderwick family is always a delight to spend time with, and I'm so happy that there are two more books to come), Okay for Now (Gary Schmidt is an amazing writer and he perfectly captured the humor and tragedy of Doug Swieteck's eighth grade year), Blink and Caution (a fast-paced novel about two teens forced to trust one another when they separately stumble into a very dangerous situation), and Delirium (falling in the dystopian fiction genre, envisioning a world in which falling in love has been outlawed).
Of course, in the immortal words of Levar Burton, "You don't have to take my word for it."
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