12.14.2013
Out of Print Totes
We have Out of Print tote bags in the Galaxy right now that are well worth mentioning. Above, The Hungry Caterpillar. On the flip side it has the fruits with the holes in them you will remember if you have read this story to someone you love 5,647 times. We also have totes featuring The Great Gatsby, Alice in Wonderland, Pride and Prejudice, and Moby Dick. Could you put a copy of the book in the matching tote? Yes, you could!
*Velvet dress and twinkle lights not included.*
12.05.2013
Book Jam Picks & Miscellaneous Good Things
Thank you to all of you for coming out and helping us celebrate the 25th Anniversary of the Galaxy Bookshop last Sunday! It was so nice to fill in the spaces between good books with lots and lots of good people! At the end of the evening it was like this:
David Budbill went above and beyond the call of duty reading stories to the youngest partygoer until closing time.
Were you able to join us for the Book Jam? If not, I have for you a list of the recommendations that were given out that evening while we were cozied up at Claire's sipping drinks and listening to story lines…
MEMOIR FOR THOSE WHO LIKE TO LIVE VICARIOUSLY THROUGH OTHERS’ EXPERIENCES:
End of Your Life Book Club, Schwalbe. As mother dies, she and son read.
NON-FICTION/REFERENCE BOOK/POETRY: FOR PEOPLE WHO LIKE TO THINK AND CHAT WHILE SITTING BY THE WOOD STOVE:
Maps, Mizielinska. The world unfolds through fun illustrations.
Winesburg, Ohio, Anderson. Classic glimpses of small town lives.
Boys in the Boat, Brown. Gripping and inspiring window to a world and time.
50 Foods, Behr. Opinionated culinary guide with fun illustrations.
ADULT FICTION: FOR A MAN WHO HAS ENOUGH TECH TOYS BUT NOT ENOUGH GOOD FICTION:
Yellow Birds, Powers. Two friends. Iraq War. Poetic. Tragic.
Where I'm Calling From, Carver. Shows why Carver is the best!
ADULT FICTION: FOR A WOMAN WHO ONLY HAS TIME FOR THE BEST FICTION:
The Interestings, Wolitzer. Follow friends from camp. They mature!
The Signature of All Things, Gilbert. Not eat, pray, love. Just great fiction.
ADULT FICTION FOR ANYONE:
Bitter almonds, Cosse. French woman tutors. Immigrant teaches. Sparse.
11/22/63, King. Can Jake alter events around JFK?
Transatlantic, McCann. Spectacular storytelling, expansive scope, real and imagined.
Bad Monkey, Hiaasen. Pure laugh out loud fun.
YOUNG ADULT FICTION--FOR TEENS AND TWEENS AND ADULTS WHO LOVE THEM:
The Ruby Red Trilogy, Gier. Time travel, mystery, adventure, and romance.
Wonder, Palacio. Can classmates get beyond an extraordinary face?
BOOKS FOR YOUNGSTERS (8-12) BEYOND TOYS BUT NOT READY FOR TEEN TOPICS:
Bo at Ballard Creek, Hill. For Little House fans. Gold rush.
True Colors, Kinsey-Warnock. Heartwarming, historic, memorable characters & mystery.
PICTURE BOOKS: FOR FAMILIES TO READ TOGETHER DURING SNOWSTORMS:
The Christmas Wish, Evert. Horses! Reindeer! Travel with Anja in a magical dream!
Journey, Becker. Red marker, imagination, and a spectacular journey!
Goodnight, Goodnight Construction Site. For littles who love machines and need sleep!
The Day the Crayons Quit, Daywalt. Crayons protest. Readers laugh. Great gift!
And finally, the galactic cupcakes that were eaten up at the anniversary:
11.29.2013
A Christmas Wish by, Lori Evert
Christmas books come and go, full of snow and elves, mangers and angels, stockings and jingle bells. Once in a while, one of those books comes with a little extra magic that marks it as a future classic. For us, The Christmas Wish, by Lori Evert, has that magic, the kind of book to share with the family each year, making it as much a part of holiday tradition as A Christmas Carol or The Polar Express.
Plucky and kind-hearted Anja has one wish: She wants to be one of Santa’s elves. After studying hard so that she can find her way to the North Pole and performing several thoughtful tasks for her loved ones before she leaves, Anja starts her journey north. Her kindness is rewarded by offers of help along the way, from a bright-eyed cardinal, a steady horse, a shy musk-ox, a friendly polar bear, and, finally, one of Santa’s own flying reindeer.
The story is gentle and satisfying, and the photographs by Per Breiehagen is beautiful and inviting right from the cover. With a color palette informed by the whites and grays of the snowy north (“a place so far north that the mothers never pack away the wool hats or mittens”), the one spot of color drawing the eye through the story is the holly berry red of little Anja’s hat, plaid dress, and rosy cheeks, also found in the red feathers of the friendly cardinal.
A Christmas Wish captivated all of us, right out of the box, and we are excited to share it with you so that you can share this joyful little book with your loved ones this Christmas.
11.20.2013
Coming Soon :: Galaxy Bookshop
There are some exciting goings-ons around the Galaxy in the coming weeks that you should know about.
1. This coming Saturday, November 23, from 2-4 PM the Galaxy is hosting a space for writers to write in at Claire's. November is National Novel Writing Month, NaNoWriMo, but you don't have to be working on your 50,000 words in 30 days to join us. You can just drop in with your pen and paper or your laptop and spend some time writing in the company of others! (We need to wrap up swiftly at 4 PM when the dinner staff comes on.)
2. Sunday, December 1st, from 8 AM to 5 PM is the Galaxy's 25th Anniversary Celebration! There will be the annual customer appreciation sale as well as guest booksellers: 11 AM will find Natalie Kinsey-Warnock in the store, Howard Frank Mosher steps in at 1 PM and 3 PM will bring David Budbill. Please come out and celebrate these 25 years with us -- we would love to see you!
3. And last but not least, mark your calendar now for Tuesday, December 3rd, 7 PM the second ever Galaxy Bookshop Book Jam! From our web site:
Last spring, we hosted Pages in the Pub, with the Book Jam blog and Jeudevine Library. It was such a popular event, that we're bringing it back, just in time for the holidays!
Gather some friends and join us for drinks and an evening of great conversation about books with our expert panel. Lisa Sammet, of the Jeudevine Library; Linda Ramsdell; Lisa Christie, of the Book Jam Blog; and a special guest from the community will present a list of the books they are the most excited to share with others this season. It's a great opportunity to make your list of winter reading, as well as to get gift ideas for your friends and family!
Tickets to this event are $10, and the cost includes one beer, wine, or soda and a donation to the Jeudevine Library. Tickets are available for sale in advance at The Galaxy Bookshop and the Jeudevine Library.
11.16.2013
Ed Behr :: 50 Foods
The Galaxy Bookshop and Claire's Restaurant welcome Ed Behr for a conversation about the pleasures of eating over a dinner celebrating the pure tastes of food! Ed Behr will be at Claire's for a special dinner Tuesday, November 19th, at 5:30 P.M. The prix-fixe dinner includes five courses paired with wine for $65 per person, tax and gratuity not included. Please call 472-7053 for reservations.
Mr. Behr agreed to answer a few questions ahead of his visit.
1. How did you come to write 50 Foods: The Essentials of Good Taste?
EB: After 25 years of travel, research, interviewing, and writing about food and wine -- and not least editing and publishing the work of others, including some of the greatest experts -- 50 Foods was the natural book to write, my magnum opus, to risk a grand description. It gathers and presents a large part of my work and of all I've learned. I've always focused on taste. I've often specialized in ingredients and the basic elements of eating -- in bread, cheese, ham, for instance -- the foundations of the pleasure we find in eating. This a sort of how-to book for eaters, a guide to deliciousness. It's full of practical information about food.
2. Do you have a favorite go-to cookbook?
EB: No. For me, that's potentially a big question, which doesn't lend itself to a quick response. I look to books more for inspiration than for recipes. But if I were to cite what I think are the two best cookbooks in English, they are Richard Olney's Simple French Food and Patience Gray's Honey from a Weed. Those two writers understand food and drink, they have, or really had, vast experience, and they write extremely well. They are, almost by definition, in the library of every Western cook who loves food and books.
3. What's your favorite passage or line from a book?
EB: Possibly Richard Olney's description of cassoulet in Simple French Food, which I quote in 50 Foods.
4. What are you reading currently? Non-food, Trollope's Eustace Diamonds. Food: Jon Bonné's The New California Wine.
You can hear Ed Behr on Vermont Edition on Vermont Public Radio this Monday, November 18th, at noon and 7 P.M as well!
11.08.2013
Archer Mayor :: Three Can Keep A Secret
Come out to the Galaxy on Tuesday, November 12 at 7PM to spend an evening with Archer Mayor and his new book Three Can Keep A Secret.
1. How did you come to write the Joe Gunther series? Did you realize when you started the first one that it was going to be a series?
2. What book or books are your favorite(s)?
AM: The one that's in my head — I haven't messed it up by writing it yet.
3. What's your favorite line or quote from a book?
AM: Can't think of one offhand.
4. What are you reading currently?
AM: Just wrapping up Atkinson's The Guns At Last Light.
11.03.2013
Ellen Bryant Voigt :: Headwaters
Mark your calendar for this coming Tuesday evening, November 5, at 7 PM to hear poet Ellen Bryant Voigt read from her new book, Headwaters, at the Galaxy Bookshop.
To read an interview with Ellen, please visit Granta.
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