3.05.2014
2.26.2014
Maple.
Eventually it's going to be time to sugar again. It must be sneaking up on us now, right? Right? We have some books on the subject if you are looking for how to boil your own or maybe you'd like to read some stories and lore beside the wood stove before we slip into spring.
Here's an excerpt from the song "Maple Sweet" written by Perrin Batchelder Fiske in 1837. (We used to have a Pete Sutherland cassette tape with this song on it and I remember singing loudly along to it during sugaring season while navigating muddy back roads with the windows down for the first time since the fall before. Good times.)
Oh you say you don't believe it
Take a saucer and a spoon.
Though you're sourer than a lemon
You'll be sweeter very soon.
'Til everyone you meet
At home or on the street
Will have half a mind to bite you
For you look so very sweet!
2.04.2014
Radiance & Please Take Our Survey!
First of all please, if you have not done it yet, take our survey!
And now… Radiance of Tomorrow by Ishmael Beah...
And now… Radiance of Tomorrow by Ishmael Beah...
I picked this up the other day and read the first few pages. I can't wait to sink my teeth into this one. Here's what got me:
…The places I come from have such righ languages, such a variety of expression. In Sierra Leone we have about fifteen languages and three dialects. I grew up speaking about seven of them. My mother tongue, Mende, is very expressive, very figurative, and when I write, I always struggle to find the English equivalent of things that I really want to say in Mende. For example, in Mende, you wouldn't say "night came suddenly"; you would say "the sky rolled over and changed its sides." Even single words are this way -- the word for "ball" in Mende translates to a "nest of air" or a "vessel that carries air."
If I express such things in written English the language takes on a kind of new mode… When I started writing this novel, I wanted to introduce all these things to my work. They are part of what makes language come alive for me.
1.24.2014
Independent Bookstores
Yesterday, while still being one with the couch after a stretch of the flu, I heard Fresh Air on NPR. Ms. Gross interviewed Ann Patchett about her new book of essays, This is the Story of a Happy Marriage. What struck me was what Ms. Patchett had to say about independent bookstores:
Terry Gross: So even though you have a bookstore now, do you ever buy your books online?
Ann Patchett: Right. Well we can order it for you. You know, it’s not that I think no one should order books online... there are a lot of little towns that don’t have bookstores or you might not enjoy going to the bookstore and I think that that’s fine, too. Buy books online. But i think that what’s important is that if you value a book store -- if that’s something you want in your community -- if you want to take your children to story hour, if you want to meet the authors who are coming through town, if you want to get together for a book club at a book store or you want to come in and talk to the smart booksellers, if you want to have that experience of a book store then it is up to you -- it is your responsibility to buy your book in the bookstore and that’s what keeps the bookstore there. And that’s true for any little independent business. You can’t go in to the little gardening store and talk to them about pesticides and when do you plant and what kind of tools do you need and use their time for an hour and their intelligence and then go to Lowe’s and buy your plants for less. THAT you CANNOT do. So that’s my message.
12.21.2013
With the return of the light -- and the rain -- and then back to the snow and the cold -- what are you hoping to be reading over the winter? Here are what some of the Galaxy Bookshop booksellers will be reading in the coming weeks: The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert, Let Him Go by Larry Watson, Transatlantic by Colum McCann, and Falling For Eli to name a few.
And you? What are you reading as we go from the dark back into the light?
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:
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