Engaged

EngagedThe highlight of the day: a marriage proposal in the store.  We were a part of the scheme.  Yesterday, a favorite book was purchased: a first edition of Taylor Caldwell’s Dear and Glorious Physician.  And, from Strong Bindery, a hollowed-out book, a Rainbow Classic edition of Gulliver’s Travels, proved to be of near-equal size for the Caldwell dust jacket.  Today, at the end of a scavenger hunt, the couple arrived at Loganberry Books and a clandestine pass-off of the book with engagement ring inside occurred.  Couple browsed, but when I asked if I could help them find anything, I was only too delighted to take them back to the sanctuary and hand over a stack of interesting Taylor Caldwell titles to peruse.  Later, we got to congratulate the happy couple.  As Christine put it, they were too adorable for words.

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Gardening Libraries

Tonight we had an excellent NOBS Forums presentation with some mighty fine show-and-tells! The program was co-sponsored by the Native Plant Society and featured two librarians from our cultural institutional libraries.

Gary Esmonde Gary Esmonde from the Cleveland Botanical Gardens gave a wonderful talk about the literature of Cleveland gardening, from new guide books from Lone Pine Publishing to the Ellen Biddle Shipman garden design at the Gwinn estate, and from histories of the cultural gardens to a treastice on the Moses Cleaveland trees.  Apparently, there are maps so you can go find these protected trees and know that they were here when Moses Cleaveland came to town circa 1796.

Wendy WasmanWendy Wasman from the Cleveland Natural History Museum brought some amazing pieces from the rare books collection. One tree book had razor-thin samples of wood, and a mushroom book included a stereoscope with slides. She also brought a folio book of orchids with gorgeous chromolithographs.  Fabulous treasures. Cleveland needs to appreciate and use these amazing resources more.

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Sweet Sixteen

It’s my fault.  I knew that a group of working women who wanted me to talk about my business would gravitate towards the media-saturated subjects.  So I decided to confront these subjects head-on: the internet, Amazon, Borders, eBooks.  Officially, I named the talk Loganberry at Sweet Sixteen, and focused on the industry changes over 1.5 decades.  The changes are extreme.  I illustrated this by beginning with the used book trade and an illustration of book searching with trade tools like the defunct AB Bookman.  Can you believe we used to read books wanted ads like personals, just 16 years ago?  Even the ladies found this ludicrous.

On to the new book industry: there’s so much to talk about here.  There have been lots of format changes over the years — trade paperback originals, audio books, POD; chain stores, internet, wholesale terms — but none as incisive as eBooks.  The media has hounded the advent of the eReader, and heralded the demise of paper.  That everyone jumps to the conclusion that books are dead is unfortunate.  Television did not kill radio.  Paperbacks did not kill hardbacks.  Audiobooks did not kill print.

The evolution of format continues, and while we are still in this proprietary-technology stage, it is akin to the Beta era of home movie viewing.  Isn’t it great that new readers are being cultivated by the allure of the device?  Isn’t it nice to see people reading on the bus again?  These are new readers, folks, and of course they loaded up their new Christmas toys with new reads, and of course that makes a sales impact.  I bet these new readers will be happy to discover paper books too, once their hobby becomes ingrained in the psyche.  I hope there will be bookstores to peruse when this time comes, and more importantly, I hope the publishers survive to see the day.

Meanwhile, the biggest threat to indie bookstore survival at the moment, Amazon.com, has declared war on proper citizenship by refusing to collect and pay sales tax.  They have just declared that they will close their distribution facility in Texas and not build a proposed second one, so that they can avoid the sales tax mandate that the State of Texas has issued.  What poor sports.  We all live somewhere, and we expect our municipal services.  Surely there is some justice left in the world, and reason to believe in a level playing field.

This morning, as expected, Borders Group announced their filing of Chapter 11.  It does not mean the end of Borders, but a third of their stores will close.  It could mean the end of some of the smaller publishers, and one wonders how Penguin can sustain a $41 million loss.  Do we care?  Ah, but we do.  I do.  Books are the cultural hub of our society, in whatever format, and bookstores are a cultural center for thinking neighbors.  We need them to be a cultured society.

But the questions at my talk were all self-centered.

  • “How can I sell my books on <the internet>?”
  • “What is my <rare book> worth?”
  • “Can you answer my <personal research question>?”
  • “Where can I test <an eReader>?”

While these are questions I answer on a daily basis, they are not the questions I expected from a quick history of the last decade of the book business.  I was hoping for a wider view, a concerned citizen’s outrage.

  • “How can we help independent bookstores survive?”
  • “How do eReaders effect the livlihood of authors and editors?”
  • “What would it mean if several big publishers went out of business?”
  • “Is there another model authors and thinkers should persue?”
  • “If libraries and bookstores disappear, what does that mean for our communities?”
  • “If retail businesses die in my neighborhood, what does that mean for the safety, cleanliness, and schools?”
  • “What is the real cost of freedom? When is saving a buck a really expensive proposition?”

Yeah, I didn’t quite expect that either.  But I did expect someone to at least care.

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Valentine’s Night

Valentine's NightDate night at Loganberry!  Join us, tonight, on Valentine’s Night for wine and truffles, a quiet evening with fine books, and the virtuoso guitarwork of Brian Henke.  What could be more relaxed and romantic?

Laurie from the Larchmere Tavern just delivered the truffles.  Oh my, my, my….

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Power of the Pen

On Saturday, I went to help judge a high school writing competition called Power of the Pen.  Schools from around the area sent teams of contestants, who competed on both an individual and team basis, in three rounds of 40-minute compositions.  For the Eighth Grade, of which I was one of the judges for Best of Round, there were three prompts for the compositions.

Round 1:  Show what it takes to start all over again.
Round 2:  Write about somewhere you’d rather be.
Round 3:  Use the pronoun them as the central theme of your story.

The essays were inventive and personal, and full of adolescent angst.  Bullying, cliques, cutting, and medical traumas were all prevalent, but so were historical fictions, war stories, mafia, competitive swimming and horseback riding.  Some of my favorites were nature stories, and although we were warned not to reward stories of personification, I like the Round 1 response of floating in limbo-land, until finally the chrysalis hatched and our protagonist discovered his wings.  There were also great stories of peer pressure, cliques, bullying, procrastination and test anxiety that made me remember what it felt like to be in eighth grade.  I am so very glad that I am no longer in eighth grade!

All in all, an entertaining and enlivening way to spend a Saturday afternoon, and inspiring to see so many different interpretations to the same question.  Long live the Power of the Pen!

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Tired Tuesday

So, the day started out with a merchants meeting and ended with book club group that stayed rather late. In between those times, there were books to buy, books to sell, and cleaning up unexpected paperwork. Now it’s sleeting up a storm, and I’m working on cat cuddles before I have enough energy to go to bed.

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Monday.

this is what Monday looks like

Some days are just like that.

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A Hunk o’ Cast Iron

I got a new toy!  It’s a rather heavy toy.  Cast-iron.  With black paint and stencil.  And a wheel crank that resembles a ship’s steering wheel.  Except cast iron, like I said.  It arrived in a heavy box with thick extruded foam as packaging (FedEx guy wasn’t pleased, but then again, he never is).  Why would a bookseller get excited about a hunk o’ iron, you ask?

It has a date on it, which isn’t unusual for things around here.  It reads 1893, which isn’t even particularly early for things around here.  But it’s a tool.  Obviously not a book, but it’s for books.  Why it has a label that reads “Best of Show, Columbian Exposition” I’m not exactly certain what that means, but it sounds cool.

Give up yet?  It’s a book press.  See?  Isn’t she pretty?  I showed her off tonight at our NOBS Forum of Show & Tell.

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Caldecott & Newbery Contenders

CaldecottOk, here’s my stab at next week’s ALA Award Announcements.  I have short and long lists for both the Caldecott and Newbery Awards, hoping that some from the long list might be good contenders for other awards, like the Theodore Geisel, Scott O’Dell or Prinz Awards.  My apologies if any Canadians snuck on the list (extracted two to my knowledge so far, those tricky Canucks), and a few I haven’t seen on other prediction lists but seem so obvious to me that there must be some reason for disqualification, or else why aren’t they on everyone’s list?  Here ’tis:

Caldecott Top Contenders:
Chalk
by Bill Thomson
Art & Max
by David Wiesner
City Dog, Country Frog
by Mo Willems, illustrated Jon J. Muth
Bink and Gollie by Kate DiCamillo and Alison McGhee, illustrated by Tony Fucile

Caldecott Alternate Contenders:
Bunny Days
by Tao Nyeu
Old Bear and His Cub
by Olivier Dunrea
A Sick Day for Amos McGee
by Philip Stead, illustrated by Erin E. Stead
Here Comes the Garbage Barge
by Jonah Winter, illustrated by Red Nose Studio
Flora’s Very Windy Day
by Jeanne Birdsall, illustrated by Matt Phelan
Kakapo Rescue: Saving the World’s Strangest Parrot
by Syd Montgomery
Ling and Ting: Not Exactly the Same
by Grace Lin
We Are in a Book
by Mo Willems

Newbery Top Contenders:
One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams-Garcia
Zora and Me
by Victoria Bond
The Dreamer
by Pam Munoz Ryan
Countdown
by Deborah Wiles
The Night Fairy
by Laura Amy Schlitz
What Happened on Fox Street
by Tricia Springstubb

Newbery Alternate Contenders:
Out of My Mind
by Sharon Draper
A Tale Dark and Grimm
by Adam Gidwitz
Mockingbird
by Kathryn Erskine
The Red Umbrella
by Christina Gonzalez
Keeper
by Kathi Appelt
Forge
by Laurie Halse Anderson
The War to End All Wars: World War I
by Russell Freedman
Heart of a Samurai
by Margi Preus
Bamboo People
by Mitali Perkins

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Old Dogs, New Tricks

I’ve been neglecting my blog. The idea that I haven’t archived in months has made me gun-shy to do anything.  So, surprise, my brother gave me new tools.  Ok, if I don’t have to do manual archiving, I might be able to keep up with this better.  That’s the theory, and it sounds good.  Meanwhile, however, I have to figure out how to use these new tools…

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