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Shaker Hts., OH 44120
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Larchmere

3/50 project
Larchmere Festival Prep
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Harriett

Larchmere Festivalee gads, I haven't blogged in quite a while. Can I blame the Festival for usurping my time?  Well, it's true.  It's a big festival this year, with 50 art and antique vendors, 50 Bazaar Bizarre vendors, 43 authors, a dozen foodies and a wine tasting event.  We have tall puppets, the Euclid Beach Rocket Car, crafts for kids, informational booths, 3D chalk drawing, bands and dancers.  It's a lot to organize.  That seems to be my job.  It's been keeping me busy!  Wanna see my nice newsletter and website?  Nice PR plug in Cool Cleveland?  Hope to see you on Saturday, July 3rd!



Changing of the Guard
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Harriett

Otis in the bagA belated fare thee well to Joy, who has gone off to the Smithsonian for an internship. Bye! We'll miss you!  Christine has shortened her hours here too, so she can play with the cool archives at the Cleveland Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, at least for a while.   We'll still see her on Saturdays, and she's leading the Classics Club book discussions on fourth Thursdays.

Welcome to Lorraine, who is taking over duties at Stump the Bookseller and the children's section.  Also welcome to Mitali, who is helping out with databases and accounting, as well as minding the non-fiction room.  These are big jobs, even if I do make them sound concise.  We have to organize the Larchmere Festival too; it's coming up quicker than we realize.  And it's spring!  Where did all these books come from?



Volunteer Appreciation
Friday, May 14, 2010
Harriett

Shaker LibraryGotta love your volunteers.  Gotta treat them right.  That's why the Shaker Heights Library is hosting a volunteer appreciation party at Loganberry Books tonight.  What better treat for bookies than a private tour a book place?  That's what we've got booked on the calendar tonight.  Books and bookies.  And a couple of nibbles.



Rebecca Cookies

Thursday, May 13, 2010

cookiesA twitter friend asked me for the recipe for our favorite Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies.  Rebecca often makes these for us during the holiday season, and I attest to their absolute deliciousness.  Kinda wish I had some right now.

(A) INGREDIENTS
4 1/2 cup flour
2  t  baking soda
4 t   baking powder
2 t   cinnamon
1 t   salt
2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips
(B) INGREDIENTS
1 cup  unsalted butter
1 cup  sugar
1 cup  dark brown sugar
2  eggs
2 cups pureed pumpkin
2 t  vanilla

Mix together the (A) ingredients.  Mix together the (B) ingredients.  Dump the (A) ingredients into the (B) ingredients and mix (it will be stiff, use your hands). 
Drop by tablespoon onto cookie sheet.
Bake at 375 degrees F approximately 10 minutes or until done.



Saturday, May 8, 2010
Wick Poetry Center: Traveling Stanzas

Traveling Stanzas is a collaboration project between the Wick Poetry Center's outreach program and the Glyphix design studio at Kent State University. It combines the creative talents of Kent State Visual Communication Design students with area student writers, senior citizens, and veterans to promote awareness of poetry and graphic design within the community. This year's theme for the Traveling Stanzas project is peace and reconciliation, so join us on Saturday at 2pm for a highly creative yet socially relevant reading from poets of all ages!



Elementary Career Day
Friday, May 7, 2010
Harriett

Harvey Rice SchoolYesterday I went to the local elementary school's Career Day.  It's a beautiful new complex, right next to a new library, with cool mosaics on the benches outside that were in part designed by students.  The building itself is sleek and new, full of glass and light, and outfitted with all the latest technology.  I was escorted in turn from a fifth grade class, to kindergarten, to first grade. 

I know this is a Cleveland City school, and I know the reputation.  The students were for the most part well-behaved, and somewhat attentive if diffident.  For unknown reasons, the desks in this classroom were not all facing the same direction, and there was a projection screen behind me that was on the entire time I was there.  I was amused by some of my interaction with the fifth-graders, especially one student's response to why it might be cool to be self-employed and to work for yourself.  "It would be cool to be your own boss because then it wouldn't matter what time you showed up or if you showed up at all," he ventured.  Debunking myths is certainly a part of Career Day.

Why kindergarten has a Career Day is beyond me though.  I provided half an hour of entertainment I suppose, as I tried to tell them about being a bookseller and how cool it is to learn from, read, and share my love of books all day.  When I tried to ask them the difference between a bookstore and a library, I discovered that not a single student had ever been to a bookstore, and not a single student owned a book.  I died a little inside, and tried to be useful, but the only thing useful at that point would have been to pull books out of my back pocket and pass them out to each child, and I hadn't brought 20 books with me.

First grade had desks, and the children seemed so much older than the kindergarten kids.  We managed a useful dialogue, although the concept of owning a business was a bit beyond them.  So I asked each of them what they wanted to do when they grew up, and from approximately 20 students I received but 4 responses:  policeman, sports player, veternarian, and . . . cheerleader.  Again, I felt a little weak in the knees and had to steady my nerves to carry on.  In the end, it would have been more useful to tell the story of the production of a book, and how many people in various jobs are employed along the way.  But next time, I'm not gonna talk at all.  I'm just gonna pass out books.



Sheila N. Markowitz: Hangin' at the Gauguin Cafe
Thursday, May 6, 2010
~ first Thursdays ~ 

Markowitz Sheila N. Markowitz uses her computer to merge her photographs, snapshots and scans of other materials in myriad and subtle ways.  She sees her process as a metaphor for how the mind overlays experiences, blurs and blends them in memory, reconciles disparate points of view to create coherence.  Markowitz works intuitively, dialoguing with her art as it evolves throught a host of incremental decisions. Each montage element connects to a personal story that is rarely evident in the finished work.  Instead visual surprises, ambiguitities, and hints of narrative invite viewers to construct their own artful fictions.



The Founder of the Edible Books Festival
Monday, May 3, 2010
Harriett

Beatrice CoronIt was an unexpectedly busy Monday here, with buying, selling, striking of art shows, and surprise visits.  One of the suprise visits was from Beatrice Coron, the founder of the International Edible Books Festival!  She was in town visiting the Morgan Art of Papermaking Conservatory, and decided to pay us a visit. She spoke of the early days, the original intent of making the festival an international affair, the website, and various hopes for a book or CD of photos from all the various festivals over the years.  That's Beatrice on the left in the photo, me, and Morgan worker Laura Martin. Thanks for the visit, folks!  Glad to be a part of the early days of the International Edible Books extravaganzas.



Water Always Wins

Friday, April 30, 2010
Harriett

water winsThere was a huge hail storm and sudden downpour on Sunday, April 25th.  It was my day off and the store was closed.  So the books had a good 20 hours to soak up water before I discovered the roof damage on Monday morning.  You need to save books quickly, you see.  Waste any time at all, and they act like paper towels.  So I'm sorry to report that we had significant losses in History and Gardening (back-to-back shelving).  We tried valiently to save the books, but 7 boxes of trash on Monday was followed by another 7 boxes of trash on Tuesday.  And a couple more on Wednesday, and two full star carts of some unbelievable bargains for 93 cents out on the sidewalk.  Hardest hit was Ancient History and Enviromentalism, followed by the Crusades, general history, herbs, flower arranging, wildflowers, and even some in Eastern Europe and Food Writing.  It sounds worse when you list it like that.  Then again, you can see some bare shelves, so you can figure it out.  The roofers have been here three times and they're working on drain liners and flanges.  The insurance adjuster can't see the damage so claims there's none.  What can I say?  Water always wins.



A Special Concert with Alix Dobkin
Saturday, April 24, 2010

DobkinWomyn's music legend Alix Dobkin comes to Cleveland for an intimate concert and booksigning. Her book, My Red Blood, was published last year by Alyson Publications and recounts her early years growing up in New York City in a Communist family.  She joined the Party at the height of the McCarthy era and grew up under the influence of folk musicians like Leadbelly and Pete Seeger.  When she moved to Greenwich Village she befriended Bob Dylan, Bill Cosby, John Sebastian, Buffy Ste. Marie, and Flip Wilson, among others, and added her voice to the folk movement.  Shortly thereafter, she came out as a lesbian and recorded the first openly lesbian record album in 1973, titled "Lavendar Jane Loves Women."  Come hear more about her story, and her music.  Concert, 7:30pm; Tickets, $10.



A Thursday of Openings
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Harriett

This is a Thursday of many openings.  Michael Wolf began his well-known auction gallery on Larchmere in the 1970s (in the building Loganberry currently occupies, in fact) and then moved downtown Cleveland and most recently to New York.  Now he's back!  His career has morphed and changed, and this latest incarnation is as an antiques gallery, in a small storefront on Larchmere.  Beautiful full-circle to his roots, and to the work he loves best. 

Joining the celebration tonight is Charles Phillips, florist extraordinaire, who didn't rest long in retirement and is back with a new florist shop behind Conservation Studios.  The antique dealers on the street are elated with the news of these two re-openings, so in addition to seeing their new shops, you can enjoy wine & cheese and a toast of the town at John Young Inc., Conservation Studios and Shaker Square Antiques.

Here at Loganberry, we're always open late on Thursday evenings, and tonight at 7pm  features a talk by Gene Epstein on the allure and creation of altered books.  The Annex Gallery currently hosts an exhibition of some fine altered books, so there's show and tell in addition to Q&A, and perhaps even a quick demo by artist Epstein.  Stop on by! 



National Poetry Month
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Harriett

Mary OliverIt's April! Get your poetry on!  In honor of the season, we've reorganized and brought in tons of new poetry to fill the shelves.  Authors include: Maya Angelou, W.H. Auden, Charles Bukowski, Constantine Cavafy, Hart Crane, Marie Etienne, Thom Gunn, Marilyn Hacker, Richard Howard, Audre Lorde, James Merrill, Dorothy Parker, Adrienne Rich, Muriel Rukeyser, Rumi, and May Swenson.  Not that we didn't already have a good selection already in stock!

We also have books in stock by the two big-name draws coming to Cleveland this month to give readings: 
  • Mary Oliver, Ohio native and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for poetry, will read as part of the Cuyahoga County Public Library's Writers Center Stage series, on Tuesday, April 13, at 7:30pm at the Ohio Theatre.
  • Kay Ryan, US Poet Laureate, will read at Cleveland Public Library on Sunday, April 18, at 2pm.



Gene's Jazz Hot

Thursday, April 8, 7-9pm
~ second Thursdays ~

The house band here at Loganberry is no ordinary jazz, it is genuine swing in the happiest of measures.  The oldtimers relish the sound, the students dance giddily while the band whoops up classics and gems and toe-tapping favorites (that if you haven't heard before will soon get you humming along).  Join us, with Gene on double bass, Seth on guitar and mandolin, Bill on clarinet and Peggi on swooming vocals.  It's a tradition, every second Thursday evening.  Donations for the band appreciated.




Brenda Reads the new Connie Willis
Wednesday, April 8, 2010
Brenda

blackoutI have been led astray!  And I'm mad about it.  Half way through Connie Willis's new book Blackout, I was so worried about one of the characters that I started turning forward to see how long I had to wait to get him back to 2060 from the horror of Dunkirk in 1940, and every chapter heading was dated during WWII until I got to the very last page, where it said "... read the riveting conclusion to Blackout in the fall of 2010..."  and I nearly threw the book away right then and there.  How can you have the first volume of a series without letting readers know up front that it is to be a series??  Do I finish the book now, or wait and finish it when I have volume 2 in hand?  There are 6 major characters and it's taken 250 pages to get them established and straight, and they are all struggling against great odds to get back "home", and I'm not sure we can wait til fall.....

Oh, I wouldn't think of quitting now.  I'm completely engrossed.  But it's going to be hard to leave them all there until she figures out how to extricate them.  This is one of the best accounts of WWII Britain I've ever read.  You feel like you are there because you ARE there.  That's the premise behind the historians time traveling from 2060 Oxford to anywhere in these books.  I love it!



Edible BooksEdible Books Festival
Saturday, April 3, 2010

What a blast.  We had 24 entries, at least a hundred attendees, and plenty of amusement and good eatin'. 

Here's the official winners list and links to the photo page and some nice press pieces.  Thanks all!

Best of Show Paddington Bear Theresa Polefko
Most Awesome & Zober Award Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs Barb & Jerry Zober
Most Book Like Mouse cookies Christy Bartley
Most Delicious Joy of Apricot Gene Epstein
Honorable Mention LeVoyage de Babar Ghanoush Amie Albert & Diana Petrauskas
Honorable Mention Easter Egg Jim & Mary Frate




Altered Book Group: Time
Opening Reception: Thursday, April 1, 6-8pm
~ first Thursdays ~ 

timeThe Altered Book Group joins us for their fourth spring show at the Annex Gallery, this year featuring creations built around the concept of time.  Come see the wild imaginations at work on these three-dimensional wonders.  How would you picture time . . . using an old book?  Artists include Phyllis Brody, Sarah Clague, Gene Epstein, Jacqueline Parsons, Ellen Takas, Anne Weissman, & Anonymous. 



Praise the Unsung Book Club
Tony Earley:  Jim the Boy
Thursday, March 25, 2010, 7pm
~ fourth Thursdays ~

Jim the BoyFrom its title to its closing sentence, Tony Earley's first novel returns to basics, back to modernness in the old sense of the word. It's not a big book, just a good one -- and in this instance ''good'' is higher praise than ''great.'' At a time when the latest, most souped-up version of something, a car or a computer program, say, is by reflex regarded as the best, Earley has had the courage to return to artistic first principles: clarity, balance, ease. Set in Depression-era North Carolina, his year-in-the-life story of a rural boyhood unmarked by parental abuse, erotic turmoil or domestic dysfunction seems strangely brave and new. Jim the Boy is a novel that does one thing memorably instead of many things forgettably.    [-New York Times Book Review]


Austeniana Book Club
Jane Austen: 
Northanger Abbey
Thursday,
March 25, 2010, 7pm
~ fourth Thursdays ~

Jane AustenWe wrap up our second round of reading Jane Austen with Northanger AbbeyNorthanger Abbey was the first of Jane Austen's novels to be completed for publication, although it did not actually get published until after Jane's death, some 20 years later.  Come discuss Austen's most overt criticism of the popular Gothic novel trend, while enjoying her own sharp satire of Victorian society. In April, we'll delve off into newer fields with Jane Austen in Scarsdale or Love, Death, and the SATs by Paula Marantz Cohen (2006). 



Dad Day, eight years since
Friday, March 19, 2010






N.O.B.S. Forums
A Panel on Self-Publishing

Thursday, March 18, 7pm
~ third Thursdays ~

Self-publishing is a field that has exploded in recent years, as the definition evolves and expands itself.  Join us for a panel of speakers on this growing industry.  Panelists (so far) include LaVora Perry, Kelly Ferjutz, Harriett Logan, and others, speaking about their experiences as self-published authors, printers, and booksellers, using various technical printing platforms.   $3 suggested donation.



Tim Burton's ALICE
Wednesday, March 9, 2010
Harriett

AliceSo here's my movie review.  In a capsule, I loved Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland.  It clearly does not try to be a faithful adaptation, and by so doing grants itself great liberty in the sequence, inclusion and omission of characters and plot elements.  Alice at age 19 is still innocent and churlish, but like the film itself, insists on order and logical progression. I liked the contrast of bleak and lush landscapes, the costumes, and the remembrance-lane feel to the whole thing.  I guess I didn't miss the pool of tears, but I did miss the caucus race, but then the Dormouse seemed to have a bigger role to make up for it.  Tweedledum and Tweedledee aren't even in the first Alice book, but they made good tour guides.  And strange plot misplacings were akin to fuzzy memories, like the Red Queen's assistant suddenly banging a big pepper mill, and a pig showing up as the Red Queen's footstool instead of the Duchess' baby.

Johnny Depp as Mad HatterThere's really no need to make a laundry list of comparisons between the book and the movie, however, and that's a relief.  I was quite content to see the Mad Hatter have a larger role than Lewis Carroll gave him -- who doesn't love the Mad Hatter? -- and Johnny Depp is indeed fabulous in the role.  I also like the inclusion of the Jabberwock, who doesn't appear in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland at all, but as nonsense poem in Through the Looking-Glass (then explained by Humpty Dumpty -- gee, even I'd forgotten that part).  This is more than a favorite character inclusion thing, but a major plot device to create a thematic arc to the movie and provide a riveting climatic battle scene.  This is my only real criticism of the movie, which is that the absurdist tone of Lewis Carroll is undermined by the straightjacketing of a progressive plot.  American film audiences may expect it, but it isn't what makes the books so beloved for 145 years, and ultimately it isn't necessary.  Just seeing our favorite characters come to life and to wander around Wonderland is enough.  And this is very well done indeed.

P.S.  I forgot to discuss the 3-D aspect of this film.  Like the plot arc, I don't think it is necessary, and at times it pulled me away from that immersion into the suspension of disbelief.  Occasionally it is very cool indeed, but mostly I either didn't notice it (which may be a good sign), or I viewed it as a kind of perspective scenery, which feels flatter than regular 2-D film.  I hope this 3-D obsession doesn't dominiate the film industry in the coming years.



Birthday ALICE
Monday, March 8, 2010
Harriett

pizza before movieI've been anticipating the Tim Burton film adaptation of Alice in Wonderland for well over a year now.  I planned a birthday celebration around it, in fact.  Tried to be an official sponsor for the opening, but Disney and B&N made that difficult, and boiled down to a deal where I could pay $1000 to have my name on the theatre door for the first screening, but I couldn't use the Disney art in my ads or have any posters or tickets to give away.  Instead, I decided to spend about $200 to take all my friends and family to see the film on my actual birthday, Monday the 8th.  Suddenly it seemed like a bargain, and it was a whole lot more fun, too.  I took 29 people to see the film, with ages ranging from 7 to 82, and distances traveled for the event as far west as Hillsdale MI and as far east as Medina County OH.  This was fun, indeed.



Grad School Chums Visit
Friday, March 5, 2010
Harriett

IlliniThe Mid-America Theatre Conference convened in Cleveland this year, and that meant some of my old grad school buddies came to town.  I was determined to let them see what I've been doing for the past fifteen years, so I rode the Rapid downtown to collect them from the Arcade and transport them back to Loganberry for a visit.  This was fun indeed.  Not only could we reminisce about the old days (we didn't really call Dr. Graves on the phone, did we?), but they were impressed with Loganberry, and particularly with the inventory.  Made my day to see my old buddies, but even better to introduce them to my life's project here on Larchmere.



Village Art Studio: Pastel Paint Wax
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 4, 6-8pm
~ first Thursdays ~  

opening receptionRonnie Jeter, Melinda Placko, and Shelley Robinson meet weekly at the Village Art Studio.  As mixed media artists, they create images which unite a variety of materials including pencil, paint, paper, pastel, wax, charcoal, photo collage, and fabric.  By pushing the limits of creativity and material, they are discovering natural textures, gutsy landscapes, southwest color, and the meditation of silence.  Come and join the exploration.  Show continues through April 3.



Anticipating Alice
Thursday, February 19, 2010
Harriett

Alice card characterKelly used to work at The Dancing Sheep down the street, and she made the most wonderful window displays.  I remember the one she made with Alice in Wonderland characters, so I called and asked if they were still lounging in her basement.  They were!  Kelly had to do some rehab work on them, and the rose tree was toast, but Kelly strengthened the card people's legs and I bought a miniature rose plant and we were set to go.  This is one of the three card characters that Kelly made.  They look great!



Anne Weissman & friends:
Tin Hearts Transformed

Opening Reception: Thursday, February 4, 6-8pm
~ first Thursdays ~  

Picture an old tea  canister filled with your grandmother's collection of odd buttons, or a heart shaped red candy box stuffed with postcards and Polaroids.  Imagine what a group of artists could make from thirty empty heart shaped cookie tins!  Anne Weissman invited a group of book artists, collage makers, sculptors and potters to take tins to their studios and transform them using the materials and methods of their choice.  The resulting artworks range from the contemplative to the exuberant .  They are as individual as are the hearts and imaginations of their creators.  Show continues through March 1.    



On this Day in History
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Harriett

In case I haven't written enough today to make up for my twittering absence on this blog, I offer two interesting facts on this day in literary history. 

The first is the anniversary of the death of Johannes Gutenberg in 1468.  Gutenberg is well known as the inventor of the movable print printing press, revolutionizing the speed, price, and accessibility of books.  It's been a remarkable invention, only questioned now after some 550 years, but long from any supposed death-date.  New technologies are coming, but can any of them last even 1/10th as long?

The second date to mark today is Norman Rockwell's birthday, in 1894.  The man was an illustrating machine, producing well over 4000 paintings and illustrations for over 40 books, including many Saturday Evening Post covers, Boy Scout calendars, and more.  He was also an artist of unparalleled popular appeal who defined a generation and screams nostalgia louder than any other object or artwork.  Our American sensibilities have been influenced and filtered through Rockwell's eyes, and even while critiquing him, we see clearer for having seen his works.  He was truly one of the greats, and today is his day.



Book Biz: Macmillan Becomes a Hero  
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Harriett

More geeky book news: just days after Apple's dramatic launch of the iPad, Amazon poised a price fight with publishing giant Macmillan, and Macmillan didn't back down.  Eventually, Amazon backed down, but not before calling Macmillan a "monopoly" along with other name-calling.  The price structure that Macmillan was proposing was only slightly greater, would actually net Amazon more share, but also was more in tune with agency agreements with Apple and their new iPad.  So the real fight here is between Amazon's Kindle and Apple's iPad and the training of a new digital reading audience.  It's scary stuff, and it's important.  Despite the scads of comments like "$9 is too expensive for an ebook" that you can read on any discussion board, there's a whole industry at stake, and what we should worry about most is the author and the reader.  Because without the author and the reader, there is simply no discussion.  Who cares about the publisher, the editors, the publicist, the wholesaler, the distributor, the bookseller, or the technical  programmer?  It's about the words: the writer and the reader of the words.  And the biggest word champions I know are convened this week at a convention called the ABA Winter Institute.  It is true that these people are also booksellers, but I honestly don't know another group as vibrant, smart, loyal, and as  dedicated to reading.  As soon as Macmillan's name was uttered, there was a standing ovation.



In Memoriam: J.D. Salinger
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Harriett

J.D. SalingerIt's old news now that J.D. Salinger died a week ago. But I thought I should mention it.

If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you’ll want to know is where J.D. Salinger was born, what his lousy childhood was like, and all that David Copperfield kind of crap, but I don’t feel like going into it, if you want to know the truth.

In the first place, that stuff bores me, and, in the second place, old J.D. was as touchy as hell about it. He was nice and all—I’m not saying he wasn’t—but he had practically been a hermit in Cornish, up in New Hampshire, for the last 50 years so he wouldn’t have to explain himself all the time. He would probably have had two hemorrhages if I told you anything too personal about him. He really would have.


So I'm not going to say much.  For one thing, it's sad--he was such a great and beloved writer.  For another, it's super sad--because we've been waiting for years for the vaults of his unpulished writings to finally be released, or a film/play adaptation to finally be authorized, and there's no sign that that will happen.  Who will walk in Holden Caulfield's footsteps?  No one.

It's also sad, because it feels like so many great authors have died this week.  In addition to Salinger, there's Howard Zinn, Louis Auchincloss, and Ralph McInerny.  We even started guessing who would be next, which is never a nice thing to do.  So, rest in peace, all.  We'll respect your privacy.  But we'll mark these passings as a grave cultural loss.



Newbery & Caldecotts Announced

Thursday, January 21, 2010
Harriett

When You Reach MeI stayed up all night reading When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead two days ago when it won the Newbery Medal.  This is exciting stuff, and I was impressed that so many of my twitter friends were all a-twitter about it, proclaiming they'd predicted it and it was their favorite of the year. It's fun getting book recommendations and accolades from smart bookies; it adds immensely to my job.

I liked the characters and the pacing of When You Reach Me, and the structure of its chapters and the unfolding of the plot. L'Engle's classic Wrinkle in Time appears throughout the book and takes on character status.  But what I haven't seen mentioned elsewhere are the huge influences of two other books that I simply couldn't stop thinking about as I read it: John Irving's A Prayer for Owen Meany and Audrey Niffenegger's Time Traveler's Wife.  Both of those books are written for adult audiences of course, but if you put them in a blender together, water it down for a YA audience with new, younger characters, the plot structure and the time traveling rules are undeniable influences. And they let me conclusively figure out how the book would end when I was only half-way through it. Mind you, that didn't prevent me from enjoying it thoroughly.

The only reason I seem so obsessed with this idea is because there is a similar story to be told about picture books with Otis.  No, not my cat, but the old tractor and his friend the young calf, as written and illustrated by Loren Long.  At the GLiBA book trade show, I remember several people touting the glories of Otis, and one who went so far as to say, "Caldecott contender, mark my words."  And I thought, no.  It's a great book, and hopefully will be a popular bestseller.  But the story is such a melding of Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel (Virginia Lee Burton) and The Story of Ferdinand (Munro Leaf / Robert Lawson), that it should be disqualified. 

Are all books derivative of something? Well, they are of course a product of their time, and our collective consciousness and creativities.  I can hear my writing friends despairing that all the great stories have already been told, and wondering if they can just rehash them enough to pretend they've found something new.  Or perhaps my own reading history is to blame here for wanting to compare things incessently (really, I haven't read nearly enough). 

Ponder this, then: Five-time Caldecott Honor winner Jerry Pinkney finally wins the top prize with The Lion and the Mouse, a fable by Aesop.  That's right, a fable that's been told for centuries.  And yet the story is fresh, told in lush illustrations and without words. Also a favorite for the medal before the announcement, it's hard not to stand up and cheer.  So I'll cheer for both books, and the Honor Books too.  After all, these are the oldest, most famous and most respected awards in children's literature.  For the complete list, see the ALA website.



Drinks at the Academy
Wednesday, January 20, 6:30pm, 2010

~ Larchmere Fundraiser ~


You’re right, we’re always fundraising for something – can’t help it! we have big dreams! – but this is an easy one.  Just join us for a drink at Academy Tavern.  A portion of the drink sales will go towards funding new gateway signage (our old one, which is so small you didn’t even know about it, did you?, is falling off its post, and besides, we have a new logo we want to share).  It’s just a little thing, but we like seeing you, and we really want new signs.  Oh, but there is one eensy-teensy catch: Kim Metheny and Sue Weir of Metheny Weir will be tending bar.  Yeah, that’s right.  Oh, and did you hear about the remodeled women’s bathroom?  Compliments of Metheny Weir of course.  Yeah, see ya there.



In Memoriam: Robert B. Parker
January 19, 2010

robert b. parkerToo many fine mystery writers have died in the past two years:  Tony Hillerman, Michael Crichton, Stuart M. Kaminsky, James Crumley, Donald E. Westlake, and now, Robert B. Parker. He was 77, and found "just sitting at his desk" in Cambridge, MA.  A prolific writer, he was perhaps best known for his Spenser private detective novels, and has been known to churn out three novels in a year, many of which have been adapted to television serials.  In fact, several books are in the publishing rounds now, with a Jesse Stone novel to be published February 23, Split Image, as well as an Appaloosa novel due out May 4, Blue-Eyed Devil. Farewell and good speed to a fine writer with legions of fans. You will be missed.



Playwriting Workshop

taught by Sarah Morton
Mondays, January 18 - March 8, 6:30-9:30 pm, 2010

WorkshopCleveland native and award-winning playwright Sarah Morton leads a workshop in the skills of playwriting.  In this 8-session intensive, students will explore the fundamentals of playwriting, including story and structure, crafting a scene, theatrical language/ dialogue, and character development. Learn how to turn your ideas on the page into vivid, dynamic and ‘actor-friendly’ writing for the stage.  Discover your own unique voice as a playwright in a small, supportive workshop setting.  This class is geared towards beginning adult  playwrights, but all levels of experience are welcome.

Class meets on Monday evenings from January 18 - March 8, 6:30-9:30 pm
Enrollment is limited to 8 students. Please register early! 



Early American Quilts & Coverlets

Thursday, January 7, 6-8pm, 2010
~ Annex Gallery openings, first Thursdays ~   

This collection of early American crafts features quilts, coverlets, embroideries and baskets.  Among the textiles is a wonderful signed 1850 Ohio coverlet, a fabulous crazy quilt dated 1898 and several grandmother’s flower garden patterns.  There are also two Persian paisley shawls, some beautiful embroideries, and a silk kimono.  But mostly there are quilts, ranging in date from 1850-1950, and many Ohio heirlooms.  What a nice, warm, winter crafts exhibition.  Show continues through February 1.



In Memoriam: Mary Daly
Thursday, January 7, 7-9pm, 2010

Mary DalyFeminist Philosopher Mary Daly died on Sunday at age 81.  Mary Daly was rabble-rousing radical whose turn of phrase would turn your head.  She taught at Boston College and wrote many books, including The Church and the Second Sex (1968), Gyn/Ecology, the Metaethics of Radical Feminism (1978), Pure Lust: Elemental Feminist Philosophy (1984), and Websters' First New Intergalactic Wickedary of the English Language (with Jane Caputi, 1987).  Her tussle with Boston College over not allowing men in her classes was legendary, and although she was granted tenure, she and the college reached a settlement in 2001 and, at age 72, she agreed to retire.

In honor of Mary Daly’s vast accomplishments, power to challenge the patriarchy and make us re-think our own language, we will host a get-together on Thursday evening.  "It was Mary's wish that if women or people want to memorialize her in any way they should stay in their own locality and have a get-together where they read or discuss her work," said Linda Barufaldi of San Diego, one of several former graduate students of Dr. Daly's who cared for her as her health declined.  Come share your memories of how Mary Daly touched your life, or share your discovery of her works, even if you’re just discovering them now.  And Peace to you, Mary Daly.



LIST-O-MANIA
Tuesday, Decemeber 30, 2009
Harriett

It's that time of year, the time when people list their favorites, their bestsellers, their critical acclaims.  As a new and used bookseller, I don't feel constrained by publication date, or even sales volumes.  But when thinking about years end, the new books do of course capture our attention first.  So here's our year-end list of favorite picks.  Just call them Appreciated Books of 2009.

CHILDREN'S
OtisOtis by Loren Long (2009).  Obviously we love any book titled Otis, but this book has more than a good name.  It's a perfect blending of two excellent classics -- The Story of Ferdinand and Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel -- and yet it rises above its roots to be a good story in its own right.

Dr. Goat
by Georgiana (1950).  This title is on our Most Requested page, and it fetches a pretty penny these days.  But it isn't often that we sell three copies in a year, and at three-digit prices for all.  Are you listening, publishers?  Bring this one back into print.

White Noise
by David Carter (2009).  I always get excited by new pop-ups for the holiday season, but this year the winner is not Robert Sabuda, not Mathew Reinhardt, not Rufus Butler Seder, but longtimer David Carter.  With White Noise, he focuses not on color or pictures, but on the sounds the paper makes as it moves when each page is turned.  It's wonderful.  So are his other abstract masterpieces like 2007's 600 Black Spots.

Where the Wild Things Are
by Maurice Sendak (1963).  This is a perennial good seller, but I make a nod to it here because I was suprised that the film of same name managed to catapult its sales even further.

YOUNG ADULT
Elephant & Piggie series by Mo Willems (2007-2009).  These are seriously the best beginning reader books since The Cat in the Hat.  Best part? After a few reads with your youngster, you can take parts and read it like a playscript.

Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days
by Jeff Kinney (2009).  I must admit that I am impressed by the number of young boys who have come in here asking for this book by name.  As a used bookseller, we generally sell more copies of The Hardy Boys than, say, Pendragon, but this particular volume is an exception.  And these reading boys bring joy to my book-loving heart.

365 Bedtime Stories
by Nan Gilbert (1955).  Again from our Most Requested page, we sold a continuing string of this page-a-day classic featuring the good folks who live on What-a-Jolly Street.  Seems less likely to ever be slated for a reprint, but the waiting list remains strong.

The Thief, The Queen of Attolia
and The King of Attolia trilogy by Megan Whalen Turner (2005-2007).  An excellent fantasy trilogy, and yes, it's written by a Clevelander.  While the first book did win a Newbery Honor Award, I still think not enough people know about this series.  So I continually feed it to the Percy Jackson crowd who thinks there's nothing left to read.

FINE ARTS
Gustav StickleyGustav Stickley by David Cathers (2003).  We were lucky to find some of these beautiful books remaindered.  I don't know if we'll be lucky enough to be able to restock them.

Georgia O'Keefe: Abstraction
by Barbara Haskell (2009).  This book coincides with the exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art, and focuses on what I've long considered to be the best of O'Keefe's work: her abstractions.  It also contains a sneak peak into the letters Georgia wrote to photographer/husband Alfred Stieglitz which have been vaulted until this publication. There's some steamy reading in here.

The Americans
by Robert Frank (1958, 2008).  Coinciding with another New York retrospective exhibition, this time at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Robert Frank's landmark book has been reprinted in its orignial format, as well as in an accompanying exhibition catalog.  Long sought-after by collectors, this happy publication brings the price within reasonable reach, and gathers a new audience for Frank.

NATURE & SCIENCE
The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe by Theodore Gray (2009).  This is such a beautiful book, and it appeals to the scientist, the photographer, the organizer, and nerds of every stripe.  It's even an interesting read.

Botanica Magnifica: Portraits of the World's Most Extraordinary Flowers & Plants by Jonathan M. Singer (2009).  This expensive and beautiful book is actually the cheap trade reprint of the limited edition production which was hailed as the most expensive book ever produced.  The photographs are luscious, the plants are extraordinary, and the cloth slipcase and heavy binding a perfect match for this treasure.  A sensual feast.

The Red Book by C.G. Jung (2009).  Well, we did manage to receive and sell one copy of this beautiful work, but that's all we've managed to obtain.  And, yes, I was tempted to pre-order several, but with this economy, I really stuttered.  How many $185 books can you sell?  Apparently, quite a few.

COOKBOOKS
Cook FoodCook Food: A Manualfesto for Easy, Healthy, Local Eating by Lisa Jervis (2009).  This cute and inexpensive little manualfesto proved a popular stocking stuffer this year.

Ratio
by Michael Ruhlman (2009).  Do we love Michael Ruhlman because he is local?  Yes, we do.  But this book is such a brilliant book - it turns the concept of cookbooks on its head and presents chemical equations instead of recipes.  If you could memorize these formulas, you'd never need a cookbook again.

Mastering the Art of French Cooking
by Julia Child, Simone Beck and Louisette Bertholle (1961 ... 2009).  A decade or so ago I stopped buying every copy of Mastering the Art... at housesales, because it was at every housesale, and not as quick a seller as you might have hoped.  Now, I wish I had bought every single copy and put them in a storage box labelled "Open after the film release of Julie and Julia in 2009."  Really.

HISTORY
Factory Girls: From Village to City in a Changing China by Leslie T. Chang (2008).  This is a fascinating cultural history of modern China, and the effects of ongoing industrialization.  Most shocking, yet most elementary, is just how incredibly different our two cultures are; it is impossible to read this book and not feel the immense chasm of difference.

Three Cups of Tea
by Greg Mortenson (2006).  This book just keeps on selling and selling.  Mortenson has a picture book and young adult version of this book now available, as well as the updated and continuation of the story in Stones into Schools, but all those books just further the sales of the paperback of Three Cups of Tea.  It's a sales phenomenon.

FICTION & LITERATURE
Await Your Reply by Dan Chaon (2009). Another local author we love, and his latest book is a spellbinder.  I'm still disappointed it didn't get shortlisted for the National Book Award, but it did make a lot of other important book lists.  And it should be on yours, too.

Wolf Hall
by Hilary Mantel (2009).  It isn't often that historical fiction wins a big award like the Man Booker Prize, but when it does people take notice.  This would have been an easy hand-selling favorite even without the award, but with the award, well, it's a year-end winner.

The Summer Book
by Tove Jansson (1975, 2008).  Our own Praise the Unsung Book Club featured this book, and we had fun selling Tove Jansson and everything Finnish for months.  Did you know that the comic book versions of Moomin have also been reprinted?  Nice.

The Elegance of the Hedgehog
by Muriel Barbery (2008).  Another book club favorite, and I mean multiple book clubs.  How many book clubs are out there?  I don't know, but they're all reading ...Hedgehog.

The Children's Book
by A.S. Byatt (2009).  Speaking of book club, we read Possession this year in Praise the Unsung Book Club, partly in anticipation of Byatt's new novel.  Yup, it's good.  But it can be a tough read.  Even my mother had a tough time starting it, but then she got hooked and she hasn't stopped talking about it.

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
by Mary Ann Shaffer (2008).  This is another book club favorite, with similar literary and quirky appeal to Helene Hanff's 84, Charing Cross Road.  It's an interesting history lesson, easy plane reading, perfect gift-giving, soulful but relaxing reading pleasure.  In other words, a great book.

MYSTERIES
31 Hours by Masha Hamilton (2009).  With a nod to my newfound Twitter addiction comes the wonderful people of Unbridled Books, and this title takes the lead.  A spellbinding account of urgency and hope, desperation and resolve.  How well do you know the people you love?  How can a chance meeting change destiny?  This will keep you up at night.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and The Girl Who Played with Fire by Steig Larsson (2008 & 2009).  It took awhile for this blockbuster to pick up speed in Cleveland, but it has now, and we're selling as many of the first book as we are of the second.  And I'm sure there are just as many Clevelanders now clamouring for the third, not yet available in the US.

The Brutal Telling by Louise Penny (2009).  Cold Canadian night, beautiful serene landscape, friendly likable people, gourmet foods and priceless antiques = perfect place for a murder!  Louise Penny throws in some wit and some Czech expatriots and the suspense mounts as everyone becomes a suspect.  This is pure escapism, reading to please every appetite (except maybe those who prefer violent, mean and hard-boiled).



OtisOTIS LOVES PRESS
Tuesday, December 9, 2009
Harriett

Otis got featured in the Cool Cleveland Holiday Gift Guide, subtitled, Your One-Stop Source for Local Gifts, Wares and Sundries, Or, Holiday Shopping That Doesn't Suck.  Well, he is cute.



presentSTUMPER MAGICIAN FREEBIES
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Harriett

It's that time of year again: time to say thank you to all our loyal Stumper Magicians who help solve hundreds of book mysteries every year.  If you've ever submitted some solutions to our Stump the Bookseller forum, now's the time to register for a free gift.  Some of these gifties are rather random, but it's always fun to get a freebie in the mail!  Many thanks to all of you!



KurzTED KURZ: Larchmere & Beyond
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Harriett

The watercolors in this month's Annex Gallery exhibition are familiar as a hometown postcard.  That's because Ted Kurz spent 30 years on Larchmere with his business Kurz Architects, and he knows the area well.  The snapshots of Larchmere and Cleveland scenes are both pleasing and well-executed.  His interest in painting and sketching extends from early childhood, and remains a pasttime in his retirement.  Show continues through January 4.



EXTENDED HOLIDAY HOURS
Thanksgiving thru Christmas

Monday-Wednesday 10am-6pm
Thursday-Friday 10am-8pm
Saturday 10am-6pm
Sunday 12-4pm



Holiday StrollLARCHMERE HOLIDAY STROLL
Friday, November 27, 10am-8pm
Saturday, November 28, 10am-8pm
 
Now in its third decade, the annual Thanksgiving weekend shopping spree continues on Larchmere Boulevard.  Three dozen locally-owned businesses on Larchmere Boulevard will welcome the holiday season with good cheer and nostalgic fanfare, food, merriment, live music and excellent indie shoppingAnd you should see the striped trees! 

Larchmere is pleased to welcome Bazaar Bizarre, the popular indie craft show, as a new addition to the Larchmere Holiday Stroll.  Bazaar Bizarre, not your granny’s craft fair, will feature 50 craftspeople in the vacant 12635 Larchmere Boulevard building. No more mass produced mall stuff! Buy handmade!

Live music also abounds on the street, with carollers browsing the boulevard in the afternoon, in addition to the following schedule:

    * Brian Henke, guitar virtuoso, at Loganberry Books on Friday and Saturday 1pm-3pm
    * Gene Epstein, cellist, at Felice Urban Cafe on Friday 6-8pm
    * Keyboardist courtesy of Wadsworth Productions at Larchmere House on Friday 3-8pm
    * Dan McCoy, Americana/roots, at Academy Tavern, Saturday at 7-9pm
    * Gene's Jazz Hot, swing quartet, at Vine & Bean on Saturday at 8pm

Just one block north of Shaker Square, Larchmere is home to a remarkable collection of art, antiques, books, clothing, crafts, furniture, gift items, jewelry, oriental rugs, fine restaurants, cafes and services.   Shop local with the upbeat vitality and offbeat charm of Larchmere!  Browse the boulevard and discover old-world shopping and award-winning restaurants in your hometown neighborhood.


Brian HenkeBRIAN HENKE
Monday, November 23, 2009
Harriett

We booked Brian Henke for the Holiday Stroll!  Brian Henke composes his music like a painter putting images on canvas, a kind of sonic shaman, drawing his inspiration from the natural world around him. Mother Earth ( Terra) as an artist has given an immense living gallery from the humbling spectacle of her natural wonders to the simple beauty of a majestic treetop against a blue sky. This magical feeling of awe and peace inspire the compositions of this award winning virtuoso acoustic fingerstyle guitarist.  Brian will be performing music from all 5 of his solo CDs, some special holiday music, as well as brand new material from his upcoming CD “A Childs Garden” to be released sometime in 2010.

Performing at Loganberry Books during the Larchmere Holiday Stroll on Friday, November 27, 1-3pm and Saturday, November 28, 1-3pm.



15HAPPY FIFTEENTH
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Harriett

Happy Anniversary to us!  No, we're not throwing a party (it's a week before the Holiday Stroll, yikes!), but we are throwing some specials and niceties out there.  15% off all books, for starters.  And free cookies and cider (always a treat).  And I have free movie passes for FANTASTIC MR. FOX, which has an all-star voice cast and has gotten some great reviews, particularly from and for the grown-ups.  Otis is here, and we're pretty much decked out for the holidays (I can't do it all on Thanksgiving Day, after all).  Oh, and a long-awaited track lighting project for the Sanctuary is being finished as I type this.  Happy Anniversary!



NO MORE!
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Harriett

The inflow of used books has been incredible, and steady, since the recession officially kicked in a year ago.  Everytime we clean up the new arrivals table, more walk in the door begging our attention and processing, cleaning, pricing, shelving.  We have a lot of books here!  We have a lot of GOOD books here!  But there's no way we're going to look pretty for the Holiday Stroll if this stream continues.  So, it is with regret but realism, that I announce as of this moment, that we are no longer looking at used books for sale until December.  We really need to focus on getting ready for the Holiday Stroll and to  bring you the best we can!  The photo here is only a tiny piece of the mess -- I mean, incoming.  Thanks.



entitlementENTITLEMENT
Monday, November 9, 2009
Harriett

Entitlement: the belief that one is deserving of or entitled to certain privileges (Merriam-Webster's Dictionary).  It doesn't bring out the pretty in anyone.  I actually had a guy standing on the sidewalk yelling at me that I should "respect people with Ph.D.s."  Um, wow.  It is, of course, distressing to have an angry customer.  His complaint?  He wanted a discount on a book that was already priced 53% off.  Respect is a two-way street. 



wal-martTHE PRICE WARS
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Harriett

Wal-Mart.com wants to top Amazon.com.  That's how it started, anyway.  So Wal-Mart.com threw out a challenge so insane it was bound to catch media attention: hit Amazon where it started, with books, by selling ten anticipated-bestsellers to be published in November for $10 apiece. 

Mind you, the category "books" does not even appear on Wal-Mart.com's main menu. But if you search (and I'm sorry to add to the free advertising here), you'll find books, a list of deeply discounted top 200 titles, and the "10 Best Pre-Selling Books" (I like to think of it like the NEA 4 of 1990).  Here's the list of sacrificial lambs--I mean, books (Wal-Mart's order):
  • Sarah Palin, Going Rogue
  • J.D. Robb, Kindred in Death
  • Barbara Kingsolver, The Lacuna
  • John Grisham, Ford County
  • Stephen King, Under the Dome
  • Linda Howard, Ice
  • James Patterson, I, Alex Cross
  • Jim Butcher, First Lord's Fury
  • Michael Crichton, Pirate Latitudes
  • Dean Koontz, Breathless
Of course Amazon answered the challenge, and they raised (lowered) the bar to $9 each.  Then Target.com entered the match for 7 of the 10 titles for $8.99, and even Sears entered the fray (without actually selling the books in question). Who knows where it will be tomorrow, but it doesn't really matter. 

The Books.
Let's look at those authors again: Grisham, Patterson, King, Koontz, Crichton.  That's half the list devoted to big-name pop-thriller authors. Of the outliers: Jim Butcher writes fantasy.  Two female romance novelists are here, but in their mystery-writing personaes: Linda Howard and J.D. Robb (pseudonym for Nora Roberts).  That leaves two women who really shouldn't be in the same sentence together: the memoir of Sarah Palin (the only non-fiction pick (is it non-fiction?)) and the first novel in nine years by Barbara Kingsolver (the only literary fiction pick).  To summarize: 100% white, 70% thriller/mystery, 60% male.  Heck, Crichton isn't even alive anymore.

The Economics.
$9 sounds cheap by any standard, but how cheap is cheap?  On Wal-Mart's list, the discount ranges from 59% - 74% off, with the average hovering around 66%.  Let's put this in context: most indie booksellers buy their books from wholesalers or publishers for 40-42% off.  Chains often get better deals, usually around 50-55%.  So these mega-giants are offering ten new hardcover books for roughly 25% cheaper than the indies can buy them wholesale.  The twitterverse asks: why shouldn't the indies buy their stock from the mega-giants, especially since they stand to LOSE approximately 10-15% with every sale they make?  The "suggested retail price" of these ten books range from $22 (Howard) to $35 (King), with an average price of $27.  We don't know exactly what Wal-Mart and Amazon and Target are paying for these titles, but let's guess their persuasive powers with publishers gets them at least 60% off retail (a full 20% more than indies get), that puts them at a LOSS of approximately $2 per book sold. If their terms aren't as good as that, that means more loss per book, and if the publishers are giving their books away at a higher rate than 60% off, god bless 'em. 

The Numbers.
Okay, so here's the (revised) geek chart, per book.
SRP = Suggested Retail Price (otherwise referred to as "retail")
Pub WH = publisher wholesale rate at 50% off (distributor rates are 40% off SRP)
WM price = Wal-mart's retail price, uniformly and arbitrarily just under $9
WM % off = Wal-mart's discount % is variable because the SRP isn't the same on these 10 books
WM loss = Wal-Mart's loss on each book sold, calculated at the unheard-of hypothetical 60% wholesale rate. Obviously, if their rates aren't quite that good, then their loss is greater.

Author SRP Pub WH 50% WM
price
WM
% off
WM loss 
King   $35.00  $17.50  $8.98 74.35%  $(8.52)
Palin  $28.99  $14.50  $8.99 69.00%  $(5.51)
Koontz  $28.00  $14.00  $8.98 67.92%  $(5.02)
Patterson  $27.99  $14.00  $8.98 67.90%  $(5.01)
Crichton  $27.99  $14.00  $8.98 67.90%  $(5.01)
Kingsolver  $26.99  $13.50  $8.98 66.71%  $(4.51)
Robb  $26.95  $13.48  $8.98 66.68%  $(4.50)
Butcher  $25.95  $12.98  $8.98 65.41%  $(4.00)
Grisham  $24.00  $12.00  $8.98 62.57%  $(3.02)
Howard  $22.00  $11.00  $8.98 59.20%  $(2.02)
average  $27.39  $13.69  $8.98 66.76%  $(4.71)

The Industry.
It isn't just the Indie booksellers cyring foul because the big box stores are selling these books at less than cost, although the crying starts there.  The extension of this equation means Indies are cancelling their orders of these ten titles with their publishers or distributors:  Indies will either boycott these ten titles outright (what's the chance of our selling them, anyway?  I haven't even sold ONE copy of Dan Brown's The Lost Symbol) or they will buy them from the big box stores (cheaper! ack!).  It has been noted that this practice didn't work out so well for the indie music and video stores, but then again, the big box stores weren't actually losing money by making these sales.  The real losers here are the publishers.  Wait a minute -- aren't they the only ones being paid the asking price?  Yes, they are.  But their books are being treated as commodoties by big corporate companies who don't care about books, and who will return some 30-60% of their inventories in that wacked, outdated system known as Returns.  When all is said and done, the struggling publishing industry will sport fewer players, and the number of books published will be decreased.  (Sure, there's self-publishing, but with no arbiter, no marketing, and no distribution, most self-published books are going to stay in the realm of the author's trunk and website.)  So perhaps I should say the real losers here are the readers.  Boo hiss.
Comments?


Monday, October 26, 2009
Comments from Lily

i'm from berkeley, and was friends with andy ross when the whole lawsuit about discounts to chains & indies was won by the independent bookstores... or so i thought! this sure doesn't make it sound like it's in effect.

you mention the trouble this presents for the booksellers and publishers, but my perspective was always all about the writers, editors, smaller press publishers; the reasoning was that if only the chains survived, and they only stocked top forty books.... well, i used to publish a little magazine called 'yellow silk,' well -- the chains wouldn't touch it, so who was going to sell my little magazine if all the independent bookstores were driven under? would anyone even think of publishing poetry?

well, yes, as you mention, we do have burgeoning forms surrounding us, though i still have a hard time reading except on paper, and what with poetry slams being as popular as skateboarding i guess one needn't worry about that. but the arguments, i think, still hold.

i cross my fingers and hope that it's just the concern of the old over the new ways. but still....



More!  More!I BLAME TWITTER
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Harriett

I have so much in my head, and so many papers on my desk, and way too many new arrivals to process.  Twitter seduces me with more news and trivia than I can handle, and insider scoops from journalists, publishers, book agents, authors, and other booksellers.  It's heady stuff.  But I still have to get some work done around here (sales, bills, processing the books), and what falls through the cracks?  The blog.  And maybe a pile of books.  Somehow it doesn't seem fair: I'm learning more and processing more (both books and information), but you, oh faceless blog reader, are losing out on the gossip.  Are you there?  Have you noticed my silence?  One never really knows with blogs.  But, at any rate, I think random entries here are occasionally read (thanks Mom), so here are my promises for blog make-ups at a later (but soon) date: 
  • My "deep throat" moment with a Washington Post reporter
  • The Espresso Book Machine in action
  • Full-length movies from children's picture books
  • The book price wars (above)
  • The death of feminism, or the science of the shelves
  • Neil Gaiman and the Chinese on science fiction


Federal Trade CommissionTHE FTC GUIDELINES FOR BLOGGERS
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Harriett

The world is a-twitter with the FTC's announcement about new disclosure rules required by bloggers.  I'm no fan of Big Brother, but it mostly just sounds ridiculous and unenforceable to me.  In a nutshell, the rules require amateur reviewers to state where they got the book.  Presumably, if the book is a gift from a publisher, a good review could be construed as payment, and therefore endorsement, so the reader of the blog should be alerted to this relationship.  Oddly, these rules are not targeted at newspapers and magazines that publish hundreds of reviews, and which receive those products for free from the manufactureres (in the case of books, that means publishers).  Yeah, whatever.  Just because a publisher sends out free review copies doesn't guarantee a good review, and certainly doesn't build loyalty for all that health insurance provided.

There's some great commentary out there.  The first informative article was Edward Champion's interview with the FTC's Richard Cleland. Ron Hogan's #HeyFTC refrain on twitter raised some excellent questions, pointed out some wild inconsistencies and questionable double standards.  Many of these points he boiled into GalleyCat blogposts: Open Letter to the FTC, FTC Guidelines, and Who Gets to Be an Online Book Reviewer?  Some bloggers immediately took cover with open statements on their blogs, albeit with clenched fists.  Some bloggers took the free speech route, others a more financial effect of the regulations.  Commentary on twitter was even more querulous, and the conversation is far from over.  Let's hope the regulations are far from over, too. 



Nathan in Bellingham WANATHAN FINISHES HIS X-C BIKE TRIP
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Harriett

Remember Nathan?  He stopped by Loganberry on July 10th on his cross-country bicycle trip from Belfast, Maine to Bellingham, Washington.  He's been pedalling ever since, and today, he concluded his trip in Washington.  Wow.  It's been quite a ride, and fans (like me) have been following along thanks to social media and the FollowNathan website.  Nathan has been broadcasting news, photos, stories, map points, and quick hellos from his journey on Twitter, Facebook, Greenopolis and a host of other digital networks.  Not only has this helped build his fanclub, but he's got real-time live data ready to write his book about it!  I teased him about writing a book when he was here, and he wasn't sure about it at the time, but he's ready now.  In fact, now that the voyage is done, he's looking for a cabin to rent so he can get to work on writing the book.  4,000+ miles in 4.5 months, and countless people met, local food consumed, and farmers interviewed.  Oh yeah, he's raising money for the Nature Conservancy, don't forget to tip your hat there!  And Congratulations Nathan!



yellowpages.comYELLOWPAGES.COM
Monday, September 28, 2009
Harriett

When you own a small business, you get inundated with telephone solicitations.  The shocking majority of these are other businesses trying to get your business - advertising, banking, merchant services, monogrammed pens, office supplies.  A major percentage of these calls come from companies seeking to verify your mailing list for online directories.  These directories fall under two categories:  something you've never heard of, or something using the name "yellowpages" somewhere in the title.  Many of these phone calls originate in India with a varying degree of English language skills.

I've learned to be cautious.  Early in my years as a business owner I got slammed by two long-distance phone companies -- at once even! I have two lines! -- and it's a pain in the neck to restore equilibrium.  That infamous slam included the assertion that I had agreed to the service change on tape, but when I demanded to hear that tape, it was pretty obvious where I had hung up the phone and where some other muffled voice continued saying "yes" after I had left the conversation (Moral: be sure you say "no" very clearly on the recorded session before hanging up the phone). 

Mostly it's just an annoying waste of time to be bombarded by phone calls offering "services" you don't want or need.  The questions are easy enough, and it's hard to hang up on someone who simply asks for your mailing address.  But there are dozens of these calls, they come in every single week for fifteen years.  It grates on you eventually and turns you into a nasty phone person.

Sometimes the websites for which they are confirming your information don't even exist.  Other times, they're variations of yellow pages that you've never heard of or used.  I suspect some of these are databases for sale  so other companies can harrass you some more. 

Today's phone solicitation claims to have been from Yellowpages.com.  The sales rep/telemarketer was a pleasant and calm American (probably Midwestern, no discernable accent to me).  She wanted to confirm my mailing address, and after doing so, she wanted me to do it again on audiotape.  When she said that process would remove me from future calls, I agreed.  We had some difficulty with the "state your title" question (really? what's wrong with bookseller or chief dishwaher?).  And she talked over the "over 18" question so that I couldn't hear what the question was on the tape.  I complained about this, and we did it several times, and every time, she talked over the tape so I couldn't hear the question.  Apparently this was the dealbreaker, and she said she'd allow my "free listing" to expire because I was uncooperative.  I'm okay with this.

Doesn't everyone use Google anyway?



Manchester sidewalkGOOD TRASH
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Harriett

One of my missions on my recent trip to Vermont was to gather some good rocks.  Now, rocks come in many varieties with as many varying degrees of coolness.  In Vemont, rocks have a pedigree:  the oldest and longest-running quarries in the nation, producing white marble (Danby), green marble (Proctor), granite (Barre), and lots of colors of slate (Pawlett, Wells, Granville NY).  In Manchester VT, the sidewalks are built with marble (pictured to the left is a colorful segment, other areas have huge wide single stones of pure white marble, like heaven).  We took a run up to the Danby Marble Company Mine, but they're still in operation, and don't really welcome guests, especially not rock hunters.  Even the slag piles are so overgrown and the rocks so large, they're just dangerous (no pocket-rocks here). 

Danby Marble Co.Danby white marble blocksmarble slag

We had better luck at an old aboned mine site in North Pawlett. These hills were shaved and mined for slate, and the quarry holes are now gorgeously clear lakes (not open to the public, although there's a marble quarry swimming hole in Dorset that's a real treat).  Here we filled our proverbial pockets and weighed down the trunk of the car.  These rocks are a lot heavier than they look, so moderation is an important rule of thumb.

old slate mineslate hillslag picking

I promised some rocks for some friends and staff, so the car was heavy on its trip home, but well received.   Soon after, when a friend called and told me about some groovy things her workplace was throwing away, I offered some slate slag in trade.  Instead, after three carloads to remove new trash picks, my friend demanded $100.  Ouch.  That's just not the way the trash-pickers work.



Pride & PrejudiceSIX DEGREES OF BOOK CLUB SEPARATION
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Harriett

We have two book clubs here at Loganberry, and they meet on the same night: the fourth Thursday of the month.  Occasionally we have people who are interested in both, or who flit from one group to the other, but when pressed if they would actually read two books a month and attend both book club meetings, they always say no.  So, we have two book clubs here, and they meet on the same night.  Why not?, the space is big enough.

One book club is Austeniana, which reads all things by, about or inspired by Jane Austen.  The other is called Praise the Unsung, and focuses on great reads which are not on the current bestseller list.  The two seldom intersect.  But here's a cool six-degrees of separation thing, so bear with me (it's fun).

A.S. ByattThis month, the Austeniana club rereads the essential Pride and Prejudice.  Praise the Unsung reads A.S. Byatt's 1990 classic, Possession (her new novel, The Children's Book, is due out next month.) A.S. Byatt is the older sister of novelist Margaret Drabble.  Both A.S. Byatt's and Maragaret Drabble's early novels borrowed from their own family experiences (Drabble: "I had written a novel, The Peppered Moth, in which I had lightly fictionalized my mother's life, and that had caused trouble enough.").  Rumor has it that the ensuing disagreements have left the sisters on non-speaking terms for decades; they certainly admit publicly that they do not read each other's works.  In Margaret Drabble's newest work, The Pattern in the Carpet  (review, article and podcast), just now published, she fits family lore into a history of jigsaw puzzles.

How am I going to fit this jigsaw puzzle of two writing sisters together with Jane Austen, you're probably now wondering.  No, I am not going to delve into Victorian sisters and invoke the Brontes (that would be ten degrees of separation).  It's about the jigsaw puzzles.  Apparently, the earliest literary reference to jigsaw puzzles comes from Jane Austen.  And so, with really only three puzzle pieces, we have joined our two book club selections:  Jane Austen and A.S. Byatt.  I hope you can join us for at least one of our book club discussions.  They will both meet on the fourth Thursday, September 24, at 7pm here at Loganberry Books.



NOBSNOBS FORUMS:  SMALL PRESS
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Harriett

Tonight, in our monthly conversations throughout the book world, we were entertained and enlighted by Suzanne DeGaetano from Mac's Backs Books on Coventry and Bree from Green Panda Press.  Suzanne gave us her views on small press and introduced us to some of her favorites, like Chin Music Press and Two Dollar Radio.  Bree showed us examples of her own work with Green Panda Press as well as other chapbooks and self-produced artist works.  While some examples were famous (early City Lights and Cleveland's d.a. levy for instance), others were relatively unknown and pleasantly surprising.  Thanks!
P.S.  NOBS has a new website -- check it out.



Mary Travers, c. 2006IN MEMORIAM: MARY TRAVERS
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Harriett

Like most people my age, I grew up listening to Peter, Paul and Mary (Mary would say, "I did too"). I remember fighting with my nursery school teacher because she wanted me to lie down and take a nap, and I told her I would lie down when the PP&M song finished. (Teacher turned off the music in a huff.  I was furious.)  I remember my great excitement when a new album was issued, and racing my bike home to hear it.  I even saw Mary solo in concert at Playhouse Square, and followed her solo career with great enthusiasm.  Mary's "Yellow Album" was amongst my most prized possessions, and my refuge in troubled times.  Years later, as a college student, I saw Peter, Paul & Mary perform in their reunion phase, and I gave Mary a twig of dogwood that I'd snagged off a tree on campus (actually, I gave it to Peter when he was sound checking in the aisles before the concert, and he was charmed by its non-commercial acquisition).  When my music interests took a less mainstream bent, I still held onto my love for Peter, Paul & Mary and that sublime harmony, and used this joy as a gateway into political protest movements.  Peter, Paul & Mary were some of the hardest working folks in the business, and they took their musical career seriously.  While you can say that they were mainstream pop artists, you also have to credit their hard work (and manager Milt Okun's) to get there, breaking the barriers not just for themselves but for all of the folk music genre.  Three people, two guitars, rich harmony and a waterfall of energy: who cannot smile at that positively yellow sound?  And the woman singing alto?!  Alas, it will never be as yellow again without Mary's blonde hair.  Rest in peace, troubadour and weaver of dreams.

YouTube gems:  Blowin' in the Wind c.1966Rising of the Moon 1966Blue, concert version, 1964The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face, Solo 1970, Where Have All the Flowers Gone c.1986?



Mt. Equinox trailVERMONT
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Harriett

Yes, I have arrived home.  Between twitter and vacation, I have not blogged often, but I have much to say and I'll post some gems in the next coming days.  For a teaser, I'll let you know that vacation included Seneca Falls NY, Danby-Manchester-Middlebury VT, Williamstown MA, Howes Caverns NY, and Ithaca NY.  Otis is very glad to have me home, and we have new bookmarks to prove it.  The incoming of 2010 calendars and Christmas cards is rather overwhelming, but not quite as bad as the 3500+ spam messages in the Stump the Bookselller mailbox.  Thanks to the staff for keeping things clean and running the shop! 



Tibetan BowlRESOUNDING JOY
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Harriett


The full title of this program is Re-Sounding Joy: Gem Crystal & Tibetan Singing Bowls, and it's tonight at 7pm.  Kathleen Calby plays Tibetan bowls in a kind of musical massage for your senses.  She’ll begin with a brief intro about the bowls, their history and use, and then give a 40-minute performance.  Q&A will follow.  $10 admission.



Some Things That StayBOOK CLUB ~ WITH THE AUTHOR
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Harriett

Sarah Willis' first novel, Some Things That Stay, features Tamara Anderson, 15 years old in 1954, who comes of age within an unconventional family that's struggling in an era of social conformity. Her father is a landscape painter, so the family (including Tamara's younger siblings, Robert, 11, and Megan, 7) moves every year, living in furnished houses from Georgia to Idaho to Maine, owning only what can fit in a trailer. Stuart and Liz, Tamara's parents, met when Liz modeled nude for art classes, with Stuart defying his family to marry the woman who had flirted with the Communist Party. Now they are determined to bring up their children as atheists, teaching them evolution and carefully explaining sexuality and reproduction.

Sarah Willis is a Cleveland native and employee of Loganberry Books, and she'll be present to discuss her work with us.  Join us, and the author!



shifting books BOOK REARRANGING
Friday, August 14, 2009
Harriett

This week we have begun a section shift in the store, creating an enlarged Social Science alcove and a first-ever general Biography section.  Seems strange that we haven't had a Biography section before, but that doesn't mean we haven't had biographies!  We'll leave the Presidential biographies in Americana and the actor biographies in theatre/film, and we'll continue to shelve writer biographies next to their works of fiction.  But the women's biographies, general American biographies, and many British and European biographies will help kick-start the new section.  It's kind of exciting, and of course a lot of work.  And how did Business & Economics get dragged into this project?  Oh, it's a  long story, but it's part of the domino effect...



FRIDAYLAND
Friday, August 7, 2009
Catapiwwa

What did you do today? It's the perpeptual Twitter question.  So here's the Twitterized diary of a day in the life of the bookseller (kinda.  memoir has a way of morphing into fiction and creating a strange imbalance of what really happened.  like, how do you account for the time that phone calls, questions, pricing, shelving and sales actually consume?)
KEY:  T = Twitter   C = Customer   NC = Non-customer     S = Salesman     V = Video goof-off     W = work

T.   an extraordinarily touching eulogy for John Hughes, by a pen-pal fan/friend
W.  emails, answering machine, "your book is here" calls, and other communications
V.   the continuing saga of Green Apple's The Book v. The Kindle, this time with kids
W.  Josie pounds out several months' worth of accounting data entry
T.  @bookavore's disgust with packaging materials.  These five boxes contained this much bubblewrap for these few books.  Yup, all from the same publisher, with different invoices.
NC.  Inpromtu board meeting here by Community Housing Solutions, who is considering renting the space for fundraiser
C.  Waitress from Academy Tavern calls to ask if we had the Twilight books (?!)
S.  AT&T salesman wants to see my bill to be sure I have lowest deal.  No biz card, no conversation, sorry.
NC.  Neighbor wants to post a flyer here; but she's all nervous, never been inside the bookstore before
S.  Russian guy wants to show me his photo album of rugs.  I do not know why.  I was too busy to look.
S.  Carlos wants to sell me 12x contract w/ Scene.  And I didn't even have the books he requested (grr).
T.  The US Army makes scads of stupid decisions, this time involving turtles
V.  No video here, but why are caterpillar seminars always on Saturday when I work?
V.  hysterical video:  Coal - cheap, abundant and clean
T.  Edward Lear coming back into print
W.  ordering books.  new books, mmmMMmmmm....

Okay, not enough work in there.  What did I do all day?  Doesn't matter; day is done.  Back at it tomorrow.



knitscapeKNITSCAPE  
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Harriett

On Wednesday, we had about a dozen people here working on the crochet pieces that will be used to decorate our thornless honey locust trees on Larchmere.  Our tree is finished--see?--isn't it pretty?  The bright colors are sure to bring a smile to your face, and our well-dressed trees are deserving of a double-take by all passers-by.  The plan is to decorate the trees all along our indie commercial strip -- as a pulic art project, a business attraction, and just to bring a smile to your face.  To read more, check out HeightsArts.  Crafters needed!



ChapmansTHE RELATIVES VISIT
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Harriett

My mother's sister and brother-in-law (my aunt and uncle) from Georgia came to visit for a couple of days.  They got the full Larchmere/Loganberry tour, as well as several days at the newly renovated and expanded Cleveland Museum of Art, a day of biking on the Towpath Trail, and two nights at Blossom Music Center.   See?  Visiting Cleveland is fun! 



Green Apple videoGREEN APPLE BOOKS

Wednesday, July 30, 2009
Harriett

The video competition of "The Book vs. The Kindle" is on, and brought to you by the creative bookish foks at Green Apple Books in San Francisco.  It's beautiful.  There are 10 in the series, and it's all over the blogosphere, newsletters, twitter, and YouTube.  The finale promises to be hysterical, so stay tuned and check back often.



FRESH EYES NOW VISITS WITH THE EYES SHUT
Friday, July 24, 2009
Harriett

"The bookstore, when we arrived there, proved to be the most extraordinary sort of bookstore I had ever entered, there not being a book in it. Instead of books, the shelves and counters were occupied with rows of small boxes."--From the story "With the Eyes Shut" by Edward Bellamy, published in 1898.

Read the rest of Robert Gray's fascinating discovery and excellent commentary on Shelf Awareness.



twitTHE MONDAY TWITTER REPORT
Monday, July 20, 2009
Harriett

I'm still enjoying Twitter (and still annoyed by Facebook, at least on a personal level).  Today, in my twitterfeed this morning came some interesting tidbits that I forwarded to friends (via email, since none of them are on Twitter) or which otherwise deserve a wider audience.  I think that's the nature of Twitter.  Here's a sampling:

  • an interesting middle-eastern pop magazine called Bidoun that I sent to my ruggie friend
  • a job offer in Middlebury VT for my friend moving to Vermont
  • an article about how to find a literary agent for my friend drafting her first novel
  • an invite to the premier of a friend's silent film about Fatty Arbuckle
  • many tributes and obituaries for author Frank McCourt
  • an article on Printcasting, where you choose the articles you want printed in your magazine
  • anything by Sara Nelson is worth reading
  • more on Amazon's  Orwellian  move
  • Missouri Car Dealer Offers Free AK-47 With Purchase of New Truck
  • 40th Anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing
  • someone I should be following:  Doonesbury's Roland Hedley
  • happy birthday Erika!


MUSEUM LIBRARY
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Harriett

We were called to come look at some books at a local museum's library.  They're getting ready for a book sale and deacquisitioning some duplicates, donations, and other items.  This is normal business for any institutional library.  But in discussion with the librarian there, I was shocked to learn that this honored institution has a palpable disrespect for its library.  The staff been reduced by more than half, its educational reading/research rooms have been allocated to other offices, and of course the budget has been slashed.  But what is most depressing, is that in the midst of a major renovation/expansion, the library has been slated to move to THE BASEMENT.  Do these people have any idea what sub-ground locations do to paper?!  This library is a treasure with some incredible gems and very valuable books.  I suppose you could run year-round dehumidifiers and other climate control devices, but what a waste.  AND, the library's proposed new location would essentially be out-of-reach to the public.  Staff and curators would have access, but not the general public.  What a travesty.  Apparently, a board member defended the library's repositioning to the basement by saying "patrons don't use the library anymore anyway; they use Google." 

I beg to differ.



Otis up highladder rescueSNEAKY FURRY RESCUE
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Harriett

Oh, that petunia.  Joy left the ladder up while she was watering the ferns above the bathroom door in the Annex Gallery ... and from there it was just a short stride onto the I-beam across and then a jump UP to the clerestory windows.  Trouble is, those clerestory windows are a good 12' above the ground with a sloped wall and not enough room to turn around, even for a sneaky furry.  (click on the image on the left for an enlarged image.)  So Mom had to get the emergency extension ladder out and go rescue the kitten.  Will he ever learn?!  Well, he certainly jumped right into my arms and was grateful for the ride down.  But that hasn't stopped him from climbing more ladders today...



NathanNATHAN'S VISIT
Friday, July 10, 2009
Harriett

Nathan arrived right on schedule yesterday, 3pm, despite biking right down Euclid Avenue through East Cleveland instead of the more bike-friendly (but longer) path I'd suggested.  He's as laid-back as they get, eager to talk to anyone and everyone, with a welcome dose of spiritual calm.  Other than "west," his plans and his goals are modest, flexible, and extremely spontaneous.  He was cool to just hang out in the bookstore, meet a few peeps, and plug his laptop in for some blog/twitter/photo updating.  He patiently waited while I worked late through a merchants meeting, and then we took him to dinner at the Vine & Bean, where he was grateful to see the local food options on the menu.

Today, Nathan is off exploring the city, Gather Round Farm, and the Great Lakes Brewing Company.  After numerous leads and maybes, we found a place for him to crash on the west side so he can continue his gradual trek westward towards Seattle.  If you're not already following him on Twitter, I do recommend it (he's traveling across the country after all, and has a positive attitude about people and life).  And don't forget, there is a cause here, and just as Nathan marked his 1000th mile in the trip, he reached approximately $1,500 for The Nature Conservancy.  Go, Nathan, Go!



Follow NathanFOLLOW NATHAN
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Harriett

Nathan Winters began his bicycle cross-country trip on May 10th in Belfast, Maine, raising money and awareness for The Nature Conservancy.  He’s headed to Cleveland tomorrow, Thursday, July 9th. One of the biggest goals of the journey is to allow people from all over the world to follow, support and interact with him while on the trail.  With the help of innovative and rich social media platforms and Greenopolis.com, Nathan already has a large following, and it’s growing.  I first encountered Nathan on Twitter, when my buddies at Chelsea Green Publishing were tweeting about him.

You can check Nathan’s progress, including a maps, daily blogs, photos and video reports of the people he meets and the places he visits along the way. He’ll be spotlighting recycling, reuse, conservation and all the ways everyday folks across North America are transforming waste to resources in their own unique ways.

Would you like to meet Nathan or learn more?  I’ve invited him to Loganberry Books, and expect him to arrive on Thursday afternoon around 3:00pm.  You can also follow/friend him on Twitter, Facebook, Skype, MySpace, flickr, Digg or check out his blog and his website at www.follownathan.org.  You are invited to come hear about his travels, and I hope you can help him reach his fundraising goal!



funny youtube videoRANT
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Harriett

Cleveland is a paradox.  Once the 5th largest largest city teeming with wealth and industry (think Rockefeller and the Euclid Avenue mansions), it's been a long and continual slide down the rust belt.  But Rockefeller, Gund and others set up nice foundations to look after their fair cities, and they continue to dole out money and influence policy.  Today I read about some new grant awards that continue to award non-profit start-ups whose mission is to teach other businesses how to run their business.  Why does it take $30,000 for some young hipster to consult businesses on energy efficiency and renewable energy generation?  Don't get me wrong, I'm all for the end product, it's the $30,000 in the middle I have a hard time understanding.  Where do you think the money gets squeezed after paying the huge consulting fees?  Who's doing the actual work?

Let me transliterate.  Today, a well-known and respected writer in town approached me for a job.  He was obviously desperate.  Truth told, I just hired two young employees at a rate I'd be embarrassed to offer him.   How are these stories related?  Look at the publishing and newspaper professions.  If you give a huge grant to the upstarts who are either ancillary or competitive, the original business model struggles.  For example, if the upstart has little overhead, tax exemption, and better wholesale terms, (think Amazon or e-publishing) then the rest of the businesses in that field may suffer (think Borders, indie bookstores, and newspapers all over the country).  You can't continue to pay the booksellers if the authors can't find jobs.  It's books we sell, after all.  And if all the money is spent on researching new digital publishing technology that precludes both the writer and the distributor from the job chain, then it's no longer a business model; it's a hobby.  If you can afford to stick around, that is.



Julie & JuliaFREE MOVIE TICKETS 
Monday, July 6, 2009
Harriett

Get them while you can!  Free passes for the film JULIE & JULIA, screening at Shaker Square Cinemas on Wednesday, July 22 at 7:30pm.  The film is adapted from the popular book by Julie Powell in which a young woman tries to cook her way through Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking.  The movie is directed by Nora Ephron and stars Meryl Streep and Amy Adams.  How can it miss?



Independents WeekINDEPENDENTS WEEK
Friday, July 3, 2009
Harriett

Happy Independents Week!  Celebrate your local independents this week -- whether they be in books, music, restaurants or what have you.  Hard to imagine what your community would look like without any independent retailers, isn't it?  Just imagine half the streets you usually drive down lined with vacant properties (a depressing thought, yes).  It's not unfathomable.  So, please, show your love.  Your hometown community -- wherever you are -- will appreciate it. 

Need more information on the economic impact of supporting your local businesses?  Check out these resources:  amiba's benefits of doing business locallySan Francisco Retail Diversity StudyABA Emerging Leadersthe Data Commons Project, and I Buy NEO.  As I write this blog, we have a tourist browsing here who is an employee from the corporate headquarters of Borders.  That's kinda cool.



Flea GalleryGene EpsteinANNEX GALLERY  
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Harriett

Every month, it's something new in the Annex Gallery.  But this transition may be the most stark contrast yet!  You see, for the Larchmere Flea Market, we decided to get in on the game by using the Annex Gallery as our month-long flea market area.  We had old wooden toys, dolls, games, vintage clothing, hats, gloves & accessories, prints, posters, tea sets, old table lighters, candles, glass mushrooms, calendars, cards . . . and some books.  Yeah, lots of stuff, a smorgasbord of interesting and assorted things. 

This month, Gene Epstein's art show has returned the space to its roots as art gallery.  She has 15 pastel landscapes on the walls and 10 folded books on little stands.  It's a pretty show, with a sophisticated feel.  Come to the opening reception tonight at 6pm, and refresh yourself.



jeopardyJEOPARDY!
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Sarah

In the last week of May, 2009, I went to Chicago to participate in an audition for the television show “Jeopardy!”  The audition was actually the second step in the process of trying to be a Jeopardy contestant; the first step was taking an online test.  The online test is offered only a couple times a year, and is given at a specific hour on a certain date that varies by time zone.  You have to register on the Jeopardy website at least a day before, and then log in before the start time.  At the time of registration you are prompted to select the city where you would like to audition (if you pass); I chose Chicago, since of the 10 or so options that was the closest to Cleveland.  The 50-question test runs as follows: a single question appears on the screen; you have 15 (I think) seconds to type an answer in the little box; you don’t have to answer in the form of a question; you aren’t penalized for wrong answers.  At the end of the test, a message appears saying thank you for taking the test, you will be contacted for an audition if you scored well enough, but we will never tell you your actual score on this test.

I took the online test in late January.  I received an email in mid-April saying “Congratulations!  You have been selected for a follow-up appointment at an upcoming Jeopardy! contestant search for the Chicago area, exclusively for those who successfully passed the online test.”  The email told me my date and time for the audition (May 29, 9am), and gave me two business days to RSVP, or else my slot could go to someone else.  I wasn’t sure yet if I could really do it, but I said “yes” anyway, just in case.  I asked permission from Harriett to skip work that day so I could try to be on Jeopardy.  She graciously allowed me to go – on the condition that I blog about it, of course!

My audition was held at the Westin hotel in downtown Chicago.  I arrived early (as instructed), and was given a form to fill out that asked for my name, address, age, occupation, and if I’d ever been on a game show before, if I knew anyone who’d been on Jeopardy, if I knew anyone who worked for Jeopardy’s parent company, etc.  I counted 21 people in the room (including me); 12 female, 9 male, ranging in age from early 20’s (like me) to late 60’s (or so).  We all had our picture taken with a Polaroid camera, and were given an answer sheet for another 50-question test.  This test was similar to the first one: a series of questions on a video screen, with 15 seconds to write your answer on the correct line of the answer sheet.  I felt pretty good about this test; I was certain of at least 75% of my answers.  At the conclusion of the test, the Jeopardy officials (there were 2 men and a tech guy) collected our answer sheets, our audition form, our Polaroid pictures, and the list we’d been told to bring with us with 5 interesting facts about us.  They scored our tests in another room, giving us about 15 minutes to sit around and chat.  We were told that our scores would not be revealed.

The next step in the audition was a mock Jeopardy game.  We were called up in sets of 3 to stand before the pull-down screen onto which a Jeopardy game board was projected from the tech guy’s laptop.  We were allowed to use three actual Jeopardy buzzers to “ring in” during the game, and given careful instructions in the correct usage of the buzzers: keep clicking until you get called on; don’t ring in before Alex Trebek has finished reading the entire question, or you will be locked out.  Each set of three people got a few minutes to play, with the Jeopardy officials making sure to give each person a chance to be called on first and to ask for the next question.  Then the officials would ask each person, going down the line, to tell a little about themselves.  They would prompt people from their list of 5 facts, so everyone could tell a “story”.  They also asked what you would do with any money you might win on the show.  Most people (including me) said “travel.”

When everyone had been given their chance to play the mock game, it was officially over.  We were told that we had an 18-month window of eligibility, in which we might receive a phone call inviting us to come to Los Angeles to appear on the show.  If you don’t receive a call, just keep waiting until the 18 months are up, and then try again.  We were also told that there are 400 slots for adult contestants per season – so your odds of getting that phone call are actually pretty slim.  It felt rather anti-climactic as we all filed out of the testing room, but kind of exhilarating as well.  I had fun, and it was definitely an experience I’m glad I didn’t pass up.  If I ever do get that magical phone call, I’ll let you all know!



AUTHOR ALLEY EXTRAVAGANZA
Monday, June 29, 2009
Harriett

We had a great time at the Larchmere Flea Market & Festival.  It was a beautiful day, tons of people, vendors, authors, and community folk strolling the street checking it all out.  Many thanks to the small group of volunteers that made this Festival happen, and to the incredible group of authors we assembled here at Loganberry.  What a great crowd.

Thanks also to the blog mentions by Karen Sandstrom, Laura Taxel and the upcoming podcast produced by Gail and Steve Bellamy.


Flea MarketALL THINGS FLEA
Thursday, June 24, 2009
Harriett

At last count, we have 65 vendors, 40 authors, a dozen Passport Project dancers, and one Rocket Car coming to the Larchmere Flea Market & Festival this Saturday.  There are always tons of last-minute requests, questions, and registrants, so the phone rings constantly.  I'll be relieved when the whole thing is over.  But, in the meantime, we're gearing up for a great Festival, and I hope to see you all there!  We're adding some cool vintage clothing, glass paperweights, London memorabilia and a Steinberg Paris portfolio to our offerings in the Annex Gallery now.  Anything goes!



CPLNEWSFLASH
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Harriett

I am not procrastinating: cleaning up my desk (i.e., the checkout counter) is a very serious and important job.  And it must be done before the Larchmere Flea Market & Festival on Saturday.  So, the doors are locked and I'm grinding here after hours to do the deed.  It's the only way it'll get done.

But I interrupt this very important task for an even more important message:  our libraries.  Apparently, Ohio Govenor Ted Strickland has decided to balance the budget by slashing funding to public libraries by 50%.  That's in addition to the cuts they're already weathered, and you know that means closings, staff lay-offs, fewer hours and resources available to the people who need them most.  I'm not even talking about books.  Even without new books, think about the public community center that is the public library.  Where will people go for GED advice, job counseling, meeting rooms, computer access, after-school safe place?!? 

Save our libraries.  Visit these sites to make your message heard.  Now.  The vote is coming on June 26th.  For more information, watch this video.  And visit the Cleveland Public Library for easy links to write to your congresspeople and senators.  There's a rally tomorrow downtown, too.



porchfestPORCHFEST
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Harriett

A new neighborhood event will enliven Larchmere this weekend: live music from the porches!  As you take a tour of the neighborhood on Saturday, 20 acoustic bands will entertain you, 2-6pm.  Then head to Shaker Square at 6pm for three more bands (with amps), and off to the after-party at Boulevard Blue at 9pm.  It'll be a big day of music!

On Larchmere Boulevard itself, here's the line-up:
2pm - Vine & Bean: Ryann Guitar Anderson
3pm - Felice:  Russian Duo
5pm - The Academy Tavern:  Martin & Marshall
9pm - Boulevard Blue: Martini Five-0

Check www.LarchmerePorchfest.org for more info, maps, and schedules.
Amazing Press...   Preview pieces in the Plain Dealer and Cleveland Scene!  And a video posted on Cleveland.com



McGuffey McGUFFEY'S READERS: THE MYTH AND THE REALITY
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Harriett

Long before Dick and Jane was McGuffey.  McGuffey's Readers marked a generation of young children, and their worn tan covers can bring an old-timer back to childhood in a flash.  More than nostalgia items, however, McGuffey shaped several generations and the entire field of American education, with at least 120 million copies sold between 1836 and 1960. 

Reene Alley is a longtime collector and historian of McGuffey's Readers.  Come learn more about the legacy of McGuffey, both the myths and the reality.  NOBS Forums meets every third Thursday; this Forum will be on Thursday, June 18th at 7:00.  See you there.



West WingWEST WING
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Harriett

Can't believe I ate the whole thing.  But I did:  seven seasons of the The West Wing, in seven months.  I'm done with television for a long while now, but I did enjoy this fast-paced soap opera.  And I'll miss those guys.



the fan is a good thing on a hot dayNEW EMPLOYEES
Friday, June 12, 2009
Harriett

We welcome two new part-time employees to Loganberry:  Josie and Joy!  Josie will be in charge of the non-fiction room and re-ordering new books, as well as taking care of the authors at the Local Author Book Fair coming up on June 27th.  Joy will be in charge of the children's and art books, as well as Stump the Bookseller and helping out with the Larchmere Flea Market & Festival (also June 27th).  Yeah, once we get into July we'll be able to breathe a little easier over here, and Josie and Joy will be able to relax into their roles and pick up new expertise.  Looking forward to it; and already hard at work.  Otis gives his squee of approval.



old pix of LieslWRITE A LETTER
Friday, June 12, 2009
Amy

So Liesl's got a deck of word flash cards she likes to practice reading with, and she brings them to the breakfast table the other morning.  Her, brown, five, ride, etc.  All's going well, she's struggling a little but working to sound out the words. And then she gets to "bed".  Ded.  Beb.  No, I tell her, this is a b, this is a d. Bed.  Well, that's it.  The cards go on the floor, she goes stomping off -- 

"It's too hard! They point the same way! Write a letter to the company!"



ABSTRACTIONS
Thursday, June 4, 2009
Catapiwwa

Two wonderful visuals found online today.  I offer them with no explanation, go and discover for yourself.

http://www.jacksonpollock.org/
Books from Heaven, Books from Earth (by Xu Bing)




OtisJOB OPENING
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Otis

With the departure of Sarah (see below), there is a vacancy in my Otis Fan Club.  I hereby seek fulfillment!  I am looking for a smart and friendly person with strong initiative to join our team.  Basic computer skills are necessary (you've got ten fingers, surely you can type better than this feline), and particular knowledge of say, HTML or Access, is a bonus.  Basic book sense is also essential, although harder to measure.  Perhaps you have a great knowledge of art history or children's literature?  Or cat literature? 

As a small and independent business, Loganberry doesn't have super high wages, but it's respectable and commensurate upon experience.  Benefits are nonexistent, but perks are many, including a super-cool place to work, good music, credit on books, purple shirts, blogging opportunities and a chance to hang out with me, the super cool and cuddly Otis.  We're looking for someone to work 15-30 hours per week, year-round.  Please send a resume and a paragraph explaining why you want to work at Loganberry Books to harriett@logan.com.



SarahFAREWELL, SARAH
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Harriett

Sarah Cristy has worked for Loganberry for only a year and a half, but she's ensconced herself well here.  In addition to the usual bibliophile work, she has been in charge of Stump the Bookseller updates and Book Club selection and shipping.  She's a board member of the Otis fan club, and hosts a wealth of knowlege in young adult literature, particularly fantasy.  She also ran the Austeniana book club that meets here on the fourth Thursdays of the month, and I'm probably forgetting other duties which will no doubt kick me in the butt when I realize they've been left undone.  But off to Michigan she goes, and we wish her the best of luck.  Interviews for her replacement now commence, albeit with a sigh.  Oh yeah -- she promises her blog entry about the Jeopardy trial process soon. 



cheesecakeNICE QUIET DAY
Friday, May 29, 2009
Harriett

Tons of professional bookies are in NYC at the annual Book Expo, and my world feels a-twitter for missing it.  Peter Yarrow sang, Neil Gaimon is signing, publishers and authors at every turn, lots of interesting seminars, and a bevy of freebies of bookbags, galleys, ARCs, and promo materials. 

But I'm in Cleveland.  Indians won, Cavs won, but that doesn't help a bookie like me.  Rebecca went off to the Shaw Festival in Canada, before passports are required in June.  Sarah went to Chicago to take a Jeopardy test (I told her she had to blog about the experience, stay tuned).  The "other" Sarah is wrapping up book club.  Otis is taking a nap.  And Brenda entertains and taunts me with tales from the sunny south.  My desk is *still* a mess, and yes, that is the news from Loganberry today. 



twitterTWITTERVERSE
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Harriett

For those of you not familiar with Twitter, here's a taste: some fun and fantastic, unrelated tidbits I gleaned from Twitter today.  Great stuff, eh?  Yeah, and my desk would surely be cleaned if I did NOT have a twitter account...
  • Watch us publish a book in 48 hrs and come participate! Book: The Sequel schedule now online: http://bit.ly/5nivI (via @BookSequel)
  • food-safety advocate offers to pay for Michael Pollan's fee at Washington State U, after book is dropped from University's reading list. http://tinyurl.com/plhna4  (via @roncharles)
  • Around Noon: Michael Ruhlman and The Cavani String Quartet http://tr.im/mzeE (via @WCPN)
  • Grassroots Campaign Cleans Up Estonia in One Day. Watch video: http://tinyurl.com/pgny8r (via @chelseagreen)
  • Can a student maintain a lending library of banned books in her school locker? http://bit.ly/NfK0Q (via @roncharles)
  • The Friends of CPL invite you to apply for a 2009 Eugenia Thornton Cleveland Public Library Patron Scholarship: http://tinyurl.com/p8qfkm (via @Cleveland_PL)
  • Can I just tip all of Manhattan once and be done with it?  (via @billba)
  • A look at what we do: Building wealth for inner-city residents: http://www.wksu.org/news/story/23426   (via @CleveFoundation)
  • At dentist's for cleaning. Reading magazines in waiting room. It looks like Hilary Clinton is the democrats' only hope for the presidency.  (via @neilhimself)
  • Confucius cat rethink: Pavlov's response for cats-cat salivates, cat rings bell, human jumps, human gets food for cat.  (via @ConfuciusCat)
  • The more things change... GM Gas-Electric Hybrid Car Ad From... 1969! http://bit.ly/fWkvP (via @TreeHugger)
  • Taking Stock: Certificate for 50 shares of The Southern Publication Corporation, issued July 18, 1911. Found in.. http://tinyurl.com/q6fpp3 (yesterday via @ForgottenBkmrks)
  • Here is an unbelievably cute video of baby otters. http://is.gd/Imei  (via @daveburdick)
  • New bookstore cats for A Novel Idea in Lincoln, Nebraska. http://tinyurl.com/ph7y6s (via Shelf Awareness e-newsletter, so I tweeted it)


Gene's butterflyBLACK SWALLOWTAIL
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Gene

You may remember that late last summer we had a catterpillar on some queen anne's lace, then we had a cocoon.  Well, our black swallowtail emerged this Sunday, May 24th.  A few days earlier I had seen the cocoon wiggling back and forth, but then it stopped, so I assumed that the wind had caught it.  We were not there to see it emerge, but Ellie spotted it soon after.  It clung to the stick for 5-10 minutes.  It flew to the ground and walked in fits and starts about 6 feet along the driveway.  Then it took off and flew away and landed up in a tree.  An hour later it circled around Ellie's head in the back yard before flying away forever.  What a thrill!



sidewalk saleGLORIOUS SPRING
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Harriett

It was a gorgeous day for a sidewalk sale on Saturday, and indeed the customers thought so, too.  Spring in Cleveland is a glorious thing:  we are so hungry and grateful for warm sunny weather that people come out of the woodwork just to walk around.  Several families of goslings are out at Shaker Lakes, and like their proud parents, we are drawn to the water.  My annual peace party celebration was on Monday (two days off in a row, it really is a glorious thing), and that was nice too.  Now it's Monday, or rather Tuesday, and a new chapter begins.  We'll call it the summer season. 



boxesSPRING SIDEWALK SALE
Friday, May 22, 2009
Harriett

Running around like crazy trying to get ready for the Sidewalk Sale tomorrow.  Presently there are 15 boxes and various unsorted stacks of new acquisitions by the round table just inside the front door...  these must disappear by tomorrow...  But that just means there will be tons of NEW STUFF to look at tomorrow, and it will all be 20% off!  In addition to that, we have some gorgeous remainders that will be 50% off (which equals 1/4th of the original publisher's price).  Come check it out and see if I got my work done.  :-)



Google WishAH, THE WRITTEN WORD
Wednesday, May 21, 2009
Harriett

Members of the Authors Guild gathered in NYC to celebrate Dave Eggers for his work with the 826 National, a nonprofit writing and tutoring centers aimed for children ages six through eighteen. Eggers spoke about the power and promise of writing.  "Nothing has changed! The written word—the love of it and the power of the written word—it hasn’t changed. It’s a matter of fostering it, fertilizing it, not giving up on it, and having faith."

Speaking of faith, Google's annual children's contest focused on answering the question "what I wish for the world."  I can't resist a Google image with a turtle and a butterfly on it.  Gotta keep working, though.  In the new tech news today, once again there is a clash between technology's disregard for copyright laws and its desire for censorship:  check out the fate of Eucalyptus



Rocky River Book FairROCKY RIVER BOOK FESTIVAL
Saturday, May 16, 2009
Harriett

Rocky River Public Library is hosting a huge local author event on Saturday.  Featured authors include James Jessen Badal, Peter Chakerian, Casey Daniels, Dick Feagler, Nina Gibans, David Giffels, Michael Heaton, Bill Kenney, Doris O’Donnell, William Price, and Sarah Willis.  I'll be there too, giving informal book appraisals.

Report from the Festival:  close to 50 authors in attendance!  In the appraisal department, here are some things I saw.  A bad set of Shakespeare, Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking, sets of O'Henry and Kipling with red rot, a beautiful leatherbound set of John Fiske, Kipling's Dog Stories illustrated and signed by Kirmse, My Father Mark Twain written by and signed by his daughter Clara Clemens, a biography of Amelia Earhardt, a Victorian autograph album, a handmade illuminated book on the 23rd Psalm, a signed Bob Hope, 1765 German Bible bound in snakeskin on wood, several nondescript primers, an incomplete set of Harvard Classics, a series of poetry signed by Edgar Guest, Gore Vidal's first novel Williwaw inscribed with photograph, Playdollies by Lee and Pearson (Whitman), an early German devotional, a very nice privately printed leatherbound book, 19th C etiquette, American History set (Harvard), and various Victorian junk. It's interesting what people think might be valuable, and what treasures actually do lurk unexpectedly just around the corner...



CleoCAPTAIN CLEO
Friday, May 15, 2009
Harriett

Cleo dons her super-hero costume!  Attention all would-be cat criminals, the Cleo is here!  (The costume was handmade by my goddaughter.)

In other cat news, I discovered Maru.  There are several excellent YouTube videos of this loveable Scottish Fold who lives in Japan; my favorite is Big Box and Maru.  (No, I'm not getting any work done.)



A DAY IN THE LIFE OF THE BOOKSELLER
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Harriett
  • stayed late last night cleaning and pricing new acquisitions so I could get them off the floor in time for Green Clean to clean this morning.  Of course I was late, but at least the floor was cleared.  Moved some furniture in the Annex Gallery for extra cleaning, too.
  • Answered email and answering machine messages.
  • Entertained employee Sarah's mother, who is visiting from California.  Urged her to check out the Rockefeller Greenhouse and Lucy's Sweet Surrender in addition to the Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage.
  • Scheduled a meeting for a new committee to research the possibility of starting a Business Improvement District on Larchmere. 
  • Sold some books and cards, including pet sympathy card, The Aunt's Cookbook, etc.
  • Bought a $10 raffle ticket from Martel Salon for the chance to win a Buddy 125 scooter.  It's bright orange; very cute.
  • Took a new photo of Otis, caught in the act of being too cute to allow me to get any work done.  Posted it on the main page of LoganberryBooks.com and uploaded it to twitter, too. Wasted more time on twitter.
  • Pre-ordered The Sorcerer of the North, the next book to be published in the U.S. in the Ranger's Apprentice series by John Flanagan. Customer says her son enjoys it as much as the Pendragon series.
  • Used the magic word "Clevavore" to get a free pastry from Vine & Bean with their exellent veggie pannini sandwich. Follow them on twitter @vineandbean to get those magic words.
  • Urged an octogenerian to give me cash for his graduation card purchase instead of a credit card.  His wife said he'd forgotten how to use cash; I commended him for being hip with his spending habits.  (yes, he gave 3 dollar bills for the sale...)
  • Coordinated some vendor issues for the upcoming Larchmere Flea Market and Festival.
  • Talked to a masonry contractor about building maintenance issues.
  • Booked the Annex Gallery for the coveted December month.  Lucky artist:  Ted Kurz, retired architect who used to have an office on Larchmere and who is now creating beautiful watercolor paintings of local scenes, including Larchmere and downtown Cleveland.
  • Sold some cards to a woman who is moving to Cleveland in August, and to a man with a young son and an Australian accent who said his son's class is collecting postcards from all over the world.
  • Updated the blog.  It needed it.
  • (cont'd) tweaked another small database for addresses for potential vendors for the Flea Market, and printed out labels and played with stickers for a bit.
  • Retweeted Chelsea Green's warning that Frito-Lay and other massive corporations are gearing up to co-opt the locavore movement (surprise, surprise).  This gave me a massive craving for potato chips.
  • Rebecca came in at 5pm after running around with errands all day.  Quick sweep through e-mails, and we'll start again tomorrow.
  • Watched Otis yearn for the great outdoors as Ellie set up a makeshift screen door for the side door in Strong Bindery.  It's a little frightening to tease him so....
  • Sister-in-law delivered an AC adaptor to recharge my new iTouch directly without going through a computer interface.  Earlier in the day, ordered a case for the new toy from a link she sent (she says it doesn't need one, but I'm really rough on my toys).
  • Small but dedicated committee for the Flea Market met and split up phone call duties.  Posters are ready, but we have to get the check from the fiscal agent and go pick them up.
  • It's after 7pm, but there was a new neighbor in checking out the store, and a customer picking up his special rush order from Strong Bindery.  It's raining here in Cleveland.
  • Does anyone but my mother care for detail like this?  Probably not, but it was kinda fun to write.  I sometimes envision a twitter widget that rolls down a chronological list of random news like this, but I wouldn't want it on a public twitter stream for a hundred strangers to actually read.  I'd just want to post it here on the blog, so if you happened by, you could tell I was still alive.  I suppose that's possible, but still not necessary...



CLEVELAND ARTS PRIZE
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Harriett

Congratulations to this year's winners of the Cleveland Arts Prize! Many distinguised names here, but there are three I'd like to especially mention, as they are customers, neighbors, and authors all.  (Yes, we have all their books.)

Thrity Umrigar Thrity is Associate Professor of English at Case Western Reserve University, as well as the author of Bombay Time (2001), The Space Between Us (2006),  If Today Be Sweet (2008), the memoir First Darling of the Morning (2008), and the just released The Weight of Heaven (2009).  She was at Loganberry just a few weeks ago reading from her new work, which may very well win more prizes as the year progresses.

Mort Epstein:  Mort has been producing engaging designs and works of art for more than seven decades. A 2007 exhibit and companion book, Mort Epstein: Sixty-Nine Years of Design at Ninety, chronicles the evolution of Epstein's visual style over decades.  Mort is additionally well-known here as the founder of our neighboring business, Epstein Design Partners, and as the father of Gene Epstein, who works in Strong Bindery and plays every second Thursday night here as the leader of Gene's Jazz Hot.

Nina Gibans:  Nina led a series of public forums on Cleveland's creative essence, which resulted in a book Creative Essence: Cleveland's Sense of Place.  She was also editor of last year's Cleveland Poetry Scenes, which features a chronological history of the poetry scene in Cleveland, and she has served on the Board of Trustees for the Cleveland Artists Foundation for 25 years.  She was in just today, and I made sure she signed all her books, and will join us for the Local Author Book Fair on June 27th.



Blueberry GirlBLUEBERRY GIRL
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Harriett

Neil Gaiman originally wrote this poem for a friend who was expecting a daughter.  The story of why Neil wrote it, and how it came to be a picture book with illustrations by Charles Vee is almost as good as the story itself.  That story, as well as an animated version of the illustrated poem are on HarperCollins' website, but the real book is of course better.  It's the perfect Mother's Day gift or new baby gift.  I've been a fan of Neil Gaiman for a while now, but I guess I've become a junkie.  I can't help it; he's good.



Chato's KitchenCHATO'S KITCHEN
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Harriett

Chato, the coolest cat in East L.A., couldn't be happier when a family of mice move into the barrio. When Chato gets out the pots and pans to prepare a feast in honor of their new neighbors, he gets more than he can handle with the surprise guest the mice bring along.

We had almost 20 copies of this colorful picture book from a large acquisition we got from a former teacher.  Chato's Kitchen by Gary Soto, illustrated by Susan Guevara, is a lovely story, but I swear it's a spin-off and I can't quite place it.  Brothers Grimm?  Aesop?  Uncle Remus?  The closest story I've found is an Anansi story, but it's not quite right.  So if you know, send me a line, okay?  In the meantime, we're delighted to share Chato and his barrio friends as a Cinco de Mayo special for many of our book club members of appropriate age.  Don't eat too much, and be nice to your neighbors!



BordersCORPORATE HAND-SELLING
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Harriett

Mimicking the strengths of of the indie bookstores, Borders Books & Music has initiated a hand-selling program.  Except instead of the classic "what are you looking for?" -- "let me help you find a book for exactly that need" conversation, Borders has taken the totalitarian approach.  Rather than asking or answering the customer's question/need, Corporate Headquarters has chosen a few titles that will fill the bill for any and all customers.  Employees are given the mandate to push these corporate-approved titles, and in fact are given a quota for sales. 

The Associated Press published a short article on the great sales reports these few suggested titles have generated.  "With thousands of titles from which to choose, the idea was to select a few works favored by Borders national sales officials and promote them nationwide in the spirit of a local seller, from prominent placement to personally advocating ('hand-selling') books in the stores."  They acknowledge that the technique is a little different from the time-honored staff picks or handselling concept, in that it is "more aggressive and more focused, with no more than two titles chosen at a time." 

What this amounts to is little more than homogenized sales, exactly what national chains are known for, and what local independents are lauded for avoiding.  In theory, this is just a human counterpart to a national sales campaign (are you sure there isn't a publisher deal involved here?).  And they didn't mention the quotas.  I know a longtime manager for Borders who was recently fired for not meeting these quotas -- not exactly a kumbaya family approach to business.  Why bother hiring intelligent people if you don't let them think?  Why bother selling tools for intellectual growth if there is only one approved choice?  Isn't that just the formula for a totalitarian dictatorship?

5/7/09  Thanks Shelf Awareness for quoting a piece of this on your wonderful newsletter, and thanks to the many responses I've had from empathetic indie booksellers and bedraggled Borders employees.



Marilyn French, 1985IN MEMORIAM: MARILYN FRENCH
Monday, May 4, 2009
Harriett

With the publication of The Women's Room in 1977, Marilyn French was catapulted into  feminist fame.  Other works followed, notably Beyond Power: On Women, Men, and Morals (1985), The War Against Women (1992), Season in Hell: A Memoir (1998) about her struggle with cancer, and From Eve to Dawn: A History of Women (2002).  In recent years, she had a hard time getting published, "partly because of the gains in women’s rights she had helped bring about," according to The New York Times.  Isn't that just the bitter wave of feminism?  And now we have lost Marilyn French, to heart failure, at age 79.  Thank you, Ms. French, for fighting so hard for the rest of us.



Pete SeegerHAPPY BIRTHDAY PETE SEEGER!
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Harriett

May 3rd is Pete Seeger's 90th birthday.  A living legend of folk songs and the power of public protest, Pete has been an inspiration to millions, even to those who don't like banjo (I've heard of those people).  Living off-grid for decades and defying the HUAC Commission, Pete is no stranger to the maxim of practicing what you preach and walking the walk.  Madison Square Garden in NYC is hosting a huge 90th birthday concert in Seeger's honor, with a star-studded cast.  Proceeds will of course go to the Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, which Pete founded to clean up the Hudson River. 

You can send Pete a birthday card via Smithsonian's website or Facebook page. 
5/4/09  For a review, start with USA Today and then go live on YouTube.



BUY INDIE DAY
Friday, May 1, 2009
Harriett

May 1st has been declared Buy Indie Day. The idea: buy one book—paperback, hardcover, new, used, whatever you want!—at an independent bookstore near you.  Yeah, we're game.  We'll even give you 10% off if you say "buy indie" at the counter.  If you need more warning than this blog affords, follow us on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.  :-)  Another cool pro-indie website is the 3/50 Project.



rearrangingREARRANGING
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Harriett

Sometimes I feel like I do nothing all day; and others we rearrange the store.  And on some days, I do both.  Today, in the "can you see the difference" department, we swapped positions of the "Epstein shelves" (so named for their previous owners) and the magazine cube.  The good news:  we have more space for books on collectibles, especially toys, dolls, knitting and quilting.  The not-so-good news:  no more "temporary" shelves available for the influx of holiday cards, when that season rolls around.  We'll deal with that crisis later.

In the "who can tell" department, I offer up my desk.  The image of Otis on the current homepage should provide enough commentary.



LIBRARY CAT
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Harriett / Elisabeth

Fidel, an eight-year-old black cat, turns up at Deal Library in Kent, UK, almost every day to check out the books and help the customers.  Otis, meanwhile, has been climbing the shelves and I-beams here at Loganberry.  Perhaps Fidel has some advice on staying on the ground?  Or perhaps Otis is jealous of that black fur and was trying to dye his fur to match?  Thanks to Elisabeth for the news via BBC. 



EARLIEST KNOWN DUST JACKET
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Harriett

A librarian at Oxford's Bodleian Library has unearthed the earliest-known book dust jacket. Dating from 1830, the jacket wrapped a silk-covered gift book, Friendship's Offering

Read more on the Guardian blog.



nebulaNEBULA AWARDS
Monday, April 27, 2009
Harriett

The Nebula Awards 2009 were presented on Saturday at a ceremony in Los Angeles. Here are the winners: 

  • Novel:  Powers - Ursula K. Le Guin (Harcourt, Sept 2007)
  • Novella: “The Spacetime Pool” - Catherine Asaro (Analog, Mar 2008)
  • Novelette: “Pride and Prometheus” - John Kessel (F&SF, Jan 2008)
  • Short Story: “Trophy Wives” - Nina Kiriki Hoffman (Fellowship Fantastic, ed. Greenberg and Hughes, Daw Jan 2008)
  • Script: “WALL-E” Screenplay by Andrew Stanton, Jim Reardon, Original story by Andrew Stanton, Pete Docter (Walt Disney June 2008)
  • Andre Norton Award: Flora’s Dare: How a Girl of Spirit Gambles All to Expand Her Vocabulary, Confront a Bouncing Boy Terror, and Try to Save Califa from a Shaky Doom (Despite Being Confined to Her Room) - Ysabeau S. Wilce (Harcourt, Sept 2008)

google
Also in the news today, Samuel Morse's 218th birthday.  Google says it all.



THE ELEMENTS OF STYLE
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Harriett

Happy Birthday Strunk and White! 

Professor William Strunk Jr. wrote the famous “Little Book” while teaching English at Cornell University.  Andy (E. B.) White was one of his students in 1919, and remembered it fondly enough to first write about it in The New Yorker, and then to revise it for publication.  And so, in 1959, the book we know as Strunk & White, but officially titled The Elements of Style, was published.  It was revised twice again by White, and a third time by White’s stepson, Roger Angell, in 2000.  Now a 50th Anniversary edition is available.

But it's Roger I want to commemorate for a moment, or rather, his son.  For it was this progeny who invented how to end a sentence with five prepositions.  In 1962, Andy wrote to a friend: "The next grammar book I bring out I want to tell how to end a sentence with five prepositions.  A father of a little boy goes upstairs after supper to read to his son, but he brings the wrong book.  The boy says, 'What did you bring that book that I don't want to be read to out of up for?'  And how are YOU?"

Yes, I confirmed the quotation, even though I have it memorized.  What a joy to leaf through Letters of E.B. White again, they are really marvelous.  I'll spare you the agony, however; it's on page 492.



HAPPY EARTH DAY
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Harriett

Today's the day, since 1970.  Here in Cleveland, the Earth Day Coalition has held an annual EarthFest at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo for 19 years (perhaps the longest consecutive such event).  The hoardes at EarthFest continue to grow, but perhaps not the true commitment from the general public.  Evidence:  "Can I get two Wal-Mart bags?" (Wal-Mart was a corporate sponsor, no kidding.) ~ "Solar panels are ugly." ~ "Why aren't there federal zoning laws?" ~ "What's the payback on that?" ~ "I need a bag because I'm walking."  ~ "Will the government pay for that?" 

Get it together, folks.  The time is now.



PulitzerPULITZER PRIZE WINNERS
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Harriett

It's always exciting when a relative unknown wins a big award.  Not that Olive Kitteridge has escaped critical praise; on the contrary, it's made many independent best picks, Nancy Pearl's list, and here in town was recommended by the head of the Cuyahoga Public Libraries, Sari Feldman.  But please note that Elizabeth Strout won against big names like Philip Roth, John Updike, Toni Morrison, Annie Proulx, Jhumpa Lahiri, and the heavy favorite Marilynne Robinson.  So, congratulations!
  • Fiction: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout (Random House)
  • Drama: Ruined by Lynn Nottage (Theatre Communications Group; not yet published)
  • History: The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family by Annette Gordon-Reed (Norton)
  • Biography: American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House by Jon Meacham (Random House)
  • Poetry: The Shadow of Sirius by W. S. Merwin (Copper Canyon Press)
  • General Nonfiction: Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II by Douglas A. Blackmon (Doubleday),




Shelley CostaCASE FICTION READING
Monday, April 20, 2009
Harriett

Approximately 70 people showed up to hear the five Case writers read from their published and in-progress works.  That's a lot of people!  We enjoyed the high tea delicacies catered by Bon Appetite, and settled in to hear the good stuff.  We had a dozen copies of headliner Thrity Umrigar's brand-new book available for sale, as well as her earlier works, and I'm dumbfounded that we didn't sell a single copy.  Her fans were here in droves...  Okay, here's the program list:
  • Thrity Umrigar, Associate Professor of English at CWRU, is the author of Bombay Time (2001), The Space Between Us (2006), If Today Be Sweet (2008), and the memoir First Darling of the Morning (2008). She read from her new novel, The Weight of Heaven, which debuted earlier this month.
  • Shelley Costa, a 1983 PhD, teaches creative writing at the Cleveland Institute of Art. Her stories, including the 2004 Edgar Award nominee “Black Heart and Cabin Girl,” have appeared in the Georgia Review, The World’s Finest Crime and Mystery Stories, North American Review, and Crimewave (UK). Shelley was scheduled to read from Blame, a mystery novel in progress, but she read from another mystery-in-progress instead (wow, two in the works!). That's Shelley in the photo above.
  • Sean Santa, a 2007 BA, is the author of Down and Out and: Prose, Poetry, Stories from Cleveland (2006). Now an MFA candidate at American University, he is working to complete a collection of short stories, Murdering Town, Ohio, and a book of poetry, Skyscrapers and Other Poems. He read “Quiet and a Sunday,” a story from Murdering Town, Ohio.
  • Gina Ventre, a 2002 BA, is in her second year in Ohio State University’s MFA program where she is being mentored by former CWRU professor Lee K. Abbott. Along with Sean Santa, she is a founding member of the Cleveland Heights Writing Group. Gina has been published in Storyglossia. She read an excerpt from her short story “Mansfield.”
  • Mary Grimm, Associate Professor of English at CWRU, is the author of Left to Themselves (1993) and a short story collection Stealing Time (1994). She read from her new novel in progress, The Dead Have Dreams


A LITTLE PRESS
Friday, April 17, 2009
Harriett

In today's Plain Dealer, Laura DeMarco offers a nice tidbit:

Each week, "Outside Opinion" asks a visitor or new resident what he or she likes best about Cleveland.  This week, we chat with Andy Schwartz, 57, of New York City, a contributing writer on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum induction program. He was in town to attend the ceremony April 4.  What did Schwartz like best about the city?  "The palpable sense of excitement surrounding the week's events and the enthusiasm of the fans who attended the induction.  "Also: An excellent dinner at Luxe; shopping at Record Revolution, Loganberry Books and Mac's Backs-Books On Coventry." But "the empty storefronts downtown and the abandoned houses on streets off Carnegie Avenue were very sad to see," he added. 

She also highlighted some lesser-known smaller museums in town, with a photograph of The Dunham Tavern



VIDEO OPTIMISM
Friday, April 17, 2009
Harriett

Some random pieces of video delight for you today, if you haven't already seen these treasures. (Obviously, procrastination and spring fever have set in.)
Tomorrow, it's back to work.  Case Western Reserve University's English Department has a Fiction Reading here at 3:00!



Larchmere bannerFLAVORS OF LARCHMERE
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Harriett

We’re pleased to announce a new event on Larchmere Boulevard celebrating our fine eateries.  For three days, April 16, 17, and 18, the restaurants and eateries will offer discounts, specials, and other enticements.  Come enjoy the fine flavors of the historic Academy Tavern, the sophisticated Boulevard Blue, the charming Felice Café, the intimate Flying Cranes Café, the laid-back Just 'N Cafe, the ever-convenient Larchmere Deli, the classic Larchmere Tavern, and the gourmet Vine and Bean Café. 

The shops and services will also celebrate the joys of food and our various flavors, with displays, sales, extended evening hours and even a travelling fashion show.  All diners can also enter a drawing for grand prizes (we donated 3 excellent cookbooks).  Loganberry Books will offer a 20% off sale on cookbooks, featuring many exciting new arrivals and signed books.



CooperCOOPER
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Harriett

Cooper the cat has quite a fanclub.  And he's another good example of viral publicity (see blog entry below).  I've admired Cat Cam pictures with Mr. Lee before, but Cooper has been on Good Morning America and People Magazine, and had his own art show at Urban Lights Studio in Seattle.  The fame is getting crazy.  Dewey, watch out!  Otis, take stock! 



#AMAZONFAIL
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Harriett

Nancy Drew and the Case of the Twittering Amazon Glitch, by Mark Probst and ten thousand followers.

Chapter One:  Publisher Mark Probst notices that a book he published, The Filly, suddenly showed no sales rankings on Amazon.com.  Other gay romances similarly disappear from Amazon's count.  Mark notes this in his blog.
Chapter Two:  Amazon answers Probst's inquiry, claiming that 'adult' titles have been removed from bestseller lists, and therefore no longer gives sales rankings.
Chapter Three:  Mark's blog hits Twitter and the blogosphere.  The tagline #amazonfail goes viral.  Even my brother catches wind of it and sends me a note.
Chapter Four:  News begets News:  The New York Times,  Sara Nelson on The Daily BeastForeign PolicyFeministingInformation Week, The Seattle Times, Publishers Weekly, Los Angeles Times, my mother's favorite Wall Street Journal, and etc.
Chapter Five:  Author Larry Kramer calls for an Amazon boycott, with 23,609 signatures and counting.
Chapter Six:  Amazon claims "ham-fisted cataloging error" and scrambles to recover from this publicity fiasco.
Chapter Seven:  Twitter and The Filly sales skyrocket.  News editors change the way they gather information, if they haven't done so already. 
Chapter Eight:  stay tuned.  The fat lady hasn't sung yet, and Nancy still needs to meet up with Bess to kiss and congratulate her fine sleuthing abilities.

4/22/09 Postscript
Two excellent follow-up articles: Vroman's Blog for the Indie bookseller viewpoint and Information Today for Neil Gaiman's role in this hyperreaction.



NOBSN.O.B.S. BOOK FAIR
Friday, April 10, 2009
Harriett

The 27th Annual Akron Antiquarian Book Fair will take place this Easter/Passover weekend, Friday, April 10, 3:00--8:30 p.m. and Saturday, April 11, 10:00 a.m.--4:00 p.m. More than 60 dealers will display old & rare, readable & collectible books, maps and prints.  Fun for all! 

Donation: $5.00 (Student: $3.00).  John S. Knight Center, 77 E. Mill St., Downtown Akron, convenient parking close by (free after 6 p.m. and on weekends).  For information: 330-865-5831



Civic Center LibraryFRANK LLOYD WRIGHT ANNIVERSARY
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Harriett

Frank Lloyd Wright is, if not the best, the most revered and popular modern American architect.  His styles were at once shockingly original and naturally organic.  Stretching from minimalist economy to oppulent detail, Frank Lloyd Wright was a master of style and space.  He died 50 years ago, on April 9, 1959.  We decided to have a sale to commemorate his great works and the dozens of books written about him, his buildings, his life and even fictionalized accounts of his marriages.  Come check it out:  lots of FLW, all 20% off during April.

A customer wrote in to say:  "I saw your paragraph on Frank Lloyd Wright and thought I would you send you a picture of the library in the Marin County Civic Center.  I work in this building and go to the library on my lunch breaks to read.  The Civic Center was the last building that FLW built and was not completed before he died.  The building is designed with a central walkways and offices on either side.   Rumor has it that the center area was to be open to the sky, since Wright visited Marin in the summertime.  After he died, it was revised with a skylight, since it can get pretty cold in the winter!  The building still leaks though, of course!"

Thanks for the great comments and picture.  I found a website for the Marin County Civic Center in San Rafael, California, that also has a wonderful vintage video about the building, including several recordings of Frank Lloyd Wright speaking about it.  Check it out



P&P&ZP&P&Z
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Harriett

Quirk Books "has found an unexpected success in a new novel, a literary mash-up called Pride and Prejudice and Zombies."  The funniest part of that PW quotation is not the title, or even the term "literary mash-up" but the fact that Quirk was taken by surprise at its popularity.  The title has been teased over the internet for months now, and I've already had customers coming in asking for it.  The original publication date was set for July, and has been bumped up to April.  It's already on our Jane Austen book club's schedule.  And now, huzzah!, the book is here.  It's as gory as anticipated, with a freakish cover to appeal to any macabe fetish, with plenty of verbatim Austen interspersed. 

For April, the Austeniana book club is working on Jane Austen's own parody of Goldsmith's four-volume History of England.  But stay tuned, we plan to tackle P&P&Z on May 28.



BACK IN PRINT ALERT
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Harriett

Alexander Key.  1968.  Escape to Witch Mountain.  Oh yeah.  Perhaps you remember the Disney film from 1975?  I swear I went to a birthday party where that film was the main event. 

There were sequels, too:  1978's Return to Witch Mountain and 1982's TV special Beyond Witch Mountain.  And now there's another, 2009's Race to Witch Mountain.  Quick, before the DVD release, let's reissue the BOOK!  Right.  So, Sourcebooks has obtained the rights, and plans to do just that.  'Bout time. 



KK'S OKAY
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Harriett

I don't want anyone worrying unnecessarily about Kandinsky, so I must report that he appears to be doing just fine.  Blood test came back normal, and he ate both dinner and breakfast (albeit in his late-age scavenger-style).  He's also been very friendly and huggable, so he seems to be out of his grump.  Good.  No grumpy cats allowed in the time travel machine.



Lydia in the boxTIME TRAVEL
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Harriett

Kandinsky didn't eat dinner last night.  Maybe he just had a big breakfast and was enjoying his snooze, but in my experience, if a cat misses a meal it means SICK NOW.  So I rushed him to the v-e-t today, and the doc said he looked fine.  Took blood to run some tests, just in case, gave him an anti-depressant and sent us home.  K doesn't like the box or the car or the v-e-t clinic, so he was glad to get home.  Lydia, however, thought the purple box very mysterious.  That's Lydia in the picture, checking out the time travel controls to see where it goes.



CONGRATULATIONS GAIL BELLAMY
Monday, April 6, 2009
Harriett

Congratulations to Gail Ghetia Bellamy, who has just been named the 4th Poet Laureate of the City of Cleveland Heights.  Gail is a multifaceted writer-about-town, with various journalistic, poetic, and book credits to her name.  We've hosted her here at Loganberry as author of Cleveland Food Memories published by Gray and Company, and she is also Executive Editor of Restaurant Hospitality magazine.  Perhaps this new title will help her get a volume of poetry published!  Congrats.



EDIBLE BOOKS FESTIVAL
Saturday, April 4, 2009
Harriett

It's a nice sunny Saturday, 50-some degrees, and we had a blast with our 6th annual Edible Books Festival.  We had about 20 entries, and they were all excellent.  Pictures are forthcoming, but here's the list of winners, including three Junior Awards for artists under the age of 12.

Best of Show/Most Delectable
Millions of Cats Pamela Bligh-Glover
Most Inspiring
Origami 101 Donita Singerman
Most Delectable
Monster at the End of This Book Theresa Polefko
Most Literary
Moby Dick William Bligh-Glover



Honorable Mention
Tail of Pita Rabbit Aime Albert
Honorable Mention
Telephone Interview with the Vampire Barbara & Jerry Zober
Honorable Mention/ Jr Award
Afternoon in the Amazon Katie Love
Jr Award
Clockwork Orange Cake
Debbie & Lizzie Bream
Jr Award
Peter Pan Cake
Nathaniel & Ariana Starkman



TWITTER
Friday, April 3, 2009
Harriett

So, I thought I'd check out Twitter and see what all the twitter is about.  I actually "get" twitter -- at least more than I do facebook or myspace -- but I also "get" that it only works if you have a network of friends with whom to twitter.  It's kind of like text messaging -- but without a specific audience in mind.  I'm not sure if anyone is interested in my answer to "what are you doing?" -- but I'll put it out there.  [Is it just me - or is it kind of slow?]  Anyway, if you're on twitter, look me up and send a line.  I've chosen the very original handle of @loganberrybooks.  tweet!



FERLINGHETTI
Friday, April 3, 2009
Harriett

Heads up!  A cool new documentary about Lawerence Ferlinghetti will be released this month.  You'll remember Ferlinghetti as one of the classic beat poets, but you may or may not know that he also started up (and continues to run) City Lights Bookstore in San Francisco, and the publishing house of the same name.  The landmark obscenity trial over City Light's publication of Allen Ginsberg's Howl was a major event for the freedom of speech/press advocates, and launched the social rebellion of the Beats into national consciousness.  Filmmaker Christopher Felver weaves one-on-one interviews with Ferlinghetti made over the course of a decade with photography and mementoes from over fifty years of social and literary activism.  Ferlinghetti premieres at the San Francisco International Film Festival on April 28, 2009.



Altered Book GroupFOOD FOR THOUGHT
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Harriett

The Altered Book Group decided to tackle cookbooks this year, and the name of the show is Food for Thought.  Seven artists and lots of altered, reimagined, mangled, folded, deconstructed, and collaged pages fill the Annex Gallery.

By no small coincidence, we also have the Edible Books Festival this Saturday.  The Flavors of Larchmere event on April 16-18 features specials and events at all the eateries on Larchmere.  And, just for fun, we're offering 20% off on cookbooks all month long, and we have lots of new ones to discover.



ADMINISTRATION TO BAIL OUT BOOK BIZ
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Harriett

As the latest part of its effort to stabilize key sectors of the faltering U.S. economy, the Treasury Department this week is bailing out the book industry. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner announced a series of far-reaching measures in a surprise press conference late last night. 

Among other measures, the government is making significant cash infusions into Borders Group, Baker & Taylor, a range of independent bookstores and selected publishers and taking ownership positions in the affected companies.

. . .  thanks once again to Shelf Awareness for their annual April Fool's pleasures . . .







 
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