Archive for the bookstores Topic


In the News: Killer English, Slush Mountain

A collection of signed William Faulkner novels, including a first edition of “Light in August,” sold at auction for $833,246.

A new memoir by Ellen DeGeneres is scheduled to be published by Grand Central in 2011.

With few of today’s writers taking the time to pen “erudite, humorous missives,” future literary archivists may find themselves combing through e-mail messages instead of letters.

David Means tells the Paris Review why he has not written a novel.

Daniel Radcliffe will star in a remake of the 1930 film based on Erich Maria Remarque’s novel “All Quiet on the Western Front.”

Is English driving other languages to extinction?

With the rise of self-publishing comes the potential for previously rejected manuscripts to flood the book market, Laura Miller argues. “Is the public prepared to meet the slush pile?

As potential buyers express interest in the Washington, D.C., bookstore Politics and Prose, Peter Osnos assembles a list of other pioneering independent booksellers.

Posted on Jun 24th, 2010 by Eileen Reynolds in Daniel Radcliffe, David Means, Ellen DeGeneres, In the News, Laura Miller, Lee Siegel, Peter Osnos, William Faulkner, bookstores, letters |

Tea Party mashup — what’s in a name?

sarah palin tea party express

What if you ran a "cozy, free-spirited, hippie-style" bookstore" that just happened to have the same name as a conservative political movement whose icons include Sarah Palin (shown here at a Boston rally)? Sounds like the premise for a TV sitcom. But for the owner of the Tea Party Bookshop in Salem, Ore., it wasn’t funny.

After being buffeted with calls and visits from folks looking for info about the Tea Party Express movement, the owner is changing the shop’s name to Tigress Books. "We will be the same great STORE … but without any of the political connotations inadvertantly caused by our name," the website says.

Owner JoAnne Kohler told Willamettelive.com, "I believe in the political process even if I don’t agree with the message behind the Tea Party. To be honest, if the name had been adopted by radical eco-terrorists, I would have made the same decision." She said the new name "stems from a blessing by a Tibetan Buddhist, Lama Karma, in Portland," and that store’s books will focus on personal growth and transformation, positive living and green living.

Not exactly the Tea Party Express platform. Let’s wish the Tigress luck.

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Posted on Jun 18th, 2010 by Dave Rosenthal in bookstores |

London Bookseller Extraordinaire

exterior_marylebone.jpg

To appeal to readers who might otherwise succumb to book bargains online, independent bookshops must cultivate that particular alchemy that stems from a well-curated selection, charming digs, and, most importantly, dedicated and informed booksellers. Laura Barnicoat has worked in independent bookstores across London for the past few years. Having recently left the sardine-tin-sized Persephone Bookstore on Kensington Church Street, she is settling into Daunt Books, an original Edwardian bookshop with long oak galleries on Marylebone High Street that specializes in travel literature. I asked her how she was getting on:

What do you like about working in an independent bookshop?

The funny characters who come into the shop. Earlier today I overheard this guy on his phone, talking in a hushed, almost Mafioso accent, saying: ‘I’m in a bookshop… yeah… looking for books… yeah… thinking of reading a book… never read a book in my life… yeah, thought I’d give it a go.” He bought a lot of books in the end and seemed very happy with his adventure.

Which books are currently selling like hot cakes?

At Daunt, Stieg Larsson’s series are selling well—absolute Swedish hot cakes—along with the unusual travel books that Daunt specializes in. In the Persephone Bookshop where I used to work, the hot cakes were the Persephone Books, along with lots of great reprints of children’s books from the forties and fifties like “The Swish of the Curtain,” by Pamela Brown.

How would you compare the ambiance in Daunt Books to Persephone Bookshop?

The Persephone Bookshop is not much bigger than a cupboard, but every book in there is brilliant. Daunt in Marylebone, where I have just started working, is much more bustling, like a train station, but in the back, where there are three floors of books, wicker chairs, and balconies, it reminds me of Henry Higgins’ library in “My Fair Lady.”

What books do you recommend in particular?

The Great Western Beach,” by Emma Smith, about growing up in Cornwall in the nineteen-twenties. Jen Hadfield’s poetry collection “Nigh-No-Place.”The Australian painter Sidney Nolan’s diaries. I also recently re-read Beatrix Potter—a comic genius.

How do you feel about U.K. versus U.S. editions?

American editions are great—I love the roughly cut edges of the pages that some of them have, and I think they often have better cover design. We used to get the American editions into Persephone before the books were out in the U.K., then we had to stop because it was illegal, but we’d always be thinking “Damn—we want to sell these American goods!” The cover is important, and the feel of the book, even the smell of it—this is what the bookshop has to offer now. As well as laying books out in a way that seems to explain them, and helps you to find your way around and show you new things. At Daunt, books are arranged by country, according to where a book is set. And in a way, reading and traveling are similar experiences.

Posted on Nov 18th, 2009 by Johanna Smith in Daunt Books, London, Persephone Bookstore, books, bookstores, independent bookstores |

In the News: Poker’s Provenance, Modern-Day Scribes

“Cowboys Full: The Story of Poker” chronicles the game’s unique relationship to America.

Visit your local independent shop today, National Bookstore Day.

Neanderthals weren’t as stupid as we think.

A tech-crazy world still has room for scribes.

Would the time you spent reading Proust have been better spent “visiting a demented relative”?

Bram Stoker shares a birthday with the Dracula-like Vlad the Impaler.

The first dust jacket was introduced in 1830.

Posted on Nov 9th, 2009 by Ian Crouch in Bram Stoker, In the News, Neanderthals, Proust, Vlad the Impaler, bookstores, dust jacket, memoir, poker, scribes |

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