May 2009

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A bit of home away from home

We had been traveling for something like twenty straight hours when we finally reached our last signpost–the customs official at LAX.  He squinted dubiously at the declaration form we had filled out.  “You only spent a hundred dollars in Europe?” he said with justifiable skepticism. 

“We bought this sweater,” I said, raising my youngest child’s hand to show off the Benetton cardigan we had grabbed in desperation when he had been cold one day.  “Otherwise, all we got were books.  Lots and lots of books.”  He smiled, waved us on through, and we stumbled our way out of the airport.

The great thing about being on vacation is that my kids read in a way they just don’t read at home when homework takes up their time and makes them reluctant to open any book, and the computer is vying for their attention.   This vacation, they were powering through the books they had packed. 

They read a lot in London, but they could also watch TV there and we were also at the theater a lot.  Once we got to Paris, though, where our internet didn’t work and the shows were all in French, well, they wouldn’t stop reading. Not even when we were walking down the Champs Elysees  (see photo).  champs-elysees

Anyway, the point is they were reading during every moment of downtime.  In the morning, they’d each take a small backpack and put a book in it to read whenever we’d stop anywhere to rest.   Sometimes it wasn’t even to rest: we have a photo of my daughter right in front of Notre Dame, calming balancing on a little pillar, making her way through The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks while the rest of us excitedly pointed out gargoyles and the inlaid star that indicates  ”point zero” for Paris.

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Last Saturday evening, Keith and I drove to Glendale for a Los storefrontAngeles Chamber Orchestra concert.  As the crow flies, Glendale isn’t that far, but in the LA traffic world, it is an expedition away, so we haven’t spent a lot of time there.  On the way I told Keith I meant to look up an independent bookstore to drop by, but forgot.  As we drove past the Alex Theater, a parking space opened up (that alone is a gift) and I looked up as we pulled in to see Bookfellows Fine and Rare Books.  The car barely stopped before I was out and in the store.

Bedfellows exuded a welcoming calm from the moment I entered.  I flew in to see the store before the concert started, but immediately relaxed in the presence of one of the owners, Christine Bell, and the quiet atmosphere.  Read the rest of this entry »

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Idlewild Books – A Traveler’s Paradise

Happy First Year Anniversary to Idlewild Books!   This bookstore has received a lot of press for its unusual stocking method, full event schedule and beautiful location (check out the airport seating, old style).  Instead of guidebooks, travel gear and Rick Steves’ luggage (nothing against his luggage, I own three pieces), all types of books are grouped by area.  Going to Argentina?  You’ll find guidebooks along with literature and non-fiction in the same place.

Ever since I started traveling as a college student, I have read literature and non-ficiton about the area or from the area both before I leave and during the trip.  Idlewild Books makes the choice of what to read easy.  If you want something more than a Michner novel for where you’re going (or on the off chance that he didn’t write about where you’re going), Idlewild Books scours small publishers of translated works, takes customer recommendations for books, and uses their own experience to hand-pick the best books for wherever you’re traveling.

Destination Kits

For those of us who don’t live in NYC, Idlewild Books offers a service called “Destination Kits.”  Tell them where you’re going, what you like to read and you’re budget and they’ll suggest a variety of books.  A girlfriend and I tested the Destination Kit service this week and it’s terrific. Dianne sent in an e-mail yesterday morning about her trip to Japan and Glen from Idlewild called back before lunch.  Glen recommended two books for her daughter that were on the Japanese young adult bestseller list and a series for her younger son.  For her, a guide that is part map, part paperback Read the rest of this entry »

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Once my kids start middle school, I give them a summer reading list that must be complete by the end of the summer.  In exchange, I don’t nag them if they spend a whole day watching TV or IMing or playing some silly computer game.  Well, I try really hard not to nag, I probably succumb too frequently to saying “remember your reading list.”  I spend a bit of time devising the reading list, it’s part a compilation of the school’s suggestions, where we’re going on vacation, a couple of books from the Bible, and a book or two that might talk about something the kids will study the next year in school.  Sometimes I give them a list of great choices and ask them to pick a few, that way they have some say in what they are reading.  Most of the books are fun and a couple are a stretch.  Now I have new source of inspiration, Twenty by Jenny.

Twenty by Jenny suggests books for four age groups:  Up to three years, four to seven, eight to twelve, and teens.  Each month Jenny recommends a new book, but what I found most interesting were the twenty classics she recommended for each age group.  Don’t let the term “classics” scare you, it doesn’t mean Charles Dickens (even I let my kids English teacher assign Dickens, I love him, but frequently part of reading Dickens as a teenager is complaining about it).  At Twenty by Jenny, teenage classics includes Are You There, God?  It’s Me, Margaret by Judy Blume (how to get any women all gushy, just mention this book) and the more recent Book Thiefby Markus Zukas.

Jenny is more than qualified to recommend children’s books.  She worked a stint as a children’s book editor at HarperCollins and Pleasant Company, and for ten years was children’s reviews editor at Publishers Weekly.  Now, when she isn’t working on Twenty by Jenny, she writes for School Library Journal and Kirkus Reviews.  Plus, she’s children’s editor of Shelf Awareness, my favorite e-newsletter.

I always love a person who pitches her favorite bookstores, and Jenny does just that on her about page.  Now, if we could only get other book people to do the same.

Kids do need fun in the summer, but fun can include reading, check out Jenny’s list of suggestions and encourage your child to curl up with a book this summer.

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muriel_barberyRegular readers of this blog, or anyone who has stood next to me in a bookstore, know that I found The Elegance of the Hedgehog the best book I’ve read in years.  I’m not saying how  many years because I found the  number growing like a the size of a trout a proud fisherman caught.  Muriel Barbery was in Los Angeles for the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books.  She appeared at a panel and answered a couple of questions (I wasn’t there) and then she was at a NEA fundraiser sponsored by Literary Affairs for an interview that I did attend.  She is lovely, elegant and a joy to spend time with.  Here are some of the highlights of the interview:

  • Muriel doesn’t write in a coherent fashion.  No outline, she doesn’t know how the story is going to progress before she is actually writing it.  She didn’t know the end of this book until five minutes before she wrote it. 
  • Renee was a standard concierge character with a small part  in Muriel’s first book, Gourmet Rhapsody (which will be published by Europa and available in September, 2009).  Muriel decided to create an erudite and base a new book around Renee.
  • Initially, the book was only from Renee’s voice, but 200 pages into it, Muriel’s husband read a  scene with Paloma and said she looked interesting and the two voice narrative was born.
  • Muriel is passionate about art (one of the reasons I love her work) so she writes about art in her novels, but she wouldn’t write art essays.
  • Muriel purposefully used archaic French words and asked that the translators keep this aspect because she believes “a new word is a new Read the rest of this entry »
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