June 2009

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Try this at home

People always think I should like playing Scrabble.    The reasoning goes: “You’re a writer, you were an English literature major in college, you clearly like words, therefore you must like any game that involves playing with them.”

And I would like playing Scrabble if it weren’t for those annoying other people who I have to play with, chief among them my husband who, while a wonderful guy in many, many ways, is so unbelievably annoying when it comes to playing board games that I pretty much refuse to play with him anymore.  His main fault?  The fact that he actually cares about winning and will resort to–ugh!–actual thoughtfulness toward that end, an attitude that wins him nothing but disdain from his wife who favors speed above success when it comes to doing, well, anything. 

He takes roughly an hour to make a move, deliberating over not just which word will win him the most points, but what placement will leave me with the fewest openings.  Heaven forbid he should allow me free access to a triple-letter score, let alone a triple-word one.  No, by golly!  If it takes him all day–and it does, Oscar, it does–he will find a way to squeeze some obscure word he can’t even define up against the existing words in such a way that all I can do is add an “a” before a “t” to make a two-point “at.” Read the rest of this entry »

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dudleysstore_front1As I walked down Wall St. towards Minnesota in downtown Bend, I was sad to think that The Book Barn wouldn’t be there when I turned the corner.  Imagine my surprise when I looked up and saw Dudley’s Bookshop and Cafe in exactly the same location.  I practically skipped over.  The Bend/Redmond area has four bookstores (lucky them!) and a big box, but Dudley’s is the only store dedicated to selling used books.  Now the community has a place to recycle the fabulous books they purchased at the other stores.  There is a selection of all types of genres, so whatever you’re looking for check in and whatever you’re trading in, there is a place for your book at Dudley’s.

Teri, the owner, changed the configuration of the store from the Book Barn days.  Rather than the shelves standing flush against the wall, they’re perpendicular, giving her room to add a cute little cafe corner in the back.  I visited The Book Barn several times and never knew there was a second floor.  Dudley’s opened up the top floor and it is a huge lounging and event space.  The comfy couches and rocking chairs are perfect for spending the day reading with other bibliophiles.

In just a short time, Dudley’s is as much a community center as a used bookstore.  The white board event calendar on the back wall is packed.  In addition to author appearances, there are weekly groups (employment transition, Spanish and knitting) along with monthly book groups and jam sessions.  The Celtic band plays regularly along with other local musicians.  The pictures on the website testify to a full blues and folk band that had the audience up and dancing.

When I talked to Teri, she said “I have a terrific landlord!”  Something I’ve never heard a bookseller mention, in fact it’s usually the opposite.  When she was looking for a place to open a used bookstore, the landlord offered her rent at less than half the cost of the other locations.  When the economy hit the skids, he voluntarily reduced the rent by 10% and said Teri could call him if she had any questions.  Her response, a million thank yous.  That’s a landlord that’s committed to the community and providing a place for them to gather and exchange ideas.  Which is exactly what Teri does.

Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe

135 NW Minnesota Ave.

Bend, OR 97701

T:  541.749.2010

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While this may be heresy in the cinematic world, but I find Disney’s “Pinocchio” boring.  Really boring.  Tortuous.  When Idlewild Books recommended Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi to read on our family trip to Italy, I was going to say no.  David described a new translation by Geoffrey Brock and promised me that the book is much better than the movie; I succumbed.  The book is a delight.  I’ve spent the last several days reading it aloud to my daughter, something we haven’t done in almost a year.  The basic story is the same, puppet is a brat and obvious liar, wants to become a real boy, does almost everything wrong, but finally transforms into a human.

pinocchioPinocchio

This Pinocchio is far worse than the movie version.  The book starts with a carpenter, Master Cherry, carving a piece of wood that talks and laughs.  As a gesture of “friendship,” Cherry gives the wood to Geppetto to carve into a puppet.   When minutes of carving, Pinocchio treats Geppetto terribly and runs away.  In an effort to catch him, Geppetto lands in jail.  Pinocchio returns home only to kill the talking cricket for being the first to give him this reoccurring advice:

“Woe to any little boy who rebels against his parents and turns his back on his father’s house!  He will come to no good in this world, and sooner or later he’ll be filled with bitter regret.”

Pinocchio lives a life of instant gratification.  He is unable to do anything other than fulfill his immediate desire.  His scrapes are the result of constantly looking for the easy way out, the easy money, or quick fix.  He runs into characters who see him for what he is, a dupe, and falls victim to their temptations.  Pinocchio feels regret for his actions, and begs the mercy of Geppetto and the Blue Haired Fairy, but he doesn’t learn from his mistakes until the very end.  This Pinocchio is more selfish and thoughtless than the cuddly character in the movie, but in the end I liked him better for making me feel squeamish and irritated.

Blue Haired Fairy

The Blue Haired Fairy plays a much larger role in the book.  First, she is far creepier than the pin-up fairy in the movie.  I imagine her as the walking Read the rest of this entry »

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bannerWithout knowing anything about the store, I loved it’s name – Between the Covers.  When I walked in and saw the shelves of candy from my childhood, I knew I found a home away from home.  Between the Covers is an old-fashioned corner store front in a residential neighborhood bordering on downtown Bend.  When the owner, Haley, was a child she lived in the same neighborhood (see a picture of her as a kid on her bike at the cash register) and frequented the then existing Delaware Market to buy candy.  Between the Covers looks like the old Delaware Market causing her to add candy as a sideline.  As fanatic as she was about candy then, she is about books now.

The store is beautiful, spacious and full of books.  I had to wait awhile to talk to Haley, the phone was ringing off the hook.  As soon as she filled one request and hung up, it would ring again.  I’ve never seen that happen, let alone on a Monday afternoon.  When the phone finally settled down, we had a lovely discussion.  I asked what books her customers liked and she gave the booksellers dream answer “whatever I recommend.”

Haley’s top three books were out of stock, a testament to her handselling, but she wrote them down and told Leslie and I to buy them “wherever we find them, they are must reads.”  Her first choice was The Help by Kathryn Stockett, a book about the lives of two black maids working with white families in the South.  Her second recommendation was On the Divinity of Second Chances by Kaya McLaren, a funny and poignant story of a family in crisis.  For our YA reader children, she loved The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie, proving Alexie’s comment that independent bookstores made his career.  On a BEA panel this year he said that when he gives his credit card to a big box store, they don’t know who he is, but at an independent he can hear them mumbling “he’s taller than I thought.”  Haley’s list is in my purse to refer to at the next bookstore I visit.

Leslie told Haley we wanted books to buy (at which point Haley’s husband silently shook his head), and we whirled around the store finding picks for us and our kids.  I left with Portofino by Schaeffer for our family trip to Italy.  It’s a novel about a teenager visiting Portofino with his missionary parents, it looks hilarious.  In fact, I found my teenage son sneaking a read when he was supposed to be studying for finals so I had to confiscate it.

Between the Covers opened almost two years ago and has a solid following.  Haley is confident the store will outlast the recession, but the family made adjustments to financially survive.  They now live above the store, ask how that quaint claw foot tub and shower is working out, but it allows them to rent out their house.  The building is reminiscent of time when people lived and worked in the same place.

The coffee/drink bar is in the back and Haley is reputed to make a great cappuccino.  There is seating scattered around the store, so drop by, grab a coffee and one of Haley’s latest recommendations.

Between the Covers

645 NW Delaware Ave. (on the corner of Delaware and Bond)

Bend, OR

T:  541.385.4766

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The owner of the Woods Hole Inn tells us about her favorite local bookstore

(My good friend Beth Colt had done many interesting things in her life, but I don’t think anything ever impressed me so much as her decision to purchase and run an inn on the opposite side of the country from where she lives.  She does, admittedly, spend her summers on the east coast ,which is where she’s from originally, but the rest of the time she lives here in Los Angeles.  One day she was visiting family on the Cape and saw that the venerable Woods Hole Inn was for sale . . . and she went into the inn-keeping business, just like that.   So if you’re traveling on the east coast, look into staying at her beautiful place on the ocean or at least drop by her favorite local independent bookstore, which she describes below.   The rest of the post is in Beth’s own words.)

I can’t imagine a small town without an independent bookstore so while hunting to buy a bed and breakfast last year, I made “has a bookstore” one of my search criteria.

Woods Hole (on Cape Cod) is a pretty cool little village, but it no longer has a bookstore. You have to drive three miles into the metropolis of Falmouth Village to find the unique Eight Cousins bookshop. I decided that was close enough.

eightcousins

Owned by the same family for over two decades, Eight Cousins started as a kids bookstore but, after the other bookshop in town failed, they took over some adult categories including ordering books for people and audio books. This is a wonderful small place, with that great local vibe. It buzzes with tourists in the summer and remains vibrant with the locals during the cold New England winters.

Check it out and stay at the Woods Hole Inn. You can ride one of our loaner bikes into town on the “Shining Sea Bikepath.” They will welcome you at Eight Cousins and I recommend Laureen’s across the street for a nice lunch. There is also an amazing new Cupcapes shop next door.

See you there!

The very beautiful Woods Hole Inn
The very beautiful Woods Hole Inn

Eight Cousins
189 Main Street
Falmouth, MA 02540
Tel: 508-548-5548
Fax: 508-548-5548

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