October 2009

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Lisa Fish, a reader from Boston, sent Claire and I an e-mail requesting recommendations for a special book group meeting.  Usually, her group consists of six women, but once a year the husbands join them for a dinner and discussion.  This year, Lisa is in charge of the event and she wondered if we had any book recommendations.  I always have a book recommendation!

I could be described as a book group junkie, there have been times in my life when I was juggling six at the same time.  Lately I’ve pared down to two steady ones, an all women group and a mixed gender group.  There are differences in the choice of books and the discussion which give the groups entirely different personalities.  I recommend these books for any group, but especially for a meeting with men who are visitors, rather than book group regulars:

FC9780307388773Netherland by Joesph O’Neill – In many ways a modern day Great Gatsby, it is told from the viewpoint of Hans, a successful Dutch investment banker working in New York.  9/11 happens (we don’t see that scene) and the wife returns to her home in London.  Hans starts playing cricket and discovers the New York immigrant world through his friendship with Chuck, an entrepreneur from Trinidad.  I found the difference between the experience of wealthy immigrants and poor ones interesting, and then how the DMV was the great equalizer.  The book raises questions about home, belonging, and how real is the American dream.  The male characters are very strong and it is a primer on the game of cricket.  Between finishing the book and the discussion, read an interview with Joseph O’Neill on The Elegant Variation (scroll down to the first part, read, then scroll up to the second part, etc.)  While not a quick read, O’Neill is an incredible writer and some of his scenes and specific sentences are stunning. 
 
FC9780812971835Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Stout – Winner of last year’s Pulitzer, the book is a series of short stories from the viewpoint of various citizens in small town Maine.  Olive is a very prickly character who I fell in love with and then was horrified that I may resemble too much.  Stout’s stories demonstrate the striking difference between our intentions  and how people preceive us.  The book brings up the big life issues:  marriage, parenting, community, aging, change.  The narrators change with each story, all from different ages and genders.  Happily, we hear from Olive a few times–hers is a voice you won’t forget.  Just to give it the male stamp of approval, my husband also read Olive Kitteridge and enjoyed it. Read the rest of this entry »

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A Link Worth Checking Out

Amber Johnson sent us a link to an article, “10 Coolest Bookstores in the U.S.”    Obviously this is right up our alley–so much so that we’ve already written about a large percentage of the stores on their list.

Kim says we should add Politics and Prose in DC and Book Soup in LA to the “coolest” list.  She’s been to the former and of course we’ve both been to the latter

Let us know if there are any bookstores you’d add to a “coolest” list.   I am personally hampered by my own lack of cool in this pursuit, but there’s no reason cool and books can’t happily co-exist.

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storePearl Street in Boulder offers a lovely shopping zone with a variety of fun stores, including, most importantly, bookstores.  Tucked away in the middle block is a store with a strong point of view:  Left Hand Books.  A small store front decorated with “Impeach Bush” signs and stickers (we wondered if they would increase in value over time), the customer knows immediately upon entering that ‘Left Hand’ isn’t about which hand do you write with, but which way your politics .  It’s an expanded and opinionated version of most general store’s single “political theory” shelf.

People’s History of the United States

The volunteer working when I visited is one of the friendliest booksellers I’ve run across in awhile.  Enthusiastic about the store and the stock, he immediately had four suggestions for me.  We first talked about Norm Chomsky, but when I told the volunteer I was done with condemning rhetoric, regardless of whether or not I agree with it, he steered me to Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States. Left Hand Books has sold the most of in its history. Dee, a girlfriend who accompanied me to the store, heard Zinn speak several years ago and described the book as chronicling the untold side of American history, the version experienced by women, factory workers, minorities and immigrant labors.  I took a quick peak at the last chapter “The 2000 Election,” a topic sure to get all sides heated, and found it to be opinionated (I like opinionated), but not condemning of anyone who doesn’t share the same view (so tired of Read the rest of this entry »

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archives_coverart4I keep hearing that one of the top gifts for the holidays this year will be an e-reader.  Below, is an essay I wrote about receiving the Kindle two years ago for Christmas.  It originally appeared in the literary magazine SLAB (Sound and Literary Art Book) last spring.  Since I wrote the essay, my husband, my teenage son and my tweener daughter all tried reading from the Kindle and they all returned it to my drawer.  It just isn’t for us. 

That being said, I have had enough experiences in the last year (i.e. accompanying my daughter to an American Idol concert) where I thought ‘if I had an iPhone, I would be reading a book on it right now.’  The moment Verizon and Apple reach a deal (please, please soon), I’ll be buying an iPhone and guess what my first app will be?

My thoughts on the Kindle

Years ago, for Christmas, my husband gave me a stack of books he chose with a book store clerk after describing me to her.  I haven’t read them all, but every time I see one on the bookshelf, I feel loved.  For my birthday, a girlfriend gave me a book I wanted but hadn’t told her about, and I felt known. (FYI, this is Claire.)  For my 40th birthday I asked all of my friends to give me a book that was meaningful to them, as a way to learn about them.  Last Christmas, as my kids ran out to see what Santa delivered, my daughter called over her shoulder, “you have a stack of books Mommy!”  But Santa had brought those books for my mother, and when I realized that, I was disappointed.  Instead of books my husband bought me the Kindle, reasoning there was no reason to buy me any real books when I could download them. 

At that moment, I didn’t feel known. 

A month before Christmas, our copy of Newsweekarrived with Jeff Bezos on the cover announcing the Kindle, a small computer book reader.  As I looked at that cover I felt uneasy, and that night my husband read the article and handed it to me as he rolled over to sleep.  “You have to read this,” he said, “you’ll love it.”  I looked at the magazine curled up in the valley of the comforter between our two bodies and felt a rush of anxiety.  I Read the rest of this entry »

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Wtwz4sVL_20090320111251Laura Sanderson Healy told Claire and I how much she loves Burke’s Book Store in Memphis, TN, and whenever someone raves about a bookstore to us, we always respond with “would you like to write a review?” Laura is a familiar guest writer on the blog, she has shared her favorite bookstore in London and her passion for the venerable Bodhi Tree in Los Angeles. This time she is taking us to her hometown:

I visit Burke’s Book Store in Memphis on visits to my hometown, where it has been open in various sites since 1875. The couple who owns the thriving independent book shop, Corey and Cheryl Mesler, met there while browsing for books and later had their wedding reception at the store.

Among the charms of shopping at Burke’s are comfy sofas and chairs, literary gifts, local authors who do readings and signings, and a poem delivered to your email every Monday. The children’s section is always stocked with both new titles and fascinating used books from the distant past.

Burke’s occupies a large storefront on in Midtown Memphis at the buzzy crossroads of Cooper and Young Streets, a creative arts neighborhood full of boutiques and restaurants. Ben Smith’s Tsunami next door to Burke’s is one of Memphis’s finest Pan-Asian restaurants, and of course, the Mesler’s feature his book in the window. They still sell textbooks for schools and has hosted the following writers: John Grisham, Richard Ford, Ann Beattie, Anne Rice, Bobbie Ann Mason, Kaye Gibbons, Peter Guralnick, Peter Carey, Lee Smith, Ralph Abernathy, Rick Barthelme, Charles Baxter, Robert Olen Butler.

Laura also sent us a link to a recent article about the Meslers in The Commercial Appeal.

Burke’s Book Store
936 S. Cooper St.
Memphis, TN 38104
T: 901.278.7484

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