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The store is full of cozy areas like this one

If I ever live in New York City, I would chose an apartment close to McNally Jackson, that’s how much I loved this store.  I first heard of it in 2009 when it was on The Millions NYC bookstore walking tour and then Michele Filigate (who I really think of as readandbreathe on Twitter) of RiverRun Bookstore recommended it.  With that information, it made the top of my list for NYC bookstore stops.

McNally Jackson is a thinking persons bookstore.  I almost shouted for joy at the three floor-to-ceiling bookcases of essays and criticism, a genre I love to read.  Determined not to buy any more books, I left with only two.  Arguing (with myself) that both were in an incredible essay selection that should be supported, both were 10% off because they were staff picks, and given my memory I won’t remember to buy them ‘later,’ I ended up with The Art of Travel by Alain de Botton and The Forest for the Trees:  An Editor’s Advice to Writers by Betsy Lerner.

Every genre is represented in this two story store (even the beach reads all of us thinking people need at times), yet the books are displayed in such a way to cast them in a new light.  This is the first time I’ve seen a literature section in a non-travel bookstore organized by country.  I learned a little about myself walking through the fiction section, just by the name of the country I noticed I was more drawn to some shelves more than others.  Of course, then I had to overcompensate for what I felt was the wrong way to judge a book.  Yet, in all honesty, the British section evoked the coziness of Jane Austen and Latin America just reminded me of how much I struggle with magic realism.  Who knew I would have to think about my prejudices just by reading fiction headings.

I took a long look at the Jose Saramago’s books because McNally Jackson created a display of his work.  It’s easy for me, and all readers, to know what’s new, but I appreciate it when a Read the rest of this entry »

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I have one final book group tomorrow night before the summer break.  I’m ready for the break, for the opportunity to read whatever I want for the next two months without thinking about what needs to be read for the next group discussion.  (To be perfectly honest, I’ve been known to go to discussion before I finished the book, however that never stops me from having an opinion.)  Tomorrow night we’re discussing Death in Venice by Thomas Mann and I’m on page 10 of 142, not an insurmountable hurdle to complete in 21 hours.  Surprisingly, I’ve already fallen in love with the book.

The flirting stage began with the introduction.  I like reading introductions, Julie Robinson, my book discussion guru. warns against them.  Julie thinks it could steer the reader away from what he or she would otherwise feel about the book.  Maybe, but I’m fairly opinionated and not too easily steered.  When I have the time, I like easing into a book with an introduction.  Michael Cunningham‘s essay on reading and translation is, by far, the best introduction I recall.

Claire and I have spent several lunches and many blog posts discussing translated literature.  Claire consistently feels that reading in translation keeps her at a distance.  I know what she’s feeling, but I wonder if it is because much of the translated literature we have read is from Europe and we’re experiencing a cultural difference.  Cunningham argues that all literature is a work of translation from the ideas in a writer’s head to the printed word.  To a certain extent, he agrees with Claire, but his argument is that the act of writing is a process of translation:

My own translators, the best ones, seem always to battle a sense of failure–the conviction that while they’ve come close they’ve missed something in the original, some completeness, some aliveness, that refuses to quite come through in French or Italian or Japanese.  This, too, is familiar to me.  I always feel the same when a novel has finally exhausted me, and I feel compelled to admit that, although it doesn’t, seem finished, it is as close to completion as I’m capable to getting it.  Some wholeness isn’t quite there.  While I wrote, I felt it hovering around me.  I could taste it, I could almost smell it–the mystery itself.  And even if that published novel has turned out fairly well, there is always that sense of having missed the mark.

Fiction is, than, at least to me, an ongoing process of translation (and mistranslation), beginning with the writer’s earliest impulses and continuing through its rendering into Icelandic or Korean or Catalan.  Writers and translators are engaged in the same effort, at different stages along the line.

I’m reading the 2004 translation by Michael Henry Heim, not the first for Death in Venice which was originally published in 1912.  Cunningham’s introduction was written before all of the Read the rest of this entry »

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I  have to admit that when I first heard that my daughter would participated in a dance competition in Riverside, CA, I inwardly groaned.  I grew up about 90 miles from Riverside, but we called it ‘Reeferside,’ a moniker that wasn’t meant as a compliment.  It had been years since my two week work stint when my employer initially tried to house me in a Motel Six knock off until fearing for my safety, I switched to the local Hilton where the staff would forget that my room was rented and walk in during the night.  You can see why I wasn’t excited.

It’s nice to be pleasantly surprised.  There is a lot of down time during a dance competition, so our first foray into town was to the Downtowne Book Store.  A small used book store tucked away off Main Street, it is quaint.  The well worn wooden floors were covered in throw rugs and squeaked as we walked up and down the aisles.  Mixed in with bookshelves were pieces of original art from local artists, all for sale.  I even noticed a few bowls of fresh fruit, I assumed free for the taking.

The store is a long standing fixture in Riverside.  We asked what was the secret to its success, the bookseller said it’s the fact that they sell everything.  The selection is impressive.  The standard fiction, mystery, romance, all at nice prices, yet I spent most of my time in a row with bookshelves of essay collections, criticism, theology, history and cultural topics.  I came home with two essay collections, The Courage of Turtles by Edward Hoagland and Paper Trail by Michael Dorris.  I chose the Hoagland collection because I enjoyed the actual essay “The Courage of Turtles” and want to experience some of his other writing.  Paper Trail caught my attention for three reasons, the New York Times Book Review blurb on the front, the fact that Dorris wrote A Yellow Raft in Blue Water, and the notes written about the essays on the inside front cover by the original owner.  I was curious to see what the notes meant, but I have to read the essays first.

Mission Inn

The Downtowne Book Store isn’t the only treat in Riverside.  The city is famous for its Mission Inn.  I always pooh-poohed it because it’s fake, it has nothing to do with California’s beautiful missions, all of which are closer to the coast.  However, the dance competition was two blocks from the Inn and a family has to eat dinner.  We walked into the most beautiful courtyard.  My daughter said “we’re in San Miguel again!”  My son thought it reminded him of Italy.  It was a warm night, we sat outside eating lovely food, laughing and enjoying the meal.

So Reeferside isn’t so bad after all.

Downtowne Book Store

3582 Main St.

Riverside, CA

T:  951.682.1082

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San Miguel de  Allende is the Mexico of dreams.  Old world charm without the glitz of the beach resorts or the overwhelming problems of the border towns.  It’s an ex-pat haven, approximately 10% of the population are foreigners, mostly Northern Americans, but the ex-pats seem to adopt the Mexican culture rather than attempt to change it.  It’s a city of culture:  music, art, religious ceremonies, great food, and, of course, literature.  The library serves as place to lend books and a community center.   The week we visited there was a classical guitar concert, a literary lecture and a Tennessee Williams play.

San Miguel is a town to meander around.  The colonial buildings open into court yards containing stores, restaurants and galleries.  And if the door is closed?  So much the better because the doors of San Miguel are beautiful, so much so there is a book, aptly named The Doors of San Miguel de Allende, by Robert De Gast, documenting them.

Wandering through the streets, we stumbled upon Garrison & Garrison Books, an English language used bookstore.  It’s fairly tiny store with about 8 bookshelves, a book table and a few tattered but comfy chairs.  The flyers for ex-pat events showed the store was a bit of a community center itself.  The store offers the traveler a variety of literature, mystery or airplane reads.  There is also a selection of local interest books, among them said Doors book.  Before leaving for Mexico, I looked for Life in Mexico by Frances Calderon De La Barca the Scottish wife the Spanish Ambassador from Mexico from 1839-1845, a book of lively letters, but was told that it was out of print.  It was sitting on the table in Garrison & Garrison, I was thrilled until I noticed the size.  It was a doorstop book that I couldn’t imagine carrying around all day and then home in  my luggage.  Every time I was in a taxi that drove by Garrison  & Garrison, I was tempted to ask the driver to pause just for a minute while I ran in to buy a book the weight of a newborn child.

Recommended Reading for San Miguel de Allende

Not willing to endure an aching back from hauling around Life in Mexico, I did read two books that added flavor to my visit.  To make progress on the Essay Challenge, I chose DH Lawrence’s Mornings in Mexico.  Traveling in the San Miguel area while reading Lawrence’s essays created a dialogue between what I was seeing and what I was reading.  The essays were written in the 1920s and described a world that is much changed 80 years later, but there was an essence of the place that Lawrence experienced and I sensed.  The courtyard life Lawrence describes in “Corasmin and the Parrots” as he ponders evolution is very Read the rest of this entry »

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What is an essay?  I heard a few descriptions at a reading of essays from The Lost Origins of the Essay edited by John D’Agata a few weeks ago at REDCAT.

  • An essay is both a verb and a noun because the writer figures out what she thinks as she writes.
  • An essay is a quarrel with the writer’s self or the world.
  • The essay is the reverse of redemption narrative because it doesn’t answer questions, it’s an ongoing argument and asks more questions.
  • It’s a work of art that can change the reader’s perception of self or other people.
  • The essay might not have any function at all.
  • Finally, quoting D’Agata from the book, “I think the essay is a antidote to the stagnancy of writing because the essay tries to replicate the activity of the mind . . . the essay is the equivalent of a mind in rumination, performing as if improvisationally the reception of new ideas, the discovery of unknowns, the encounter with the “other.”

I bought this compilation at Bookshop Santa Cruz last summer as a counter point to the essays in Lopate’s The Art of the Personal Essay.  The Lost Origins of the Essay is a doorstop compilation of essays from across time and all over the world (other than the United States) that one speaker described as an argument that the essay is a vehicle for art.  The four essays I heard read certainly supported the case for artistic writing:

From 1957 – “Tisanes” by Ana Hatherly are vignettes, some a paragraph, others a sentence.  To date, Hatherly, a Portugal writer, has written 463 Tisanes, approximately a third of them are translated and 15 of those are published.  The provide a flurry of images interwoven with questions and observations that left me contemplative and quiet.

From 1500 B.C.E. – “Dialogue of Pessimism” by Ennatum of Akkad is a conversation between a master and slave wherein the master instructs the slave to an action, the slave instantly agrees in such a Read the rest of this entry »

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