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9781594484001In The Wordy Shipmates, Sarah Vowell makes it very clear that she isn’t writing about the Pilgrims of the Mayflower.  In fact, one of her motivations in writing the book is to highlight the fact that there were very influential Puritans who didn’t 1) arrive on the Mayflower, or 2) hunt witches in Salem.  Sarah’s Puritans are the non-separatists (the Mayflower inhabitants were separatists, an important distinction that Sarah clearly spells out in the book) who arrived about a decade later as part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and founded Boston.  Dust off your American history and these names will sound vaguely familiar:  John Winthrop, Roger Williams, Anne Hutchinson, John Cotton.  The religious zealots that founded our nation both literally and, as Sarah points out, intellectually.

The foundation of the book is Winthrop’s A Model of Christian Charity speech in which he invokes “a city upon a hill” from the Book of Matthew in the New Testament.  More than one President took up the phrase from Winthrop.  Sarah explains, “The most important reason I am concentrating on Winthrop and his shipmates in the 1630s is that the country I live in is haunted by the Puritan’s vision of themselves as God’s chosen people, as a beacon of righteousness that all others are to admire.”  She points out that the seal of the Massachusetts Bay Colony includes an Indian with the words “Come over and help us” coming out of his mouth.  Sarah noted that ever since we have been helping people to death.

A Model of Christian Charity sets out a road map for how the Puritans are to live in community:  the rich are to help the poor, all are to mourn together, rejoice together, take on each others “conditions.”  Sarah calls it a declaration of dependence.  She then sets out to look at how Winthrop and his Puritans lived up to the ideal.  They failed miserably.  Enter stage left, Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson, on scene to prove that Winthrop’s community is a model of charity as long as everyone agrees with him and the leadership he established. 

Sarah chronicles the founding years of the Massachusetts Bay Colony inhabited by bookish people.  A subject matter that could turn deadly dull in an instant, Sarah describes with humor and a knack for showing the continuing relevance of the events.  Sarah finds Winthrop, with all of his flaws and inconsistencies, laudable and lovable, but hard to like.  Williams and Hutchinson, two people who have come down through history as outcasts for standing up for religious freedom retain their reputation, but are also fanatics.  Quite frankly, I would have been happy to see them go myself.

At her reading at Book Soup earlier this month, Sarah explained that she decided to write the book after hearing the “the city on a hill” image used during Ronald Reagen’s funeral.  The irony that the term was used by Winthrop to describe a city where the poor were helped and everyone contributed to the betterment of the community when Reagen aggressively slashed programs for the poor was not lost on her.  Winthrop declared that Read the rest of this entry »

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button-wideThere is a new website is in town and we love it – Buy Books for the Holidays!  Their goal is to introduce literacy charities, spotlight independent bookstores (YAHOO!  what could be better?), and provide gift suggestions and printable shopping lists.  We are instant fans of anything that reminds people to shop at independent bookstores.  Starting on Monday, Buy Books for the Holidays will be highlighting various independent bookstores. 

Buy Books for the Holidays has already directed readers to several terrific literacy organizations.   Want to donate funds to organizations that promote reading?  Look at the post on Reading is Fundamental or the list of organizations that need your money or your books.  More charity profiles will be added in the future.  For most of our fans, reading is a passion that we can feed by buying or easily borrowing books, but for some it is a hard won privilege.  Take this opportunity to feed the hunger for reading in others.

The website also includes some fun book lists:  a children’s booklist that is further broken down into books for “Mommy and Me,”  “Daddy and me,”  and ones that celebrate the family; a vampire list; a list for teenage girls (some would argue that a vampire list and a teenage girl list is redundant); and, a list for “if you like that author, then try this one . . .”  More lists will be printed each week, so check out all of the options.

As I’ve said before, my mantra is “the best gift is a book.” We’ll be providing you with lists throughout the holiday buying season (look for our parenting book list on Monday) and Buy Books for the Holidays is another great resource.   Remember, once the gift giving season is over, you’ll have a chance to win a book gift certificate for yourself if you are a Holiday Helper and you buy two books at an independent bookstores.

Happy shopping!

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Claire and I launched the Independent Bookstore Reader’s Challenge earlier this year to encourage people to seek out and visit new bookstores.  Robin, from A Fondess for Reading, satisfied the scout category by visiting Murder by the Book in Portland, Oregon, and  Snow Goose Bookstore in Stanwood, WA.  Allison Staton, from Soccer Mom in Denial, is also a scout after visiting Busboys and Poets in Washington, DC, and The Blue Bunny Bookstore in Dedham, MA.  We’ve had several other people sign up and we’re looking forward to hearing from them.  It’s not too late to enter the competition  – just visit at least two new bookstores before the end of year and tell us about it (in a post, or an e-mail or a comment on the Challenge post).   What a great activity while traveling for the holidays!  Everyone who satisfies the Challenge will be entered in a drawing for a $20 ABA Gift card.  Click here to enter.

In honor of the upcoming gift giving season, we’re adding a new category, “Holiday Helper.”  Buy two books at an independent bookstore, scan the receipt and send it via e-mail to Claire (claire@bookstorepeople.com) or me (kim@bookstorepeole.com) and we’ll enter you in a drawing for a second $20 ABA Gift card.  Not sure what books to buy?  No worries, we’ll be starting our Best Gifts for Readers lists next week.  We’re gathering lists of travel literature, fiction, YA, children’s, independent publishers and more.

We’re looking forward to hearing from you!

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fireworks1About nine months ago, I tripped upon the WPA American Guide series at Wessell & Lieberman Booksellers, Inc.and decided to collect them.  As a refresher, the WPA hired writers to compile stories, facts, folk songs, and travelogues about locales all across the nation–from states, to landmarks, to cities.  There are approximately 1,000 volumes.  I own six so far.  I’m not the only one inspired by the series.  Matt Weiland and Sean Wilsey, the editors of State by State:  A Panoramic Portrait of America, compiled a modern day equivalent.  They asked 50 writers to prepare an essay about a state.  Some of the writers were natives, others transplants, and a few visited to give a fresh look at the state.  Weiland and Wilsey’s conviction is that Americans are largely undescribed, and despite the repetition of Starbucks, Gap and Walmart across our nation,

[t]he fifty states differ in landscape, topography, and weather; in political outlook, cultural preference, and social ideals; in accent, temperment and sense of humor. . . The fifty states themselves have individual places in our collective imagination, and they offer their natives a mind-set, even a world-view.  For all of the talk of identity in American life, the personal fact that defines American lives as much as gender, ethnicity, or class is where you’re from, which more than anything means your state.

state by stateAs a Californian who can’t imagine living anywhere else, I read William Vollmann’s California essay first.  I didn’t like it, in fact I almost stopped reading the book.  Much of it felt like a re-hash of what is written over and over again–Owen’s Valley per “Chinatown,” sensationalizing San Francisco, four paragraphs into the essay the author mentions The Day of the Locust.  Yawn.

Yet, as a fan of “This American Life,” I moved on to Montana written by Sarah Vowell.  Within five pages, I discovered a sense of place and culture that I didn’t feel after spending two weeks boating, hiking and touring the state.  That is Read the rest of this entry »

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memorial-day-tombstones-2Civil War Origins

Memorial Day started in 1868 as a day dedicated to honoring the dead of the Civil War.  Initially called Decoration Day, it was celebrated in part by placing flowers on the soliders’ graves which could be found throughout the country. 

The greatest tribute to the fallen of the Civil War and one of the greatest speeches in American history is the Gettysburg Address by President Lincoln.  This two minute speech was given on November 19, 1863 to dedicate Soliders’ National Cemetery in Gettysburg, PA. 

We all know the opening line “four score and seven years ago” and many of us memorized the speech in school, but with each re-reading it’s hard not to be drawn to Lincoln’s tribute to soldiers who died not just for the Union, but for the preservation of freedom:

It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us-that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion-that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain-that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom-and that government: of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. 

The story many of us grew up with, that Lincoln wrote the speech on the back of an envelope on the train to Gettysburg, isn’t true.  However, he didn’t have much time because he was only invited to the ceremony 17 days before it occurred.  The invitation specifically stated that the orator was Edward Everett.  Lincoln’s limited role was to only “formally set apart these grounds to their sacred use by a few appropriate remarks.”  In modern terms, the President of the Untied States was the ribbon cutter.  What Lincoln said to memorialize the 7,500 dead on the field demonstrates why he was a wonderful President.

 Expansion of Memorial Day After World War IPoppies-774775.jpg

Following the end of WWI, Memorial Day was expanded to include the American dead from any war or military action.  Veterans frequently sell poppies to raise money before Memorial Day.  Poppies grew into a Memorial Day symbol after the popularity of Lt. John McCrae’s seminal World War I poem, ”In Flanders Fields.”  Lt. McCrae wrote the poem the day after watching his friend, Alexis Helmer, die Read the rest of this entry »

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