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I’m counting the days to this event!

Watch for a seismic shift in the literary landscape of Southern California next month.  No, it won’t be an earthquake, it’s the inaugural Beverly Hills Literary Escape, a unique weekend for literati.  This isn’t another festival where the attendee sits in the audience listening to a panel of authors and a moderator and then line up for a few Q & A, here the goal is for everyone to mingle and have conversations.  The organizers, Julie Robinson and Tyson Cornell, are striving to create an European cafe culture and Algonquin Round Table atmosphere of give-and-take between authors and readers.  Here’s the schedule:

I’m in a terrible choice bind about which events to choose for the lunches and afternoon lectures.  I can tell you this, I’ve never met a woman who hasn’t fallen in love with Lynn Batten after hearing him talk about Jane Austen.  I recommended both Ethan Canin and Susan Straight before and would love to hear them speak, but that could mean downgrading my groupie status with Lynn.   What could be better than having lemon cake with Aimee Bender, yet one of my favorite books this summer was Gin Phillips’ The Well and the Mine (if you liked The Help, run to the store to get The Well and the Mine).  I’ll be wallowing in the torture of deciding for awhile.

Two events are free:  An evening with Colum McCann author of Let the Great World Spin where he will receive the first Medici Book Club Prize (more on that in a future post) and a discussion with Abraham Verghese, author of Cutting for Stone. The prices for the remaining events vary and there are passes for multiple events. (Click here to purchase tickets.)  Readers of Bookstore People are entitled to purchase the lowest price passes and tickets for conversations by using the discount code LITERARY. There will be one private VIP event, a coffee with Joseph O’Neill, author of Netherland, on October 15th.  We have one ticket to the O’Neill coffee to giveaway, just leave a comment that you want it by 11:59 October 7th and we will pick the winner.

It looks like a spectacular event, don’t miss it!

Disclosure:  Kim is a Medici Founding Patron

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Every fan of independent bookstores talks about their importance in creating community.  Sometimes it’s hard to know what that means.  There is certainly interaction between the customers and the booksellers, and between readers and authors at events.  Those are “wheels and spokes” models of interaction, all directed toward a center.  How does an independent bookstore create an opportunity for the spokes to interact?  Visit Vroman’s.  It’s not unusual for me to chat up complete strangers looking at books in a bookstore.  Just pick up The Elegance of the Hedgehog and get ready to hear my thoughts despite the fact you’ve never met me.  At Vroman’s, customers were clustered in groups and talking all over the store.  And not all of them knew each other, I know because I was eavesdropping.  I wasn’t in the store for 10 minutes when a customer walked up to me, pointed at The Whistling Season by Ivan Doig and told me it was a beautifully written story.  Wanting to exchange the favor in the D section of fiction, I recommended The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson.  We both walked away with a new book.

Just when I was going to ask a bookseller for a recommendation, I heard one of the employees recommend Louis de Bernieres for a “sophisticated, educated woman” who was in the hospital.  Well, I’m not bedridden, but I flattered myself that the rest of the description may apply so I discretely followed along (stalked them).  I didn’t connect de Bernieres with Corelli’s Mandolin, probably because I’ve only seen the movie, but the bookseller raved about it.  I bought his A Partisan’s Daughter to give it a try.

What else did I find?  Looking at the WALL of employee recommendations I found Read the rest of this entry »

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Here is another adventure that Mark and Liz Koussa experienced in New York.  Thank you Mark for sending us another review of a terrific bookstore!  Oh, and I have read The Final Solution and you’re going to love it, and can I borrow Black Echo?

Strolling through Greenwich Village, this inconspicuous little Mystery Bookstore snuck up on us as quickly and quietly as the protagonists it has dedicated itself to.  At first glance, Partners & Crime looks just like another one of the Mom & Pop shops that lined Greenwich drive, albeit with a catchy name.  Figuring I could always use a good mystery novel, I decided to head inside.  If nothing else, it would not take very long, as the store was also no bigger than the neighboring locally-owned shops it resembled.

Walking into the store felt much like walking into a library.  It was deafeningly quiet, with a small reading room in the back.  Never to be mistaken for a place to study, the store owner is quick to remind you — should you forget as I did — that “you don’t have to whisper, it’s not a library.”  The shelves were not remarkably expansive, but made up for it in its specialty categories, which included tough guys, historical, espionage, and exotic locale.  Perhaps the most endearing and impressive aspect of Partners & Crime is that their employees appeared to have read every single book in the store.  One worker was able to provide thorough insight into every book a patron questioned him about.  After three or four visitors, I had to resist the urge to test him by grabbing books at random and asking “what about this one? and this one?”  There is a passion for their books that is reflected in their everything from their expansive categorization, to their schedule of authors slated to visit the store, to their prominently displayed signed first editions and British Imports.

I stumbled on their collection of Michael Connelly books and recalled a friend raving about Connelly’s Harry Bosch novels.  Before I could even finish my seemingly elementary questions, the store’s worker responded that “Black Echo” is the first of the Bosch novels, and yes, they are as good as everybody says.  I strolled over to the $1 used book table towards the front of the store, and found a tattered copy of Black Echo, which I promptly purchased.  Before leaving I glanced through their shelves dedicated to Sherlock Holmes (my personal favorite), filled with collector’s editions and “new novels” covered by authors such as Michael Chabon and Laurie King.  ”I haven’t read Chabon’s Final Solution yet but it is supposed to be an excellent short story if you like Sherlock Holmes.”  OK so maybe they have not read every book in the store, but it is a safe bet that not too many conversations there start with “I haven’t read…”

Partners & Crime

44 Greenwich Ave

New York, NY

T:  212.243.0440

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Need to give a unique gift?  A book to someone who seems to have read everything?  Look no further, this list includes gems for which your recipient will thank you.  I love Skylight Books, everything about it, except the location, it is just too far away from me.  At least it’s close enough for an occasional foray.  My next trip will be to visit one of their monthly Literary Salons that highlight small presses.  Monica organizes the Salon and Emily contributes as a fan of small presses.  I knew Skylight Books was the perfect store to ask for recommendations and Emily was kind enough to send along her favorites and the best picks from some of the other staff members at Skylight.   (Note:  the link from the book title leads to the review of the book from Skylight Books, the link on the publisher leads to its website.)

1.  MopusCounterpath Press

2.  The Musical Illusionist Hotel St. George Press : Emily says the book reminds her of the Museum of Jurassic Technology in Culver City.

3.  A Happy Man Les Figues - Until December 7th, Les Figues is offering a holiday sale, free shipping and buy two books and get a third book for free.  An extra bonus – the books are long and slim, the perfect stocking stuffers.

thumb_waitress4.  The Waitress Was New Archipelago – I love this publisher, so much so that I subscribed to their fall series.  Not only is the content great, they are lovely physical books.  Here’s my interview with Dave Lievens of Archipelago Books and my review of The Waitress is New.

5.  Hard Case Crime Mysteries  - This publisher specializes in hardboiled crime fiction.  The Skylight Books blog posted about the publisher.

6.  Sometimes My Heart Pushes My Ribs — MuuMuu House   Jade of Skylight Books writes: “This is the most innovative poetry book out right now. Kennedy’s poems are semi-surrealist narratives — dry, but beautiful; witty, but intense. Kennedy was born in 1989, and the speaker of her poems is generally very young and in touch with modern culture. The characters range from a generic young female to Woody Allen and Norm MacDonald. It’s semi-ridiculous, it’s (sort of) sexy, it’s post-modern-ish, it’s funny — in a way, it’s kinda cool, and it’s completely fantastic. Read it!”

Emily has also shared that she has really been enjoying stuff from Two Dollar Radio.  She hasn’t featured them at the salon (yet), but their whole collection is worth checking out.

Interested in learning about more small, independent publishers, check out our list of recommended books from last year and the list at Bread and Bread.

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LAT_FIRECVR080209_78027dReviewing The Girl Who Played with Fire for Translated Tuesday feels a little bit like cheating.  The goal is to highlight current translated works, which this book is, but it isn’t as if it’s a relatively unknown work, people have been waiting to read about the Wasp and Kalle Blomkvist for months.  But, it was so much fun, I decided not to resist.  (A link to a giveaway is below.)

How can they sleep?

The first thing that strikes me about Larsson books has nothing to do the with the writing, the plot, the sex, or the suspense–it’s the fact that these Swedes can drink coffee.  A lot of coffee, at any time of day or night, over and over again.  In fact, I wondered if my insomnia last week resulted from reading about characters having espresso in the middle of the night.  In all likelihood, my inability to relax had everything to with the book, Larsson conveys  an edginess I felt from the first to the last page.

Character Novel on Speed

In The Girl Who Played with Fire, Larsson flips the focus to Lisbeth while Blomkvist plays the secondary role.  The combination of both books gives the reader a full picture of both characters.  We met Lisbeth in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and the reader learns much more about her than the other characters.  It is in this second installment of the Millennium trilogy that we start to understand her actions.  Almost halfway into the book, all of the characters catch up with the reader and everyone is on equal ground Read the rest of this entry »

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