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With all the writing awards being handed out lately, I feel like we’re all getting a little TOO fixated on books. There are more important things to take into consideration when judging the greatness of a literary figure. Thank goodness someone agrees with me and has taken the time to put together a list of the best dressed authors of all time.  Check out the piece and if you have anyone or anything to add to it, let us know.  Also come join the discussion on our new Facebook page.

Now excuse me while I go spend several hours figuring out what to wear to my reading at Vroman’s Bookstore this afternoon (at 5 pm, if you live near Pasadena and are interested).  I’m bummed I didn’t make the best-dressed list this year, so I’m upping my game in the hopes of taking Jane Austen’s spot next year.  Maybe if I wear my new zipper-rose high heeled shoes to this thing . . .

Oh, fine, since you asked, here’s a photo of them, taking by my friend Dawn.

Nice, right?

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The NCAA came out with the team picks and first round pairings yesterday (here’s the bracket).  Amidst controversy, the NCAA named the Louisville Cardinals as the No. 1 seed.  If your city has the best bookstore of the year, why shouldn’t it have the number one seed also?  Who says basketball and reading aren’ t related?  Just ask my daughter, she reads through every basketball game we attend or watch on TV.  Or better yet, ask The Morning News, an online magazine that hosts the Tournament of Books each year.

What is the Tournament of Books?  TMN describes it as “the one and only March Madness battle royale of literary excellence, sixteen books enter, but only one book can win the Rooster.”  TMN chooses sixteen top-touted books from the previous year and pits them head to head in a bracket system eerily like the NCAA basketball tourney (download your own bracketto follow along).  For each match, a different judge evaluates both books and declares the winner.  Kevin Guilfoile and John Warner provide game commentary and readers chime in also.  The ultimate winner receives a live rooster in honor of David Sedaris’ brother, “the Rooster.”

The Regionals started last week and what an upset week it was!  In the Read the rest of this entry »

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Carmichael's Frankfort Location

Carmichael's Frankfort Location

Last January, Publisher’s Weekly asked for nominations for it’s annual Bookseller of the Year Award.  Nominees should “operate a professional storefront retail bookstore in the U.S. and excel in vendor relations and buying, marketing, hand-selling, customer care, community involvement, management-employee relations, merchandising and business operations.”  After what PW described as a tight competition, yesterday PW named Carmichael’s Bookstore of Louisville, Kentucky as Bookseller of the Year.

Carol Besse and Michael Boggs (the store name is combination of both of their names) opened their first store over 30 years ago.  Currently, they have two locations in Louisville.  PW stated that Carmichael’s sales doubled and profits tripled over the last ten years.  Now that is news, Carmichael’s met the challenge of big box stores and online ordering.

How?  Because Carmichael’s offers “a hand-picked selection of titles reflecting both the taste of the owners and that of the neighborhoods they are a part of. From the very beginning Carmichael’s has been committed to being a neighborhood gathering place by being open seven days a week and every evening. Both stores are on corners that hum with activity – walkers, joggers, dogs and children, families and couples – lively streetscapes never darkened by the shadow of a big box store.”  That sounds like a true bookstore!

Claire and I aren’t close enough to visit Carmichael”s Bookstore, but we would love for a fan to write a review of the store.  Contact us if you would like to share a personal view of the store.

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rally_one_of_us_front-small1The American Booksellers Association (ABA) announced the Indie Choice Book Awards.  Awards will be chosen in seven categories:

  • Best Indie Buzz (fiction)
  • Best Conversation Starter (nonfiction)
  • Best Author Discovery (debut)
  • Best Picture Book
  • Best YA Buzz Book
  • Most Engaging Author
  • Picture Book Hall of Fame

The award “reflects the spirit of ABA member booksellers in the IndieBound movement and their dedication to handselling unique, thought-provoking, engaging fiction and nonfiction, children’s and YA titles.”  The finalists for the first five categories will be chosen by a jury of booksellers from books listed in the previous years Indie Next List and then all members will be able to vote for the winner.  The Most Engaging Author Award will go to an author who is great at readings and who has displayed a sense of how independent bookstores are important to their community.  There could be up to three picture books inducted into the Picture Book Hall of Fame each year and there will not be a publication date limitation on that award.  The winners will be announced at the BookExpo America in May.

Which book or author do you think should win?  I love the Indie Next Lists, but they aren’t seared into my brain, so I’m going to give it my best shot without that limitation, in fact, since it’s a new award, without any publication limitation:

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Many Newberys are Wonderful, but not All

I am an Newbery Medal fan, mostly.  My daughter and I set a goal to read all of the Newbery Medal winners (see how I’m perfect for Reader’s Challenges) before she left elementary school and we made a decent go of it, until we were stopped dead cold by a few of the selections.  Now, I must admit, I’m a little suspicious of the award selections.  A Man Booker Prize winner I’ll pick up without hesitation, but a Newbery I’ll leaf through and read the description.  Some of the greatest children’s literature has won the award, but then there are the other years. 

Tackling Lifes Great Issues

Susan Patron, author of The Higher Power of Lucky and winner of the 2007 Newbery, wrote about some of the Newbery criticism in a recent Los Angeles Times article.  One issue is the seriousness of the topics of the books in recent winners– death, mental challenges such as autism, the absence of one or both parents.  But she points out that Newberys historically have always dealt with the hard aspects of life, when she was younger the issues were death, war, being torn from your family during an invasion and losing a beloved dog.  I believe one of the best ways to confront scary issues is through literature, life isn’t Disneyland and I want my kids to learn that step-by-step, not as one large shock when they leave home. 

While there is always a reason to discuss life, there is never a reason to do it in a boring manner.  Over years of picking books, clearly the Newbery Committee isn’t going to hit the mark every time, who remembers Secret of the Andes by Ann Nolan Clark, the winner of the Newbery the year Charlotte’s Web was an honoree?  But they have noted some jewels in the winner and the honoree category:  Old Yeller, Island of Blue Dolphins, My Side of the Mountain, The Door in the Wall, One Hundred Dresses, From the Mixed Up File of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, Sounder, The Twenty-One Balloons, Mr. Poppin’s Penguins, Sounder, The Giver, Number the Stars.  As Ms. Patron points out, these books can change your life. Read the rest of this entry »

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