Denver

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mbtbseasonWorking through my personally designed tour of the bookstores in Denver, my girlfriends, Leslie and Dee, and I walked up to an old Victorian home on Pearl Street that was a combination of cozy and puzzling, perfect for a mystery bookstore.

Murder by the Book

Murder by the Book carries only mysteries, used, new and collectible, but all mysteries and crime fiction (Leslie and I decided we don’t know the difference between the two genres).  While all of us liked a good mysterious tale, what impressed me was that we each have our own passions and the owner found a mystery that matched those interests.  I’m love art history, so I went home with The Art Thief by Noah Charney.  I majored many years ago in Soviet Studies leading me to The Death of Achilles by Boris Akunin, called the “Russian Ian Fleming” by Ruth Rendell.  She had recommendations for YA mysterys, some that were better for girls and others that boys preferred.  You think of a topic, she had a mystery.

The store truly is a house, with the nicer collectible and hardbacks in the front “entertaining” room and the paperbacks meandering through the hall to the side room.  While small, there’s room for a couch and a place for the owner’s daughter to do her homework, which we did our best to distract her from.  In solid bookstore fashion, there’s even a cat, Bruce.

Book Reviewbook-cover1

Leslie is the true mystery fan among us and she left with a stack of books, so much so we almost had to check our bags to get home because if was iffy if we could lift them into the overhead compartments.  She agreed to share one of her favorites from the store:

A Beautiful Blue Death is Charles Finch‘s first book. Set in Victorian England, it is the story of a fairly well to do gentleman, Charles Lenox, who loves solving mysteries as a profession although he continually grapples with feeling that he should be doing something more appropriate to his station in life. His childhood friend, Lady Jane, is a widow who happens to live next door and asks him for his help with the supposed suicide of one of her servants. Charles, being the clever sort, will certainly figure it out.

What follows is an intriguing picture into Victorian life in England. Charles Finch does a superb job of showing us upper crust life back in the mid 1860′s.  We can feel the cold seeping through the house as Read the rest of this entry »

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Earlier this week, I wrote that a necessary ingredient for a successful bookstore is community support.  The Park Hill Community Bookstore operates as a non-profit, officially and intentionally.  It is all about community.  Last fall’s newsletter described the store as a sturdy three legged stool.  The three legs of support:

  1. Membership:  The store offers membership levels from $10 to $40.  Members receive a 7.72% discount, additional discounts during Christmas and sales, 10 used book credits (good for 10 used paperbacks or 5 used hardbacks) and a newsletter.
  2. Donated Used Books:  members and non-members alike receive credit for donating and exchanging books.
  3. Volunteers:  There is one paid employee, the manager, but otherwise the store is completely run by volunteers.  Volunteers sign up for at least one four hour shift a month.  Some volunteers have worked there for over 20 years.  If I lived in Park Hill, I’d volunteer in a flash!

Park Hill Community Bookstore is on a quaint street in a lovely neighborhood.  Park Hill is a suburb of Denver that looks like it came out of a Frank Lloyd Wright drawing book.  I wanted to stay for hours as soon as I drove up.  The store itself is as cozy as the neighborhood.

Park Hill Community Bookstore is two stories.  The bottom floor houses a small selection of new books, calendars,  and used fiction and children’s books.  Upstairs is a large room with rows of shelves of  mysteries, espionage, romance, and a variety of non-fiction genres.  At the bottom of the stairs was a bookcase full of plays; I wish I had hours to go through those shelves!

If you’re in the area, stop by, the volunteers are friendly and eager to chat with locals and visitors.

Park Hill Community Bookstore

4620 E. 23rd Ave.

Denver, CO 80207

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The drag queens are the large black and white photo

The drag queens are the large black and white photo

When I visited Capitol Hill Books, a used bookstore in Denver, CO, I noticed a collage running down the entire side of a bookshelf.  It was made up of all the things found in used books.  My favorite was an 8 x 10 photo that at first glance is a group of 1940s “pin up” girls, but on closer look is a lineup of drag queens.

Joel Eis, owner of Rebound Bookstore, described in an interview some of the interesting items found in books in his store:  a World War II book with a Dear John letter; stationary with the Union Army logo in a Civil War book; a coffee table book containing two huge marijuana leaves; a $100 bill (flip through the used books you buy, you could find lunch money); and, stacks of airline boarding passes (I use them as bookmarks when I travel, helps me to remember where the boarding pass is located).

In one of my book groups we’re reading the Rabbit series by John Updike.  One of the members is a John Updike fanatic and owns almost all of his books, many of them she purchased used.  She shared with us an old Book-of-the-Month Club summary of Rabbit Redux and a review from 1971 she found in a used copy of Rabbit Redux, it felt like opening a literary time capsule.

What have you found in a used book?  We’d love to hear, leave a comment and share!

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While I’ve been visiting independent bookstores wherever I am for years, since we started the blog, I’ve hunted down stores with a renewed vigor.  The number of used bookstores surprises me.  The rents are so expensive in Los Angeles that independent bookstores selling new books withevents and activities struggle, so covering the overhead with a stock of used books is doubly difficult.  As I’ve visited used bookstores over the last several weeks, I’m jealous of the communities that have them.

I’ve found that used bookstores fall into three broad categories:  those that sell mass paperbacks, those that resemble a bookstore with new books but the stock is used, and those that carry fine or collectible books (calling them a used bookstore is a bit like calling an antique store a used furniture store).  One of the attractions is the discounted price for everyone, but also the potential trade polices.  Many bookstores give credit for donated books that can be used to purchase other used books.  Some stores pay for used books, but those tend to be for collectible or rare books.  As I’ve wandered through the used bookstores, I’ve noticed that the owners are extremely knowledgeable about books, their stock, and what they see coming through.  They all knew the American Guide Series and gave me advice on how to collect them (avoid reprints), although none of them had any at the time.  I found these fun stores recently: Read the rest of this entry »

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There are a few bookstores that are talked about over and over again – The Strand, Elliot Bay Book Company, Powell’s, Shakespeare and Co and The Tattered Cover Bookstore in Denver, Colorado.  I could move to Denver for the Tattered Cover, it’s that good.  The staff is fantastic.  I overheard a customer walk in and ask for a book that he couldn’t remember the author and only one word of the title, with that the clerk immediately led him to the book he was looking for.

One of the employees was so excited about Neil Gaiman and his graphic novels that she convinced me to try one.  I know that graphic novels are a huge publishing phenomenon, but comic books never appealed to me (but I did like Chabon’s The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay) and I don’t like scary stories (I’ve never read King or Straub), so imagine my enthusiasm, but hers was so genuine and it’s almost Halloween, what better time to try one?  On her advice, I bought Neil Gaiman’s The Doll’s House from The Sandman series.  Read the rest of this entry »

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