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First buy a book . . .

It’s awards season, the time when people all across our great country are thinking, “I could write a better screenplay than THAT.”  In an incredible show of goodguyship, my husband Rob took a break  from writing episodes of “The Simpsons” to read and review some of the top screenwriting how-to guides for those who want to plunge in.  The rest of this post is all him:

Aspiring novelists who walk the fiction aisles at the bookstore wonder how it must feel to finally have a book published after years of hard work, and then they all have the same thought:  maybe I should just write a screenplay.  Movie scripts are a lot shorter, pay a LOT better than novels, and if you do sell one, you’ll have time and money to write your novel, for which, of course, you’ll write the screenplay.  Or maybe you should just write the screenplay first.

The problem is, how do you go about writing a script?  Might there possibly be a book out there that tells you in insufferable detail how to go about the process?  Actually, there are several hundred of those–leading to the thought that maybe the aspiring writer should skip both the novel and the screenplay and go right to publishing his own writing guide.

Anyway,  Claire and Kim asked me to come up with a list of the best screenwriting how-to books, but after agreeing, I realized that I haven’t bought one of these books in years.

So I headed over to The Writer’s Store in Los Angeles.  I spoke with Anthony, one of their extremely knowledgeable salesmen, and asked him to name their top-selling screenwriting book.  He immediately said, “Save the Cat” and pointed to a big empty space on the shelves where it sits when it’s not sold out.  I bought several others he recommended, found my old favorites, and borrowed Save the Cat from a friend, knowing full well that just because it was the flavor-of-the-month didn’t mean it belonged on my list.  From those choices I compiled my top-five list of screenwriting books: Read the rest of this entry »

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The neighborhood gains a new bookstore

When you live in Los Angeles, you get used to that feeling of urban anonymity wherever you go, but the first time I walked into the new Diesel Books in the Brentwood Country Mart, I glanced down at the guest list and immediately spotted the name of one of my closest friends just a few rows above where I was about to sign up for their email newsletter, and I suddenly felt like I lived in a small town.

Diesel just opened up a few months ago, less than five minutes from my house.   Locals like me who live near the Country Mart tend to go there regularly for their Reddi Chick fix, since they have the best rotisserie chicken and ribs in Brentwood.  (Also possibly the only rotisserie chicken and ribs in Brentwood.)  You order at their take-out counter, then sit outside in the courtyard, either close to the fire or far away from it depending on how warm it is.  (When it’s really warm, there’s no fire at all, of course.) Read the rest of this entry »

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There’s a new kid in town–Stories Books in Echo Park (for the Dodger fans out there, the store is close to the Sunset stadium entrance).  Stories is a new and used Stories in Dwellbookstore with a yummy cafe in the back.  Co-owner Claudia was a member of the Dutton’s North Hollywood team.  After it closed, she decided to continue the Dutton’s legacy by opening her own bookstore.  Dutton’s Brentwood contributed shelving to the new store, Stories recycled the shelf/counter from the order desk in the North area to their own front counter giving it a second life as the heart of a bookstore.

Claudia and her co-owner, Liz, chose Echo Park because it is an up and coming area of Los Angeles.  Stories is a cozy neighborhood bookstore with an abundance of paperback books, new and used shelved together.  There is a nice selection of authors with a solid backlist of selections.   We visited just after the new year so the children’s selection was a little sparse due to sales (yahoo!).  There is one shelf of hardbacks, since Stories can’t compete with the big box stores on these Read the rest of this entry »

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Just in case we’ve been too subtle, the primary purpose of this blog is to support independent bookstores by reviewing them where we find them and discussing books and literary topics to encourage people to buy from them.  Independent bookstores are part of a community, but they need the community to survive.  Most people love the idea of a local bookstore, but more people need to act on that idea and buy from them.

Claire and I are encouraged by the way the Pacific Palisades community rallies around its local bookstore, Village Books.  A blockbuster event is scheduled for Wednesday December 17, 2008 at 7pm, when Tom Hanks will make a special appearance at Village Books to raise funds to help the bookstore stay in business.  We applaud Mr. Hanks for jumping in to help Village Books, we’re sure it’s out of love for the store rather than guilt over portraying that chain bookstore owner in “You’ve Got Mail.”  Read the rest of this entry »

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One family lives the dream in Westwood

A lot of us passionate readers have a secret dream of one day owning a bookstore. When Meg Ryan welcomes children to her small independent shop in You’ve Got Mail, who doesn’t want to be that character?  To spend your days surrounded by books, to introduce strangers to the books that mean the most to you, to have a reason to order every new book that catches your eye in a review . . .  if you love to read, that’s just pure fantasy.

When I walked into Mystery Books on Broxton Ave in Westwood Village, I knew I had found a really appealing independent bookstore with a clear market niche.  But when I started talking to the assistant manager, Linda Brown, I learned that this wasn’t just any bookstore–this was my dream brought to life. Read the rest of this entry »

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