Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Feed the Need with a Read Challenge

We meant to post this sooner. It did appear in the most recent issue of the newsletter. Please join us!

We are wrapping up 2011 and it is coming faster than many of us would like to admit. The two biggest seasons of the year are almost upon us, Thanksgiving and Christmas. During these times we celebrate with friends and family. All around us, though, are people in need. It is this need that gave me an idea.

For the month of November I’m challenging you, our readers, friends, family, and customers alike to. . . READ. How will reading help, you might be asking. Think of it as a charitable book reading club. We would ask that you pick from the small reading list below and tell us that you are joining the Feed the Need with a Read challenge. Then tell us on Facebook, by mail, by email, by phone even, or come into the shop, that you have joined. When you tell us you are joining the reading challenge Pete and Freddy’s will donate $1.00 for each person to the Helping Hands Food Pantry in Mentone. By reading you’re helping those in need to have a more tangible holiday season. We want to help while enjoying a good read!

In our next issue we hope to feature you, the readers, with book reviews, comments, articles or thoughts that you had while participating. If we have a good turnout, we will have a movie night at the shop. We encourage you to not limit yourself to one book. Please feel free to share this opportunity with your friends and family as well. Join us!

Feed the Need with a Read Book Challenge List
-The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington
-The Hiding Place by Corrie ten Boom
-The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield
-A Girl of the Limberlost by Gene Stratton Porter
-The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis 

I will be reading The Magnificent Ambersons.


Friday, September 30, 2011

Books about Books

If you aren't familiar with our shop, then you've probably been missing out on our newsletter as well. We try to print a new issue every 2 months and next month will be our one year anniversary of this venture. For your reading enjoyment we thought you might like reading an article from a past issue. Enjoy!

Books about Books is an article featured in every issue.

Books about Books
by Pete (aka Maddie)
Originally appeared in the October 2010 issue

What better book for a bibliophile to indulge in than a book about books? Reading about your fellow friends out in the world is a warm embrace. They're quirky, a bit crazy even, zealous, well-written and versed, and just like you.

This month's book came into our midst purely by chance. A few years ago Freddy was at our local library looking at, wonders of all wonders, the for sale shelf. She came across a thin, sepia cover, brand new looking book with books on the cover. Of course she bought it, who wouldn't?

Freddy came home and read the book in one after-noon. Despite gobbling up all its yummy “bookness” she left some for me and pushed it into my hands saying “you have to read it now.” I devoured it just as quickly and decided it must be added my collection.

The book, a classic must have, is the twenty-year correspondence between the New York born and bred author/playwright Helene Hanff and the British bookseller Frank Doel. Helene Hanff is an avid, sometimes demanding, book reader constantly requesting this or that title. Over the years (post World War II) she and Frank, even the other bookstore employees, develop a devoted and long lasting friendship all because of BOOKS!

The main things I look for in books about books, in which 84, Charing Cross Road passes with flying colors, are:
-Does it make me laugh?
-Do I nod my head in agreement while reading it?
-Is it quotable?
-Would I recommend it to other bibliophiles?

My favorite quote from the book is:

I am going to bed. I will have hideous nightmares involving huge monsters in academic robes carrying long bloody butcher knives labeled Excerpt, Selection, Passage and Abridged.
~ Pg 76/77 Helene to Frank 1960

Oh how she would cringe today, right? Sadly Helene Hanff passed away in 1997.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

What To Look For In A Book List

If you aren't familiar with our shop, then you've probably been missing out on our newsletter as well. We try to print a new issue every 2 months and next month will be our one year anniversary of this venture. For your reading enjoyment we thought you might like reading an article from a past issue. Enjoy!

What to Look For In A Book List
by Pete (aka Maddie)
Originally appeared in the Feb/March 2011 issue
    
I have long been a fan of lists. Whether it be a To Do List, Shopping List, 100 Hottest Actors List, Must Watch Movie Lists, Top Baby Names of 20__ Lists, or some other list. I can't seem to get enough of lists. My favorite types of lists though are the check off lists. You know: To Do, Shopping, yes even reading lists. There is an unexplainable satisfaction that comes with checking off, scratching off, or drawing a line through your recent accomplishment. An inward sigh of contentment but also a spurring on to mark off more!
  
Reading Lists are unique creatures all to themselves. Bibliophiles, most often, are as unique and varied in opinion as there are books. It wouldn't surprise you then to know that book lover's lists are just as different. While I can only speak for myself; it is my opinion that book lists are a source of pride and smugness for many creators, myself included. We can become downright snobby when it comes to what should and shouldn't be considered “the best”.

After examining 5 different reading lists, I've come to further conclusions of my own. Do keep in mind that I am an extremely picky reader. If this book hasn't jumped through hoops of fire and sailed the seven seas, I see no reason to include it on a list. I'm being sarcastic, if you didn't realize. 

Of the 5 lists, my favorite would have to be, BBC's The Big Read. Here's a country that knows how to pick must read literature! Books appeared on this list by American authors that do not make the cut in their own backyard. 

The first thing that you should look for with a reading list is familiarity. If I don't know at least 5 titles on a list, it isn't worth my time pursuing. Five is a small number and I would only apply that to short lists, otherwise you are looking for more than 10 on a longer list. Keep in mind that familiar does not equal read worthy. 

My biggest issue with the majority of reading lists is not seeing the books I consider must reads. If the list doesn't have these books, chances are the book list won't find me as a fan. Books that must be on lists I come across are: Little Women by Louisa May Alcott, I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith, Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell, any Tolkien books (as long as I see one title by him that's great), and Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis. The problem with my must reads is that the majority of literary snobs (sorry critics) consider Alcott, Tolkien, and Lewis books for children that shouldn't appear on adult lists. I can't see it, never have been able to agree. Elizabeth Gaskell is a somewhat obscure Victorian author, not many people I talk to know who she was. She was a contemporary and friend of Charles Dickens. I think it is still important to have must read titles set to the back of your mind for reference. Don't be afraid to question a lists “readability” compared with your own must read list. What are a few of your must read titles? 

It is important to know who the creator is of any list you are looking at. I find lists that are polled from a group of people, rather than one so called expert, are easier to stomach. BBC's list was compiled through a poll they sent out to the country. While some of the titles were funny to me (Harry Potter for one), it was obvious that the list came from a broad audience. The opinion of many is always preferred to that of one. Lists from a single person are not all bad, but I like to know what I am dealing with. Unfortunately scholars write lists typically for scholars (i.e. books I may never consider reading). That's fine for them, but when you are trying to appeal to the masses, let's try bringing down the heaviness a bit. I much prefer a list created by a school librarian than a person with a long list of accomplishments. 

What makes a list unique, sets it aside from all others? I can read 10 lists that all claim to be 100 books you should read in your lifetime, but what makes them different? My second favorite list, of the 5 I looked at, is The Art of Manliness Blog's list of manly books, 100 Must-Read Books: The Essential Man’s Library. I know an odd list for a girl to pick, right? It was fun to read what books a guy would pick as must reads. When you think manly, you think of powerful, meaty reads. Great books! I live with three guys (2 brothers and my dad), they are all readers in their own right, but this list gave me new perspective. I also now know I'm not very manly. 

Another list I've long had a liking for, since my friend sent it to me, is the 10 Books Not To Read Before You Die. What a hoot! Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen and Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien both made the list. Diversity in lists is much appreciated, not to mention amusing. 

Do you see a trend in the lists you are looking at? One of the largest and annoying trends I see with most lists created today is controversy. It feels as though the creators out there think the only literature we should be reading is the questionable, ethnically unsound, envelope pushers, racy, you name it. Controversy is the backbone of America, the life blood of every person. It is the king's feast that will know no end because its guests have no desire to retreat back to normalcy. These types of lists are an open and shut case for me. When I think of books that should stand the test of time I don't think “Oh, Oh! Pick the books that I have seen featured the most in the media for their 'dirty' content.” One of the lists I looked at was in book form. These books spanned form Pre-1700s to the 2000s. I don't typically pick modern literature for my must read lists, but I am always willing to make exceptions. This book listed 1001 titles, of those I have only read 12. However, I was familiar with over 150 of the titles listed. Wait! I wasn't familiar with them because I want to read them some day. More than 75% of the titles I recognized, I knew because of their. . . you guessed it controversy. Think of books you've read that have stuck with you ever since you read them. What about them is ingrained in your mind?
Controversy is not what pops in my mind first or even tenth.

Your personal preference here is what really matters. When looking at lists keep open minds (I need to listen to myself more), but don't be scared to have strong guidelines. Reading lists are fun, but they are truly only there as suggestions. They do not dictate or determine your level of intelligence if you choose not to read the books on a particular list. Something my parents have always told me (again I should listen more): You put trash in your mind and it is bound to come out at one time or another. The same applies for books. There are so many books (not too many) and so little time. Why not spend that time
reading books that are beautiful and compelling?


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Thursday, July 21, 2011

Books . . . We have them Red Box Doesn't

Every day on my way to work I drive by a Family Video store. Each week their sign features some new release stating ______ we have it Red Box doesn't. I myself am a Netflix gal and aside from that, refuse to gift Family Video with my patronage* (humble aren't I?). I find that sign so irksome and I'm not sure why.

Perhaps people need the extra enticement to walk through the door. I
don't think a bookstore needs more enticement than the simple exclamation of BOOKS! We have this joke in our family that when we see bookstores (or the like) we do a mental touchdown with our arms in preparation for crazed shopping that is to ensue. It also serves as a good excuse in explaining to a father and brothers why you bought a fifth copy of Pride and Prejudice or a children's book that looks as though it survived a war. It is a tingling sensation, much like when you swear someone is following you, you look around and bam! . . . a bookstore.

The day may come when books become obsolete (Lord willing I'll be dead and buried then), but an eReader or even a movie for that matter can never replace the satisfaction of walking into a bookstore prepared for the hunt. eReader's may affect business, but I'm sure the diehards will agree, we won't be saying so long to books, REAL books that easily. REAL Books . . . We have them and you got the knock off.**


*for my own reasons
** Hopeful to have t-shirt made with this.