All posts by Melissa

Diane’s Favorite Holiday Books for Children

I hope you are reading stacks of holiday books in your house – do you still need suggestions?  I am reposting Melissa’s article from last year and we still have a great stock of holiday stories – even Kwanzaa!

There is a holiday tradition at our house.  Beginning on December 1 and continuing through December 23, my two little girls receive a book under their pillow each night from The Book Fairy.  I guess this is my version of Advent, and an excuse to shower my girls with the thing I love most…books.  All year long I gather titles from East Side Books and stow them in the upstair’s closet.  As my children grow, it is fun to dole out my childhood favorites that match their changing interests and reading levels.  This year my eldest will find under her pillow a copy of Louise Fitzhugh’s Harriet the Spy, Newbery Award winner Ginger Pye by Elenor Estes, and a few more of the Nancy Drew mysteries that she loves.  My youngest will receive several of the Stephen Cosgrove Serendipity books that she collects, Bruce the Bear by Bill Peet (her father’s favorite childhood author), and a children’s biography of Helen Keller.

Since the girls love to have their new books read to them for story hour, it is fun to pepper the giving with some classic holiday children’s books. This year, I turned to East Side Books owner Diane Doonan, holiday and children’s literature connoisseur, for help choosing some special holiday titles.  Each holiday season, Diane unpacks a wealth of favorite Christmas and holiday books for children and adults. (See Get in the Spirit With Adult Holiday Fiction blog.)

Diane took my request seriously and responded with the following.  I decided that I could not say it any better or with as much love and enthusiasm for books and illustrations as she did, so I am sharing her email with all of you:

Melissa,

I am looking at my kids’ holiday book shelf and pulled some of my favorites.  The pile is quickly too tall, these have been MY favorites among MANY kids book favorites…here are my thoughts…

Of course when the kids are very young, you end up reading Pooh’s Christmas Wish and Rudolph a million times, but Little Critter’s attempts at pleasing his parents in Mercer Mayer’s Merry Kris Christmas Mom and Dad still brings a smile.  And the simple text and strong graphics of Who is Coming to Our House? by Joseph Slater and illustrated by (one of my favorite illustrators) Ashley Wolff  is one of my favorite retellings of the Nativity story for little ones.  It is published by Scholastic.

There are also several versions of the Nativity story from the animals’ point of view that are beautiful and meaningful, and on my favorites list. Room for a Little One by Martin Waddell and illustrated by Jason Cockcroft is one beautiful version that conveys a warmth and a “Lion lies down with the Lamb” lovliness that I hope my children always associate with Christmas. Waddell’s more well known work  is Can’t You Sleep, Little Bear?, and the cow’s singsong line of “there is always room for a little one here” warms my heart. Another incredibly beautiful nativity story is We Were There by Eve Bunting and illustrated by (another HUGE favorite) Wendell Minor.  In this version, instead of just the cozy cow, donkey, and cat, the welcoming critters include scorpions, bats, and even the cockroach.  Probably better understood by older children, the message is that even the “ugly” and overlooked creatures have a place and a purpose in welcoming the coming Lord.  I think it is lovely.

 All For the Newborn Babe by Phillis Root and illustrated by Nicola Bayley is as beautiful as an illuminated medieval manuscript. The text is a cradle song for Baby Jesus drawing in all of the traditional stable creatures plus the herons, wrens, and spiders that are each busy ensuring a warm and comfortable night’s sleep.  As the dustjacket says, this one is a lullaby for every newborn child.  For an even more unusual perspective on the nativity, how about What Star is This? by Josephy Slate and illustrated by Alison Jay. This book brings an intergalactic vision to the wise men and shepherds; I am not sure about the science, but the illustrations are awesome and the text is simple and sweet.

There is no doubt that The Night Before Christmas poem has taken on a life of its own in our culture.  My family usually  reads it on Christmas Eve as well as the nativity story.There are so many beautifully illustrated versions; I love the variety of interpretations and own some beauties.  Some notable ones that should be readily available include a stunningly illustrated  version by the Golden Age illustrator Arthur Rackham.  First Editions of any work by Rackham run in the multi-thousands of dollars, but the reprints are great.  Rackham is best known for his detailed fantastical color plates, but I adore the black and white line drawings that accompany this poem.  From fir trees shaking hands, sleigh silhouettes, mischievous elves, to a smiling moon, these are wonderful.  The detail is probably too small for really young children, but older kids and adults should appreciate it.  Another silhouette version that I just discovered last year is by Niroot Puttapipat.  It is called “A Magical Cut-Paper Edition”, and it truly is magical.  Three color silhouettes incorporate intricate cut-outs that Hans Christian Andersen would be proud of!  Like all of her children’s books, The Night Before Christmas illustrated by Jan Brett is beautiful and fanciful, and tells a whole other story in the sidebars.  If you only own one version (and who would be that crazy), you would do well with Brett’s.  Or there is the humoros retro-techno version by Richard Jesse Watson….okay I will stop.

Another aspect of Christmas that I liked to reinforce through stories with my family is the opportunity to recognize and act on others’ needs.  Again, there are many, many wonderful stories out there but my favorites have evolved to be Christmas Day in the Morning by Pearl S. Buck (illustrated by Mark Buehner) which conveys the message that actions can speak louder than words and service is frequently the best gift, and….more.  The setting is a family farm, and the story layers remind us  just why Pearl S. Buck is a famous author.  Similarly, but with a community and cross cultural layer as well, Patricia Polacco’s story The Trees of the Dancing Goats is visually beautiful and can bring tears to my eyes.  A book my daughter discovered in the store, written by Carly Simon and illustrated by Margot Datz is called The Boy of the Bells, and brings Santa Claus and a nontraditional family into the mix while trying to do good deeds for Christmas.  Katie and I both enjoy this one, and she loves that she found it!  Lastly, it would not be Christmas without reading The Little Match Girl by Hans Christian Andersen.  The version illustrated by Rachel Isadora is wonderful.  I felt slightly guilty about reading this harsh, sad story to my kids until I saw Esme Raji Codell’s recommendations in How to Get Your Child to Love Reading.  Okay, maybe don’t read it to a sensitive four year old, but older kids still respond to the powerful images as they have for over a hundred years, and I believe it is appropriate when considering the realities of poverty before family community service activities.

Lastly on the my favorites list, some books find their place just for being fun and invoking the atmosphere of a family holiday.  My kids loved A Pussycat’s Christmas by Margaret Wise Brown and illustrated by Anne Mortimer which reads like a long poem.  This one is not an obvious choice to start with, except for the notable cat illustrations, but I think Brown’s talent in seeing the world as a child (as well as the cat) shines through and I now love it too.  Not strictly a Christmas tale, The Tomten and others by Astric Lindgren is a magical seasonal favorite. Another Jan Brett story, The Wild Christmas Reindeer is also a perpetual favorite.  And I have to include A Wind in the Willows Christmas illustrated by Michael Hague.  An excerpt from Kenneth Grahame’s classic, the trees, Mole, and Mice renditions by Hague are not to be missed.  I think Michael Hague is our era’s Arthur Rackham, and I buy all of his works, but this one is a fun, longer read for Christmas as well.

 Sorry Melissa, I think I got carried away!

 Diane

P.S. from Melissa (When I stopped by East Side yesterday, Diane had a few more titles to add to the list–all that looked too good to omit from this blog entry.  I will just give you the titles and you can go check them out yourself:  Christmas by Barbara Cooney, A Charlie Brown Christmas by Charles M. Schulz, Little Tree by e.e. cummings, Morris’s Disappearing Bag by Rosemary Wells, It’s Christmas by Jack Prelutzky, Christmas in the Country by Cynthia Rylant, The Little Drummer Boy by Ezra Jack Keats, and Merry Christmas, Curious George.)


Gone to the Dogs

This is a dog loving county. Each morning while walking my own pooch, I see at least a half a dozen or so other walkers out with their furry companions. We have an active Inyo County Animal Resource and Education (ICARE) organization, and Eastern Sierra Dog Rescue was recently founded by dog trainer Nancy Hardy.

With all this dog adoration, it is no surprise the Dog Section at East Side Books is teaming with books about dogs, dog training, and even dog memoirs.

Dog memoirs are a hot new trend. One of the most popular is the bestselling Marley and Me by John Grogan, which was made into a movie. Marley was a Yellow Labrador, and as Grogan tells it, an uncontrollable, crazy, sweet, headache of a dog. When I first read Marley and Me, I had my own Labrador. I could relate. But still, you can’t help but laugh aloud at the antics of Marley and his owner, and be touched by the loyalty of their relationship. If you haven’t read Marley and Me, pick up a copy today.

We also have dog memoirs by popular writers such as columnist-turned-novelist Anna Quindlen who wrote Good Dog, Stay, and award-winning poet Mark Doty who penned Dog Years.  Willie Morris wrote a dog memoir called My Dog Skip, which was made into a popular movie. I was interested in the title Two Feet, Four Paws by Spud Talbot-Ponsonby who walked the Cialis entire coastline of Britain (4,500 miles total) with her dog Tess in an effort to raise money for homeless people.

If you have a new dog or your New Year’s resolution is to train your dog further, check out our dog handling books. Some of the most popular and long-standing dog training manuals are the books written by the Monks of New Skete. We have copies of both The Art of Raising a Puppy and How to Be Your Dog’s Best Friends. I have used both of these with good results (although NOT with the Labrador!) I love the title of John Wright and Judy Lashnits dog training tome: Ain’t Misbehavin’. Wright is a renowned pet-behavior consultant with years of experience.

We also have a shelf full of book about specific breeds including Australian Shepherds, Dalmatians, Cocker Spaniels, and Pekingese. If you want to vacation with your dog, we have guidebooks for dog-friendly hikes in Las Vegas, the Bay Area, and Los Angeles. We even have numerous books offering pet traveling tips.

If you love dogs, you should definitely check out Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein.  This novel, which is shelved in our Fiction Section, is told from the perspective of the dog. It is guaranteed to twist your heart strings.

If you or someone you know loves dogs, you would be barking up the right tree if you hurried on down to East Side Books and checked out our Dog Section.

Revisiting Recent Classics

This fall I found myself in a reading slump. It isn’t that there aren’t a number of great books out there, I’d just gotten in the habit of selecting books similar in genre and subject matter. I was bored and needed something to shake up my reading world.

I fired up my computer and googled “best books of all time.” One of the first hits was a list of the 100 best English-language novels from 1923 to the present as determined by TIME magazine. I love book lists, so I printed off a copy, and headed down to East Side Books to see what I could find.

There were a number of titles on the TIME list that brought back memories of high school English classes such as Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck, 1984 by George Orwell, and The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger. A friend recently told me that he refused to read Moby Dick by Herman Melville as a teen, but once he reached adulthood he gave it another try. Now, it is an all-time favorite that he revisits once a year. He wasn’t ready for Melville’s classic in high school, but he appreciates it greatly as an adult.

I recognized a number of titles from my college literature classes as well: Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut, The Painted Bird by Jerzy Kosinski, To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf, Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, and There Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston. Each of these are incredible, and I read them with great absorption and awe.

And even though there were a number of recent classics listed that I’d enjoyed thoroughly in the past few years such as Beloved by Toni Morrison, White Noise by Don Delillo, and White Teeth by Zadie Smith, there were many titles that I’d never read, some I had never even heard of. List in hand, I made my way through the East Side Books shelves in search of something new.

I’m not a big science fiction fan, so in the past I’ve skipped over the classics such as Brave New World by Aldous Huxley and The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells. I knew that Ray Bradbury was one of the best science fiction writers around, but I didn’t realize that he was the author of Fahrenheit 451, a book that makes just about every “best book” list. Feeling adventurous, I picked up a copy and gave Bradbury a chance. Within the first few pages, I was blown away. Bradbury’s writing is intense, vivid, and mesmerizing. In the introduction, Bradbury states that he wrote Fahrenheit 451 in a span of just over a week in the basement of a library. He describes himself writing at a feverish pace while feeding his rented typewriter hourly from the stack of dimes he kept on the table.

Flush from my success with Bradbury, I bought a copy of If Beale Street Could Talk by James Baldwin. Published in 1974, I expected the story to be a bit dated, but I was overwhelmed by the beauty and power of this often overlooked classic. Baldwin writes like a poet; his language is lyrical and beautiful even as he examines the stark realities of being Black in America. I put a star by Baldwin’s name, and intend to read many more books by him.

Work by Ernest Hemingway appeared on the Top 100 list, but I’d already read and loved  Farewell to Arms and For Whom the Bell Tolls as well as all his short stories. Regardless, I perused the Hemingway titles on our shelves and decided to check out A Moveable Feast, his memoir about his early years as a budding writer in Paris. I’m glad I did because it was excellent. The spare, tight descriptions were classic Hemingway, but the subject matter was lighter and happier than most of his fictional work. This got me interested in other works by my favorite authors that I have overlooked. I now have on my to-read shelf at home a copy of Death Comes to the Archbishop by Willa Cather who wrote My Antonia and O Pioneers!, This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald of The Great Gatsby fame, and Up at the Villa by Somerset Maugham who wrote The Razor’s Edge and Of Human Bondage.

Excited and inspired by my expanded reading repertoire, I find I can’t help but quiz others: “Have you read The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler?” or “Have you ever heard of The Recognitions by William Gaddis?”  When I emailed my friend Seth asking if he’d read Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson, which was listed on the best 100 TIME list, he responded immediately. “Snow Crash is hands down one of the most creative books I have ever read. He is an excellent writer.”  When told my hair dresser about reading Bradbury for the first time, she asked if I’d read the Tolkien series. When I confessed that I hadn’t, she put down her scissors and refused to continue my hair cut until I promised to run right out and pick up a copy of The Hobbit.

As I read book after book from the TIME list, I found myself asking, “Why haven’t I read this before? This is such an amazing book! What if I’d missed it?!?!” I think I’d previously thought that classics were too dense to jump into at the end of the day, and admittedly, some are. (I have avoided the Russians for now.) But others read like a conversation with a friend: smoothly, easily, even quickly. That is what good writing is–readable yet inspiring. Examples of more excellent yet readable classic literature are: The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers, Rabbit, Run by John Updike, and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee.

There is still a long list of classics I want to read: The Day of the Locust by Nathanael West, Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys, and Under the Net by Iris Murdoch. Now, instead of not being able to find something to read, my to-read book pile has grown to an enormous, teetering height. If you are in a reading slump or just want to be a little adventurous, pay a visit to East Side Books and pick up a recent classic today. The TIME list of 100 top books will be posted on the front counter for your convenience.

And remember, if you ever need help locating a title, please ask our staff for assistance. We are happy to help, and always pleased to recommend a title.

Forgotten Bookmarks

Diane, owner of East Side Books, spends a lot of time going through other people’s books. One of the pleasures of all that book browsing is the treasures she finds between the pages. On the counter she keeps a container of gently-used traditional bookmarks (free for the taking), but Diane has discovered over the years that people will stick just about anything between the pages of a book to mark their place.  A few of her favorite finds? Tickets to the1973 Bishop Union High School Homecoming Dance, a handwritten Will (which was returned to the owner), and a “don’t worry, be happy” card with a portrait of Meher Baba that is pinned to the East Side Books’ bulletin board. She says the most interesting find was a ticket for a Playboy Jazz Festival tucked inside the book A River Runs Through It. “Now that person was well rounded!”

Of course, Diane was delighted to discover ForgottenBookmarks.com, a website devoted to posting photos of memorabilia found in old books. Diane forwarded me an link to her favorite post: a recipe for squash pickles that was found inside the book Horns of Ecstasy. Diane wrote, “I just love this site, and wish I had thought of it! I have a drawer full of photos and recipes.”

(Click on the image to enlarge.)

It is no surprise that Michael Popek, who started ForgottenBookmarks.com, is in the used book business as well. He began working in his family’s bookstore when he was seven years old. Now the owner, he often sorts through five hundred books a day. Writes Popek about his initial inspiration for the site, “About three years ago, I came across a large pot leaf inside a microwave cookbook–it was too funny not to share. I scanned the leaf and book cover into the computer to show some friends who got a real kick out of it.” Soon after, ForgottenBookmarks.com was born.

While pressed leaves are the most common between-the-pages find for Popek (although not usually the illegal kind), his Cialis Online favorite discoveries are old letters. And yes, he does try to reunite his finds with their rightful owners when possible. He writes, “There was one case where a cross-stitched bookmark was returned to its owner after I posted it on the site. His sister had made it for him 24 years prior and he was thrilled to see it again.” Popek says that dictionaries and cookbooks are the best for turning up treasures.

Diane shared with me her collections of found bookmarks that she keeps in three large expandable folders. There were cards and photographs (some of people I recognized), letters and birthday cards, newspaper clippings and an expired Bishop Library card. There was even an old to-do list with Diane’s family’s name on it. I discovered a title for a 1983 Honda Civic, a Christmas letter written from the perspective of the family’s pet turtle, and a deposit slip from the First National Bank in Howard, Kansas for the amount of $5,750 dated 1-7-1937. I was especially fond of the the spotted and stained recipe for Pineapple-Marshmallow Yams written in spidery, old-fashioned cursive. It called for a lot of butter and cream. I would imagine someone is missing the instructions for that favorite side dish.

Popek has compiled his favorite finds in a book entitled Forgotten Bookmarks: A Booksellers Collection of Odd Things Lost Between the Pages. Don’t tell Diane, but I ordered a copy for her as a Christmas gift.

Even though Diane makes an effort to remove memorabilia found between the pages of donated books (“It is too small a town,” she says), I occasionally still find scraps of this and that in my purchases from East Side Books. A reminder about a doctor’s appointment, a birthday card, a photo of an unknown man and woman on a camping trip. Each discovery delights me, and reminds me of the extra special connection we make as readers of used books.

What is the best “forgotten bookmark” you have ever found? Let us know in the comment section below.

Get Up-To-Date on Current Events

As you might expect from a used bookstore, East Side Books houses a large number of vintage volumes and classic literature from years past. What you might not expect is that we also have an impressive selection of recent top sellers that explore some of our country’s most pressing issues.

Since we didn’t want these hot reads to get lost among the older tomes, we created a special section entitled Current Events, or as Kim, book staff extraordinaire labeled it, Where Are We Going And Why Am I In This Handbasket?

As Kim so wittily points out, there are more issues than ever to debate about these days. No one is better at stirring up a discussion that Glenn Beck. Those who love him will be pleased to know we have a hardback copy of his latest book Arguing with Idiots. You know you’re big when your name on the front cover is larger than the title.

As the 2012 election nears, the effectiveness of Barack Obama as a President is being hotly debated. To jump into the discussion, pick up a copy of the New York Times bestseller Renegade: The Making of a President by Richard Wolffe.  For another perspective, check out Fleeced: How Barack Obama, Media Mockery of Terrorist Threats, Liberals Who Want to Kill Talk Radio, The Do-Nothing Congress, Companies that Help Iran, and Washington Lobbyists for Foreign Government Are Scamming Us by Dick Morris and Eileen McGann. How can you not be intrigued by a title like that???

The war in the Middle East is still a difficult subject our country is trying to sort out. Sometimes gathering information from several experts is the best way to decide how we feel about something in our heads and in our hearts. The Assassins’ Gate: America in Iraq by George Packer was named one of the Ten Best Books of the Year 2005 by the New York Times Book Review. This book offers a comprehensive background to the war in Iraq and our place in it. Noam Chomsky, a philosopher and activist who has been writing about current issues for over fifty years, has penned Middle East Illusions. As controversial as ever, Chomsky’s book will surely stir up some strong opinions. As will Phillippee Sands’ book Torture Team: Rumsfeld’s Memo and the Betrayal of American Values.

If you are looking for a little hope among the current crises of the day, pick up our copy of Giving: How Each of Us Can Change the World by Bill Clinton. He believes that “we all have the capacity to do great things.” Giving is a call to action and Clinton tells the inspiring stories of Dr. Paul Farmer, Oseola McCarty, Andre Agassi, and Heifer International. Another book of hope is aptly named The Impossible Will Take A Little While: A Citizen’s Guide To Hope In Time of Fear. This collection of essays edited by Paul Rogat includes stories to guide us through despair towards hope and compassion. Contributors include Howard Zinn, Terry Tempest Williams, Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela, and Herman Alexie.

This is just a small sample of the numerous titles we have on our Current Events shelves. If you like to be up-to-date and in the know politically, come on down to East Side Books and pick up a few books at bargain prices.

As always, please ask for assistance if you need help finding these or any other titles.

Hurry Down: East Side Brimming with Great Reads!

East Side Books is brimming with great books right now in all subject areas and all genres. Here are a few highlights to pique your interest until you can make your way downtown and buy a few of these goodies for yourself.

There is something about chilly weather that makes me want to grab a blanket and a mug of tea and snuggle into the couch with a book of poems. We have some lovely volumes in right now that are not a pleasure to read but visually appealing as well. The slim volume of Favorite Poems of Emily Dickinson is a must have if you adore the woman in white like I do. “This is my letter to the world,” she wrote. And you can read it too for only $5.00. If you prefer poems that rhyme, check out our beautiful copy of Evangeline, a book-length poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (a distant relative of yours truly.) This book has lovely illustrations by Howard Chandler Christy that alone are worth the $10.00 price. For something a little more modern, check out the poetry collection Junior College by award-winning California poet Gary Soto. A steal at $3.00. Although plain-spoken and easily understandable, his poems ring with beauty. His poem “Oranges” (not featured in this volume) is one of my favorite poems of all times.

If you are in the baking mood, you will for sure be tempted by our latest cookbook buys. We have two beautiful bread books just in. The Best Bread Ever by Charles Van Over features amazing bread recipes using your food processor. The black and white instructional photos are especially handy. Nancy Silverton’s Bread from the La Brea Bakery is a lovely tome that gets to the heart of true, old-fashioned bread baking. Some of the recipes take two to three days to complete, but the photos of the end results, especially the Walnut Bread, look like the effort is well worth it. Both bread books are priced at a mere $10.00, and won’t be around for long.

I’m not a dessert person, but even I was tempted by the covers of Let Them Eat Cake by Susan G. Purdy ($10.00) and Desserts to Die For ($12.00) by Marcel Desaulniers Online Blackjack. I think photos make a cookbook, and both these volumes are rich with photos as well as helpful sections such as “The Light Touch” and “The Chef’s Touch,” which give excellent cooking hints to make your baking experience a sure success.

You don’t have to be a teenager to love our latest addition to the Young Adult Section. We have a set of The Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini. Kim, East Side Books employee and mother of two very well-read teen-age boys, recommends this series highly. Paolini wrote Eragon, the first book in the series, when he was just fifteen years old. With help from his parents, he self-published his manuscript and spent two years traveling around the country promoting his book. Eventually Eragon was picked up by Alfred A. Knopf and spent 26 weeks on the New York Times Bestsellers List.

And finally, our Nonfiction Table is loaded with great reads. We have a number of copies of Greg Mortenson’s bestseller Three Cups of Tea. You will be inspired by his humanitarian efforts to build schools across Pakistan and Afghanistan. Tracy Kidder is one of the finest writers of nonfiction working today. (Look for his outstanding books Among Schoolchildren and Old Friends on our shelves.) Strength in What Remains is one of his more recent books, and tells the story of Deo, a refugee of Burundi who comes to live in New York City. Kidder chronicles Deo’s amazing journey and the people who help him along the way.  Barbara Ehrenreich, author of the eye-opening Nickel and Dimed about her experience working for minimum wage, has a new book out. You can’t miss the bright yellow cover of Bright-Side: How Positive Thinking is Undermining America. It is hard not to be intrigued by a title like that, and you are always guaranteed to be challenged and changed after reading anything by Ehrenreich.

The titles listed above are just the tip of the iceberg of all East Side Books has to offer right now. Come and stock up for winter or beginning your Christmas shopping early. If you need any help locating a title or need a recommendation, please ask one of our staff for assistance. We are always happy to help.

Craft Books Galore

East Side Books has just received an impressive pile of beautiful arts and crafts books that are not only visually pleasing but offer a new take on the art of jewelry making, rubber stamping, paper making, and doll crafting. If you are beginning to think about homemade Christmas gifts, or are just in need of some inspiration to jazz up your own creations, come on in and check out the new titles East Side Books has to offer.

The Art and Craft of Jewelry by Janet Finch is one of the most lovely and practical jewelry making books around. Intended as “a practical guide to high-style, low-cost design,” Finch offers a breathtaking array of jewelry making options. This book won’t stay on our shelves long. Nor will Jackie Dodson’s book How to Make Soft Jewelry. Using primarily fabric, notions, and beads, Dodson explains with excellent detail how to
“create stunning fashion accents on your sewing machine.” She even has a section on how to make the popular “worry doll” necklaces and earrings.

Most of us associate rubber stamping with cute designs and funny little sayings. The books Rubber Stamp Extravaganza and Rubber Stamp Carving take rubber stamping to a whole new level. Vesta Abel in Rubber Stamp Extravaganza uses mixed media stamping techniques and Native American influences for design. The results are spectacular. If Abel’s book inspires you to consider rubber stamp images that you can’t buy at Ben Franklin, pick up a copy of Rubber Stamp Carving by Luann Udell. She teaches you how to carve your own rubber stamps using a few simple tools. It is all I could do to not abandon writing this blog and jump into a bit of rubber stamp carving.

Once you have your rubber stamps made why not test them out on paper you make yourself. For pointers in the craft of paper making start with the book The Art & Craft of Handmade Paper by Vance Studley. He takes you through the paper making process step-by-step. With your homemade paper in hand, peruse Unique Handmade Books by Alisa Golden and Handmade Books and Cards by Jean G. Kropper. Both are an excellent find. Not wanting to invest quite as much time as paper making requires? If this is the case, pick up a copy of Papier Mache Style by Alex MacCormick or The Art and Craft of Papier Mache by Juliet Bawden for an updated twist on this elementary school craft.

If doll making is your thing you are in luck. East Side Book has eight new titles for you to choose from.  Four of these books are by Susanna Oroyan who has been making dolls since 1972. Her designs are not only gorgeous and whimsical, but her instructions are clear enough for a beginner to follow along. The Oroyan titles we have available are: Anatomy of a Doll; Finishing the Figure; Fantastic Figures; and Designing the Doll. Just as inspiring is the book put out by Somerset Studio entitled The Art Chronicles: A Collaborative Journey of Discovery. Along those same lines is the book that most intrigued me, Art Doll Adventures by Lisa Li Hertzi. I would love to own any of the creations presented by Hertzi.

If you are looking for general inspiration, we have a number of titles just in that offer excellent ideas that can be carried over into any area of crafting. I loved looking at Collage: A Complete Guide for Artist by Anne Brigadier. Another excellent title is Imagery on Fabric by Jean Ray Laury. On a more psychological level, we now offer the books Illuminations: The Healing Image by Madeline McMurray and Reading Meaning produced by Scripps College. East Side Books also obtained three lovely books that honor the African American tradition: Who’d A Thought It by Eli Lean; The Art of African Textiles put out by the Barbican Art Gallery; and The Personal Treasures of Bernard & Shirley Kinsey put together by the California African American Museum.

If you are arty and crafty don’t miss out on this fabulous collection of books offered right now by East Side Books. If you need any assistance locating the above mentioned titles or any other books, please ask our staff members for help. But don’t wait, these books won’t last long on our shelves!

Field Trip to East Side Books

by Clara Place

My class got to go East Side Books for a Field Trip. We went there to learn more about books.

When we got there, we got a tour of East Side Books. Diane is the person who owns the books store, and she gave us the tour. We saw millions of books piled high. After the tour, Diane read us books in the Children’s Section. She read us cowboy books. We liked them so much. After Diane read to us, she gave us $4.00 certificates and we got to pick out one or two books to keep. While we picked out books, Diane gave us cookies. And more cookies. And more cookies.

My favorite part of the field trip was when Diane read us books and when we got to pick out books to keep. I like books, and that is why I like East Side Books! There is so much to read there!

Thank you so much, Diane from the First, Second, and Third graders at Bishop Adventist Christian School!

Vintage Nature Illustrations

When I think of books, I think of a story told in words between a front and back cover. But recently, Diane, owner of East Side Books, turned me on to a whole new genre: vintage books that feature remarkably beautiful illustrations, drawings, and color plates.

Without Diane’s tutelage, I never would have stopped and looked at a book entitled Mushrooms by Albert Pilat. But once Diane showed me the full page color illustrations rendered by artist Otto Usak, I immediately got lost in the gorgeous colors and contours of exotic species of fungi. Along those same lines, The Book of Fish published in 1924 features “92 color plates of familiar salt and fresh-water fish” as beautifully painted by artist Hashime Murayama. The Handbook of Nature-Study by A.B. Comstock is a vintage textbook of quite innovative teaching lessons, but it is the utterly charming black and white illustrations that kept me turning the pages.

Once Diane had piqued my interests in vintage illustrations, she moved me over to our Nature Section and shared with me the books of Ernest Thompson Seton. Seton was a turn-of-the-century nature writer and wildlife artist. It was Seton’s book The Birch Bark Roll of the Woodcraft Indians that was the initial inspiration behind formation of the Boy Scouts of America. East Side Books carries a shelfful of Seton’s classics such as Wild Animals I Have Known, Arctic Prairies, Rolf in the Woods, The Book of Woodcraft, and The Biography of a Silver Fox. Not only are the stories wonderful, but the borders of the pages are filled with delightful black and white illustrations by Seton that give his books the feel of a naturalist’s journal.

We also have a number of books by naturalist Edwin Way Teale. His books often rely on photos as well as drawings, but the illustrations by Edward Shenton are spectacular. Especially his work for the book Dune Boy including the lovely cover art.

Other turn-of-the-century vintage natural histories used not one but several, sometimes dozens, of illustrators and artist to complete their volumes. One of the better known nature books is The American Natural History by William T. Hornaday.  East Side Books houses several editions of this book and the original drawings are not to be missed.  Also excellent is The Library of Natural History by Richard Lydekker. This 1904 edition features beautiful black and white illustrations of birds and an introduction by Ernest Thompson Seton.

One of Diane’s favorite examples of color illustration come from a 1941 edition of Webster’s Encyclopedia Dictionary. Although this thick tome is a bit battered and torn, the pictures burst from the page with resplendent vitality. This classic is a real steal at only $5.

My favorite illustrations come from a 1932 Atlas of Human Anatomy with original drawings by K. Hajek. I have taken a number of anatomy classes over the years and bought several different anatomy textbooks, but none have been as detailed and as thorough as this edition by Dr. Johannes Sabotta. I’m not sure that I will be able to resist adding it to my pile of books during my next visit to East Side Books.

And you don’t have to be afraid that getting hooked on vintage nature books will take toll on your checkbook. Most of these volumes are reasonably priced between $8-$25.

If you like a little something besides words between your covers, I suggest you check out the display of vintage illustrated books that Diane and staff have created on top of the glass case in the Nonfiction Room. If you are looking for illustrated books in other areas of interest, please don’t hesitate to ask Diane for assistance. She is the best at unearthing hidden treasures and piquing interests you didn’t even know you had.

A Clue About Nancy Drew

“Bluffing about questionable information can often lead to people revealing juicy secrets.” –The Clue in the Old Stagecoach

I love Nancy Drew.

As a kid, nothing was better than crawling under the covers with a flashlight and a new Nancy Drew mystery. I started collecting the girl detective series written by Carolyn Keene for my own daughter shortly after her birth. I’ve dressed as Nancy Drew three times for Halloween–twice as a child and once as an adult. And I am not ashamed to admit to rereading a Drew mystery now and again. (I am still scared silly when Nancy heads into dark alley to follow the shadowy figure who may or may not be selling fake jewels to the housewives of River Heights. “Don’t go, Nancy! For once in your life be a coward and dial 911!”)

So, it came as a blow when I discovered that there is no Carolyn Keene. All these years I have imagined Keene at her typewriter–an older version of Nancy–tapping out the adventures the titan-haired sleuth. The truth is this: the Nancy Drew mystery series have been penned by no less than sixteen different authors.

“When confused, sit back and try to arrange the facts into some kind of order.”  —The Ghost of Blackwood Hall

Nancy Drew is the brainchild of Edward Stratemeyer. Stratemeyer was one of the first publishers to print books marketed for children. In 1926, he created the popular Hardy Boys series. Even though Stratemeyer believed that a woman’s place was in the home, he was savvy enough to realize that a series featuring an amateur girl detective might be a success as well. The first four Nancy Drew mysteries, published in 1930, were an instant hit.

“When forging a letter to nab a perp, be sure to use grammar and spelling appropriate to the education level of the person you’re impersonating.” –The Ghost of Blackwood Hall

The initial manuscripts featuring Nancy Drew were plotted by Stratemeyer himself, and written by hired writer Mildred Wirt. Wirt wrote the majority of the early Nancy Drew books along with Stratemeyer’s daughter Harriet Adams who eventually took over her father’s publishing company. The later Nancy Drew mysteries were written by numerous ghostwriters, but the characteristics of the girl detective remained consistent throughout the years.

“Lipstick is not just for looking glamorous; it can be used to signal for help on windows or other surfaces.” –The Mystery of the Fire Dragon

Growing up, Nancy Drew was the girl I wanted to be. She’s the girl I want my daughters to be. Not only is she attractive and slim, but she is smart and talented as well.  She speaks French, paints, can drive a motorboat, skies, swims, ice skates, sews, plays golf and tennis, is a gourmet cook, and can hold her own at bridge. When in a jam, the amateur sleuth keeps her cool and relies on her nerve, intellect, and intuition to find a solution. Nancy is a loyal friend, an adoring daughter, and has a handsome and supportive boyfriend. Despite the many trials she undergoes during her investigations, she has never taken any monetary compensation. Plus, she drives a convertible. It doesn’t really get any better than that.

“If you can prevent it, do not chase after thieves when you are clad only in a leotard. It’s unseemly.” –The Scarlet Slipper Mystery

I’m not the only one who admired Nancy’s calm, intelligent demeanor. Powerful women such as Supreme Court Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Sandra Day O’Connor along with Hillary Clinton and Laura Bush all cite Nancy Drew as their girlhood hero and looked to her as a role model. Over 80 million copies of her books have been sold world wide, and her mysteries have been translated into more than 45 languages.

“No one is so jaded that they don’t appreciate praise for mysteries solved or jobs well done, no matter how small.” —The Hidden Window Mystery

My girls are now old enough to enjoy Nancy Drew, and they have fallen in love with her as well. As disappointing as it is to learn that the author of Nancy Drew is really just a pseudonym, I realize that Nancy is still as timeless as ever. . .with or without Carolyn Keene. If anything, the veiled authorship might even add a bit more intrigue to the aura of Nancy Drew.

East Side Books is always well-stocked with the Nancy Drew mystery series. Her books are located in on the Children’s Mystery Series shelves adjacent to the Vintage Children’s Books section.

(The italicized quotes are from the book Nancy Drew’s Guide to Life by Jennifer Worick.)