Category Archives: Events

Local Foods, Local Gardens, Local Books on all of them!

I was thrilled last Friday evening after closing the store to actually remember and then to not have other obligations that required scurrying off somewhere – I  got to shop our new Friday Farmer’s Market!  Still small, but wonderful all the same. I am glad it is on Friday’s now!  I bought beautiful beets from Bishop Creek Farms and spinach from Banner Springs.  Their arugula looked great too, but that is flourishing in my garden.   I also tasted salad offerings from TheSecretSandwichSociety, yummy.  If that society is still secret to you, you need to check out their website and order some lunches to be delivered in Bishop via bicycle.  Their menu has vegan choices and is all healthy and conscientious, as well as delicious. Make sure to use The in the web address or you will be ordering from New Hampshire or someplace, which defeats the whole local concept!

We had such a late spring that my own garden is slow and looking a little stunted.  Just last night though, we ate our first little squash in a quiche also made with our own ham and eggs. We also had a nice arugula salad, which my kids were not crazy about, but I liked.  I get tired and frustrated with my gardening efforts sometimes, but when most of the meal was produced by me or people I know, it really does make me feel happy and a little virtuous.  I am also happy, ecstatic actually, to see more and more local food options popping up around the Owens Valley.  Check out the UCCE Master Gardener’s of Inyo Mono handbook for a nice list if you’ve missed them.  Bishop Creek Farms mentioned a Facebook page as well to check out.  Of course you can come by the Farmer’s Market tomorrow night and talk to Master Gardeners in person (you can get started on a fall garden you know) and the other producers as well as craftspeople.  Mammoth’s Farmer’s Market is on Wednesday nights if you live to the north.

Do I have a book tie-in?  Of course I do!  If you have not yet read Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal Vegetable Miracle, come pick up the one copy we still have on the shelf.  She is just a wonderful writer, and even vegans I know loved her chapter on butchering turkeys!  While her current location in rural Virginia makes eating locally (food produced within 100 miles) a little easier than in the Owens Valley, she makes the effort seem worthwhile, or more like essential, and very doable.  Plus she includes recipes! Another writer who beautifully inspires us to treasure those heirlooms and regional specialties is David Mas Masumoto, a peach grower in the Fresno area (Fresno is within 100 miles as the crow flies…..).  He wrote the classic An Epitaph for a Peach, as well as Letters to the Valley (signed copy on the shelf now) and Harvest Son.  Well worth reading.  Also pulled from the shelf, Fading Feast by Raymond Sokolov looks fascinating as well.  It is “a compendium of disappearing American regional foods”,  things like Smithfield Ham, Minnesota Wild rice and abalone from La Jolla.  It has recipes and pictures, and is part travel memoir to boot!  The Omnivore’s Dilemma  by Michael Pollan has been making news for quite some time on the scary science behind the other end of the food spectrum, we also have High Tech Harvest by Paul Lurquin and similar titles if you need more convincing.  More fun reading looks like Blithe Tomato by Mike Madison, “an insider’s wry look at farmers’ market society”.  I don’t think our Bishop Farmer’s Market has quite reached society status yet, but it is fun and shopping feels like joining a burgeoning movement.

Don’t forget all of the excellent gardening books on our shelves as well, from Sunset Western Gardening to classics on pruning and JI Rodale’s Earthworm’s are Our Friends.  I am sorely tempted to take that one home every time I see it, so please come rescue it !

Not sure what to do with some of those beautiful beets?  Here is a favorite recipe from Nigella Lawson’s Forever Summer cookbook.  Her cookbooks are a pure joy to read, and laugh-out-loud funny at times.  (We have her memoir on the shelf too, did I mention that?)  She says this recipe is vaguely Scandinavian, to be served with Hasselback Potatoes and salmon, which I of course do.

Raw Beet, Dill and Mustard Seed Salad
 
big bunch fresh dill (apx 6 T when chopped)
18 oz raw beets ( I have no idea how much  is 18 oz of beets, I use about 4-5 med to large beets per recipe)
juice of 1 lemon
2 Tbs extra virgin olive oil
2 TS mustard seeds
a spoonful or so of chopped fresh flat leaf parsley for garnish
 
 
Blitz dill in food processor to chop.  Use julienne or grating disc in food processor to grate peeled, raw beets.  (Nigella’s quote here on peeling beets – “I use rubber gloves for this, so I’m not like Lady Macbeth with my incarnadined hands forever.”  Personally I never have rubber gloves handy, so live with red hands, it does not last forever!)
 
Turn beets into bowl with dill and toss.  Squeeze the lemon juice over, drizzle in the olive oil and toss again.  Use a nonstick or heavy frying pan (cast iron works great) to toast the mustard seeds for a couple of minutes.  Add to beet and dill salad and toss again.  Sprinkle with some reserved dill and/or parsley for a “final uplifting hit of more vibrant green”.  (Gotta love Nigella’s use of language!:)
 
She says you can use parsley or any herby combination you are in the mood for if you can’t find fresh dill, but I would not give up the dill.

Garden fresh, it is one of the best parts of summer.  Along with reading a great book, or reading a great book about gardening.    And do you have any ideas for arugula?  Come see us.

Post Popcorn & Poetry Party Pictures

My poetic capabilities don’t really get past alliterations, but, thankfully, that was not true for the poets and poem reciters at our 2011 Popcorn & Poetry Party!  We had an enthusiastic group who brought their favorites to read or wrote their own, one girl even made up masterpieces on the spot! 

As I said to one of my reading friends, I think it is very special to be part of a tradition more than a thousand years old to get together to listen to poems… and all the more fun over popcorn.  This year’s party could not have happened without the planning and preparation of Emma, Clara and Melissa Place, and I am very appreciative.  Thanks so much to all of you who came to celebrate National Poetry Month at East Side Books.  Start looking for your poems for next year’s readings!

1st Booksigning – Great Party, Great Book

East Side Book’s first booksigning celebrating the new Images of America – Bishop book by Pam and Brendan Vaughan was a wonderful success.  The Laws Museum provided most of the photos for book, and helped sponsor the booksigning event with advertising, food and more copies of this  quickly selling book.  A portion of the book sales from our store last week will go back to benefit the museum.  The authors signed stacks of copies, heard even more stories from the valley’s history, and visited with dozens of friends.  It was especially fun to hear the many excited folks who knew their pictures were inside – although there are at least three people claiming ownership of the car parked on Main Street on the cover!   Attendees enjoyed an awesome and eclectic mix of music from guitarists Greg Smith and Jeremy Freeman. If you get a chance to hear them play, by all means go listen!   I’d like them here every Friday night….

We sold out our stock of Bishop books as of Saturday, but more are on their way.  The Laws Museum still has some on the shelf, as well as an excellent selection of local history and of course railroad books.  Check out the new Stamp mill and Textile Building while you are there!

Thanks to everyone that helped out and attended this booksigning.  Looking forward to the next one!

Authors Brendan and Pam Vaughan signing away.
Lots of food, lots of friendsMusicians Greg Smith and Jeremy Freeman - playing "gypsy jazz"Barbara Crosby and Barbara Moss from Laws Museum - Thanks Mom!

Party Memories – Ghosts, Pumpkins and the Headless Horseman!

Wow!  I think it was our best turnout ever for the ghost stories!  And the little hobgoblins were all very excited!  I hope they are associating all that excitement with the fun of reading wonderful stories…. but it may have been the little donuts.  That’s okay too, donuts go with Halloween in my book.

I want to especially thank all my wonderfully patient staff and our extended families, getting a party together is a little crazy even without the scattered mindset of a key organizer (me).  Galen Busby commendably handled the headless crafts with grace and good humor, Katie coordinated the pumpkin guts (in the darkest corner) without complaint, Lindsey managed the nine-pins game and prize delivery with fairness and a sense of fun (okay someone tell me they got the association with playing ninepins and Washington Irving?).  Mary helped the next day with the clean up aftermath. Connor Busby squeezed in some time to help between sports practice and homework as well as installing flyers all over town; Matt, Lindsey and Katie helped engineer and install the spooky Sleepy Hollow trees, etc; Kim with her usual smoothness kept everything flowing, the food replenished, and the books sold (with flashlight in hand to see prices); and my husband (bless him)  put up with me, took pictures, and policed the fog and candles. 

Here are a few pictures – okay the pictures ended up at the top, with many pictures of big eyed Katie.    And how did Galen get sideways?   Sorry folks, I can’t fix it.  Obviously not the techno wizard of East Side Books, but that is not news. 

Hope you all had fun, and we’ll see you for the next story time….hot chocolate and Christmas stories maybe?

Diane

Chug on over to Choo Choo Swap Meet!

It’s here again, the semi-annual Choo Choo Swap Meet at the Tri-County Fairgrounds!  (Saturday, October 2, 8:30 AM) At East Side Books, we pack up a lot of overstock, a few oddities, and a few boxes from my storage shed (yes I have a book filled storage shed, but I can quit at any time – just not today).  These treasures are priced  for volume discounts, so bring your little wagon or a wheelbarrow if you want to stock up! 

The Choo Choo Swapmeet is the primary fundraiser for our friends at the Laws Railroad Museum, both the space rental and the reasonable $2 admission keeps some of their restoration and preservation work going for the year.  Even if you don’t need any swap meet treasures, the admission is cheap for the amount of socializing you can do in one morning, it seems like EVERYone is there to visit! 

If you have not been out Highway 6 to the Laws Museum in a while, you should also stop by to see the restored Agent’s House, the new mining exhibit in the Stamp Mill and the new Textiles Building that stores and displays some of the amazing quilts, clothes and needlework the museum has collected over the years.  Some of the textiles have been in the Owens Valley for generations, and some had rich histories before they ever made the trip west. The talented members of the Calico Quilters have been volunteering hours upon hours to catalog and care for these treasures – our whole community should be grateful!  The Stamp Mill  has been dedicated to the memory of Larry Paglia, a long time Museum board member and volunteer who spearheaded the project and did much of the design work for this interesting exhibit.  If you have ever wondered just how miners got the gold out of the rock, this is the perfect graphic display to show you that process step by step.  I have not seen the new Agent’s House improvements, I know they had to fix some foundation problems, but I am sure all those favorite displays like the Victorian funeral hair wreaths  and the Murphy Bed are still in there, well worth visiting again.  Laws is one of the few free admission museums still around – they rely on donations at the door instead of  ticket sales, so you can easily stop by when you have young children for the day just to ring the bell on Engine #9 or to have a picnic.  We are so fortunate to have this resource in our community to visit often.  If you are just visiting Bishop, make sure to put it on your list of activities as well! 

We’ll be in the first row by the fence, so stop by the East Side Booth to say hi and check out the bargains – See you there!

Diane

Feedback Contest – Anniversary!

I think you all have missed this contest announcement, only 16 more days to enter this month!  What do we want to know?  Your favorite memory from the store, in honor of our anniversary month!  It could  even be a memory of the store in its earlier version as The Worn Book Worm. 

One of my most loyal, and sweetest customers, Robert Renfro who died two years ago,  told me at least once a month about his favorite Bookworm book ends discovered at a garage sale –  former owner Jeanne Holt coveted them as a perfect match for the store in its Worn Bookworm incarnation.  Robert’s amazing estate of books can still be found throughout the store, especially in the old classic mysteries, Egyptology, and languages.  We counted at least nine different languages among his collection of  learning foreign language materials, everything from Persian to Swahili. He had thousands and thousands of books stacked, literally, to the ceiling in his small home, and I believe he read most of them. He was the epitome in my mind of a “life long learner”, and some of his estate was credited to Altrusa to help grow more life long learners.  So, you could say Robert’s visits and stories are one of my favorite memories of my time behind the counter.  Hopefully that primes the pump and gets you thinking of your special moments in the store! 

Also wanted to say that the Anniversary Open House was a great celebration, and I hope fun for the many folks who came by.  Laura Vios and her gifted children Caber and Manna, sang and played for a full three hours, which was wonderful!  A lot of browsing and visiting, a few cookies, all the good stuff.  You will love the great artwork submitted by younger customers to help advertise the store, I’ll get it posted soon.

Thanks to Lindsey, Kim, Mary, and Melissa for all their work and contributions to the party.  Of course, thanks to my family too, who do face coercion on party days, but manage to help mom with patience and good humor.

Lastly, the winners of the July comment contest were Amy, the pregnant woman on the roof watching a pregnant moose, while reading,  and Allie, the random winner but also a highly dedicated reader checking out the guidebooks while the scenery goes by outside….(okay Allie you may want to save the books until after dark next time!).  We were thoroughly entertained with all the entries!

Diane

August Anniversary! Contest, Party, Sales, ETC

August marks the 5th anniversary of Dave and I owning the store, and we intend to celebrate!  I don’t know the starting month but it is about the 27th year of the store’s existence, which is a long time for a business with a slim profit margin.  The reason for the longevity is, of course, the wonderful, loyal customers who read, sell and buy such excellent books. So THANK YOU for that.  Now for celebrating….

  • Comment Contest:  This month, we invite your favorite memories of moments in the store.  Meeting your future spouse maybe?  Finding a book on the shelf you loaned a friend a year ago?  Reading to your baby?  Whatever, it is, we’d love to hear, and you have a chance to win a $25 gift certificate just for commenting!  We will again have a certificate for the “best” comment, and a random drawing from all those who posted responses to any blog during the month. 
  • Party TimeAugust 13 will be our Anniversary Open House, from 5:00 to 8:30.  Come enjoy some live music, snacks, a sidewalk sale and your friends that evening.  Then on Saturday, August 14, we’ll continue the fun with more sidewalk sale items, kid’s story time at 10:30 and 2:00, and some kid’s activities in-between.
  • 5 for $25 Sale:  You’ll be clearing the shelves with this excellent anniversary sale!  Pick any 5 books, originally priced $9 or less, for only $25.  Any genre, any combination, you choose, and you could save big time!  With any luck, we’ll solve the overflow problem for months to come. 

Any questions?  Give us a call or stop by.  I am adding more details on the anniversary celebration on a daily basis, so we could have more to share. 

 There are so many customers that are a joy to see every time they come in, I really can’t tell you how much I appreciate you all.  Since I barely have had time to read in the last five years, hearing about what you are reading is the next best thing!  And again, thanks for your loyalty to the store and buying locally.

Hope to see you this month,

Diane

Happy 5th Anniversary: A Love Letter to East Side Books

Dear East Side Books,

When my husband first mentioned the possibility of moving to Bishop, California, my only questions was: Is there a library?  I figured I could live anywhere as long as I had access to books.  What I didn’t know at the time was that in Bishop I would find something better than the library; I would discover Eastside Books tucked off the main drag in an unassuming low brown building whose plainness belies the treasures hidden within.

That was eleven years ago, and I am more in love with Eastside Books than I was the first day I cruised the shelves, checking out all the nooks and crannies, delighted with the wide diversity and quality, elated with the possibility of what I would find.  Over the years, East Side Books has played a significant role in my life.  Initially, it offered me a connection to a community that helped salve off the loneliness of moving to a new place, and later, when I was a sleepless new mother, the shelves of Eastside Books offered much needed mental stimulation.  As my interests have changed from season to season, I have found great resources in a variety of sections, whether it be instruction manuals on composting with worms or patterns for Amish quilt making or advice on how to train a puppy.  The most pleasure I have gotten from East Side Books is introducing my own children to the wonders of books. Simply being able to spend time sitting on the floor in the children’s section where they can handle and read gently used books, creating stacks of treasures they can’t live without.  It pleases me greatly that over time, East Side Books has also become their favorite stop in town.  We go to the warm, safe cocoon of East Side Books to counter balance the bad days where nothing has gone right as well as to pile on the happiness when all is bright and shiny.   I have even run into my husband amongst the stacks when he has needed an escape from work to clear his head.  East Side is not just our bookstore, it has become our haven.

This August, East Side Books is celebrating a fifth anniversary–five years of ownership by Diane Doonan.  An anniversary party will be held on Friday, August 13 including food, music, extended hours, prizes and giveaways, and lots of fun.  The sale will extend throughout the rest of that weekend.  I can’t believe it has already been that long since Diane took over the store, but I can mark the anniversary by the birthdays of my youngest daughter.  It was she that helped Diane and I get to know each other quite abruptly when Diane first became owner.  On our first visit to her East Side Books, Diane met us warmly at the door, not often the greeting I received with a four-year-old and two-year-old in tow.  As we made our way to the children’s section, she encouraged us to seek her out if we needed any help.  We spent a good amount of time at East Side Books that afternoon and the store slowly filled with other browsers.  In our happiness to be reading books and out of the house we forgot, my youngest and I, that she was potty training, until there was quite a large puddle spreading beneath her where she sat in the children’s section.  It was one of those moments when I didn’t know what to do first.  As I carried my daughter bottom up to the bathroom I mentioned to Diane as discreetly as I could with a line of people at the counter, “We had an accident.”  On my way back through, my child bare bottomed, Diane handed me a roll of paper towels and spray bottle of carpet cleaner while ringing up customers with the other hand.  And I knew right then I liked her because that moment was a perfect example of the essence of Diane–practical and kind.  Somehow I got everything and everyone cleaned up and exited as quickly as possible without our stack of books.  It was quite some time before I could face returning to East Side, slinking in the door, but Diane never said a word about, in tune with her gracious character.

Although this month is Diane’s fifth anniversary of ownership of East Side Books, as most people know, East Side Books has been around for many more years than that.  Barbara Marcellin started what is now East Side Books in the early 80’s with partner Jeanie Holt.  It was then called The Worn Bookworm (and you can even occasionally still find a book with a Worn Bookworm stamp in it), and was limited to what is now the Children’s and Fiction room.  Ten years later, Tamara Ganahl took the reins.  Tamara was the queen of the book hunt, scouring thrift shops, books sales, and estate sales to add titles that added diversity and liveliness to the shelves.  She too moved on from East Side Books after about ten years, handing her crown off to Mary Daniel.  Mary’s reign was short, but important as she did much to spiffy up the store and create a cozy atmosphere.  Emily Johnson was the next owner, and while her ownership was also short, she brought a wonderful sense of order and organization to the store.

While browsing as a customer one day, Emily mentioned to Diane that she was selling the store.  Diane was spending so many hours in town, waiting for her kids to finish their various activities that she was looking for something productive to do with her “in town time”.  Plus, she was buying so many books for her kids that she figured she might as well just buy them all.  Like many of us who love books, in the back of her mind owning a book store was always a “fun” job option.  Perhaps it sealed that deal that at the time she and her family were living in a small house that didn’t have a foundation.  In the spot where her bookshelf was, the floor was beginning to separate.  Her husband suggested that she find somewhere else to shelve her books.  So she did.  She bought East Side Books.

Although owning East Side is not always as peaceful and calm as she imagined, and, NO, she doesn’t get to read all the time because there are always 300 other things to do, there is much Diane loves about owning a used bookstore.  She loves when the neighborhood kids come in for a free book.  She loves the holiday parties. (Diane is a holiday decorator extraordinaire.  Since I personally hate to decorate, I bring my children to East Side to get their dose of holiday festivity.)  She still loves when her own kids come in and pick a book off the shelves that they might not have found otherwise.  But she says the matchmaking is the best part–finding the perfect book at the right moment for a grateful customer.  Her favorite East Side Books moment so far (and no, it was not when my toddler peed on her carpet), was when a regular customer was in with her high school age granddaughter.  She overheard the granddaughter say, “Grandma, have I ever let you read the essay I wrote about how all the books you have bought me over the years have changed my life?”

And I guess that is what reading and East Side Books is really around.  Changing lives.  Offering possibilities.  Helping doors open and windows be found. Giving everyone the chance to fall in love with words on a page.

Come help Diane celebrate five great years of her love affair with East Side Books on Friday, August 13.  Who knows what you will find.

And thank you East Side Books, for all you have given to me and my family.

Love, Melissa