Summer Reading Bags

I have been giving my kids a bag of books to celebrate the end of school every year since they were in preschool.  Sometimes I put in art supplies and treats, or other little things that reflect their current interest, but there is always a good stack of books.  I don’t remember exactly how I got started doing this, but it has always been my theory that having books available to read is the first step (or maybe the second after reading to them) to getting them to read on their own and for pleasure.  My kids would have been surrounded by books even without the gift bags, and even before I bought the store, but it was still seemed worthwhile to me to pick out some things that I thought reflected their new interests, might inspire them, and were hopefully just fun to read.  Of course some books went unread and were probably “wasted”, especially as my kids got older, the books longer, their interests more specific, and mom more clueless.  Oh well.  My kids are good readers and enjoy reading, which I am very thankful for.

My first year college student has not been able to read a single thing for pleasure, how well I remember that feeling!  But maybe he will find some time this summer after his long list of delayed projects and work responsibilities.  I just found a biography on Chris Ledoux whom he admires that may spark his interest.  I will probably try another Elmer Kelton book too, it is relatively short and a fun read. Those will go into his bag.  My second son appreciates fine sports writing, and I found another great collection to add to his collection.  I am not sure what fun fiction to try out for him, but I have some time still.  My daughter is an opinionated 13 year old, who reads voraciously.  My challenge  is to nudge her towards some books I consider good literature, throw in some fun adolescent chick lit that is still age appropriate, and find interesting books that address tough issues or historical issues that I believe she needs to know about.  Whew, that may be a full bag!  She is also completing a church confirmation class and I would love to nourish her interest in spiritual growth, but have not found anything suitable just yet.

Finally, I give my kids books as a way to celebrate their hard work through the year, but also acknowledge that learning is really their own responsibility, in or out of school.  Plus, I struggle with transitions of all sorts, even though the end of school is usually one I am grateful for I still tend to regret the things I did not get accomplished during another school year and how quickly my kids are growing up and away.  My coping technique is to celebrate the transition and the changing season, which forces me to move on and be appreciative of the new season.  Like so many things we do with and for our kids, the summer  book bags are as much for me as for them!

If you too are looking for a way to celebrate the end of school with your kids, come in.  We’d love to help you put a bag together.

Happy summer.

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!

Wonderful Vintage Girls Series Just In!

Most of us (women anyway) grew up with Nancy Drew (although I confess a preference for  The Hardy Boys myself), but do you remember The Bobbsey Twins, Happy Hollisters, or maybe Trixie Belden or Cherry Ames?  Well the spunky mystery solving girl series are even older than those classics, and we just got a huge batch in of wonderful 1900 to 1930 editions.  We have 18 titles from  The Outdoor Girls by Laura Lee Hope and about ten volumes of  The Campfire Girls series by Hildegard G. Frey.  Numerous other authors wrote for the Campfire Girls, but we only have books by Frey.

As summarized in Manybooks.com, The Outdoor Girls series is a product of the Stratemeyer Syndicate and was published from 1913 to 1933 by Grosset & Dunlap and focuses on the various activities of a group of girls who form a Camping and Tramping Club.  As a result of the girls’ outdoor activities they become known as the “Outdoor Girls” in their city of Deepdale, a city located on the Argono River in New York.  Apparently tramping had a kinder connotation in those decades.  Laura Lee Hope, or the multiple writers using that penname, also wrote the Bobbsey Twins series, and while I have not yet read the Outdoor Girls, I imagine they share a similar sweetness and the demonstrations of good characters with those sets of twins.  The frontis piece art is wonderful, and portray some action packed adventures, in ladylike bloomers of course!  We have 17 great titles to choose from, a few loose hinges and frayed corners, but  generally in good  or good plus condition.

An ad for the Campfire Girls series from Grosset & Dunlap states:

These are the tales of the various adventures participated in by a group of bright, fun-loving, up-to-date girls who have a common bond in their fondness for outdoor life, camping, travel, and adventure.  They are clean and wholesome and free from sensationalism.

I’m not sure how “up to date” these girls will seem now, but they are still charming, and fairly spunky, and apparently clean despite their outdoor lifestyle.  Our 9 copies have a few loose pages, but again are generally in good condition with attractive covers and frontis piece art.  I particularly appreciate the alternate titles, The Campfire Girls Do their Bit, for example, is alternately titled Over the Top with the Winnebagos.  The frontis piece illustration shows a campfire girl rescuing a pilot from a plane crashed into a swamp…Now that title combination is intriguing! Most of these books are priced at $9.00.

Don’t you know someone who would love these series?  They are so much fun!

Woodworking Wonders – a great new batch!

For the woodworking and carpentry aficionados, or the wannabees, we have just processed a great batch of books on home building, remodeling, carpentry, tools, and woodworking.  There is a nice selection from the Fine Woodworking series, such as Handtools, Proven Shop Tips, Refinishing and Woodworking MachinesThere are many more interesting titles on hand tools, including Sharpening Basics by Patrick Spielman, and the one I particularly like, Build Your Own Mobile Power Tool Centers, now that is efficiency!  For the more philosophical approach, you may want to read Woodworking Book 1; Plane Perfect by Ian J. Kirby, it really is a whole book on hand planes!  There are some excellent flyfishing books in this batch too….Fathers Day is coming up!

Open Your Heart to Poetry

“A poem begins with a lump in the throat; a homesickness or a love-sickness. It is a reaching out toward expression, an effort to find fulfillment. A complete poem is one where an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found the word.” –Robert Frost

April is National Poetry Month, and although I am not an expert when it comes to poetry–in fact, I barely muddled through my college literature classes–I have a euphoric love for certain poems. As poet Nikki Giovanni explains in her poem “Art Sanctuary”: “Art offers Sanctuary to everyone willing/ to open their hearts as well as their eyes.” (Please read complete poem here. http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/index.php?date=2011/02/17)

East Side Books has an exceptional Poetry section that is overflowing with volumes of poems that will crack your heart wide open. Whether you’re into Shakespeare and Milton, or prefer Dickinson and Whitman, or don’t really know a thing about poetry, you are sure to be moved, inspired, and changed by exploring the amazing breadth of our poetry shelves.

In the movie “Bright Star,” about the intense but brief love affair between poet John Keats and Fanny Brawne, there is a brilliant exchange between the two on the subject of reading poetry.

Fanny Brawne:  “I still don’t know how to work a poem.”

John Keats: “A poem needs understanding through the senses. The point of diving into a lake is not immediately to swim to the shore, but to be in the lake, to luxuriate in the sensation of the water. You do not work the lake out, it is an experience beyond thought. Poetry soothes and emboldens the soul to accept mystery.”

Keats died tragically at the age of 25, when he was just beginning to produce work that allows readers to reach beyond thought and accept that which was previously unknown or unseen.  As Robert Frost, one of the most well-known and well-loved American poets, said, “Poetry can make you remember what you didn’t even know you knew.”

Frost calls his poem “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” his “best bid for remembrance.”  After staying up all night to work on a poem entitled “New Hampshire,” Frost wandered outside and waited for the sun to rise.  He suddenly had an idea and rushed back inside to write the lovely lines; “Whose woods these are I think I know./ His house is in the village, though;/ He will not see me stopping here/ To watch his woods fill up with snow.” (Please read complete poem here. www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/20519)  Frost completed the rest of the poem without pause, “as if having a hallucination.”  What was it in that June summer morning over 90 years ago that inspired Frost to write the lines that so easily plunges readers into the depth of winter?

W.S. Merwin says that “If a poem is not forgotten as soon as the circumstances of its origin, it begins at once to evolve an existence of its own, in minds and lives, and then even in words, that its singular maker could never have imagined.”

Sharon Olds and Mary Oliver are two poets who create poems that take on an existence of their own in my life. For years I have kept a copy of “Wild Geese” by Oliver on my bulletin board, and turn to it whenever necessary. The first lines begin:  “You do not have to be good./ You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting./ You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves./ Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine./ Meanwhile the world goes on.” ( Please read the complete poem here. www.english.illinois.edu/maps/poets/m_r/oliver/online_poems.htm)

Poet Charles Bukowski agrees that we only have to love what we love. He says, “There is nothing wrong with poetry that is entertaining and easy to understand. Genius could be the ability to say a profound thing in a simple way.”

A poem that displays simple genius most beautifully is “Oranges” by Gary Soto. “The first time I walked/ With a girl, I was twelve,/ Cold, and weighted down/ with two oranges in my jacket./ December.” (Please read complete poem here. http://www.Akoot.com/garysoto10.html ) Soto’s description of adding an orange to his nickel on the store counter when the chocolate bar the girl picks out cost a dime is pitch perfect writing.

I also love, even though I can’t say exactly why, the poem “This Is Just To Say” by William Carlos Williams. It is just a few lines that read like a note taped on the refrigerator about why he ate all the plums, but it is perfect. “Forgive me/ they were delicious/ so sweet/ and so cold.”  (Please read complete poem here. www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/15535) Williams was not only a poet, but a pediatrician. He said that he could not have had “one without the other,” and that his two professions complimented each other.

Poetry does compliment our lives, whether we are reading it or writing it. I am a huge fan of The Writer’s Almanac on National Public Radio. Every morning Garrison Keillor of Prairie Home Companion fame reads a poem. Since my early hours are now busy with getting lunches packed and children off to school, I often miss hearing the Writer’s Almanac, but have discovered that I can have it delivered daily by email. (Go to http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/)

Now, each morning, I turn on my computer to find a new poem waiting for me. Sometimes I skim the first line, feel like I am back in my college lit class, and hit the delete button. But more often, I find myself reading the first few lines and then returning to the beginning, to read the whole poem through more carefully. As I sip my coffee and the first light of the day touches the windows, I savor lines such as these:

“If you stare at it long enough/ the mountain becomes unclimbable./ Tally it up. How much time have you spent/ waiting for the soup to cool?” (“Against Hesitation by Charles Rafferty. www.laferle.com/2010/02/against-hesitation/)

“But I didn’t know I loved the clouds,/ those shaggy eyebrows glowering/ over the face of the sun.” (“Things I Didn’t Know I Loved: After Nazim Hikmet” by Linda Pastan http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/index.php?date=2010/05/27)

“You are a warm front/ that moved in from the north,” (“You and I” by Jonathan Potter http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/index.php?date=2011/02/28)

“I don’t know why so much sweetness hovers around us./ Nor why the wind blows the curtains in the afternoons,/ Nor why the earth mutters so much about its children.” (“The Blind Old Man by Robert Bly http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/index.php?date=2011/02/16)

“I love mankind most/ when no one’s around./ On New Year’s Day for instance,/ and I’m driving home on the highway alone/ for hours in the narrating rain” (“Be Mine” by Paul Hostovsky http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/index.php?date=2010/12/30)

Billy Collins, crowned by the New York Times as “the most popular poet in America,”  says that “I don’t think people read poetry because they’re interested in the poet.  I think they read poetry because they’re interested in themselves.”

Come on into East Side Books and find yourself in our Poetry section. If you need help finding any of the above mentioned poets, please ask our staff for assistance.

Oliver concludes in “Wild Geese”: “Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,/ the world offers itself to your imagination,/ calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting–/ over and over announcing your place/ in the family of things.”

Road Trip for Spring Break?

Do you actually get to to go away for spring break?  If so, you are in luck, we just received a nice selection of fast paced suspense books-on-cd; the kind that will eat up the miles and keep you awake between Lone Pine and Adelanto.  Favorite authors in this batch include Iris Johanson, James Patterson, John Grisham, Jonathan Kellerman, and many more.

If you don’t have to drive, how about reading some by the Queen of Mystery – PD James?  We have the best selection we have ever had right now, surely there are some you haven’t read!  We are also well stocked on another Brit mystery favorite, Martha Grimes.

Writers, Warriors and Warrior Poets

An alert for readers interested in military history, poetry, writing, or soldiers who write poetry …. We just processed a great batch of specialized military history books, including a very hard to find description of the Soviet battle disaster of Kharkov against Nazi Germany in World War 2.  (What started offensively by both sides turned into a rout and nearly 300,000 casualties for the Soviets.  Details of the disaster were kept secret until the late 1990’s, when this book was written).  Aspiring authors should check out some of the new writing books, as well as poetry.  Finally, my son finished with his stack of World War 1 books for his history paper, so that section is full again as well.  Don’t forget history books are on sale this month too!

Here’s some examples: (if I can get the pictures to load correctly)

"Books will save your life" – Sherman Alexie

I am still having conversations with customers every day in the store about the huge impact author Sherman Alexie had on each person and, hopefully, our community.  I planned to write more, but I think I’ll let one of Mr Alexie’s quotes, stated during the presentation at the High School, speak for itself.  Thanks to all the individuals and organizations who made his visit possible.

We are sold out again of Sherman Alexie’s many books!

Explore Nature Writers

This month at East Side Books, our Nature books are on sale. Our shelves are overflowing with amazing writing by some of the top nature writers around.

Here is a short list of some of my all-time favorite nature books:

The Country Year by Sue Hubbell

Hubbell, former librarian turn beekeeper turn writer, lives and works on a 100 acre farm in the Ozarks. There she tends 200 beehives and produces honey on a commercial scale.  Her book, A Country Year, is a beautiful collection of short vignettes arranged by seasons that give a glimpse into her work and landscape. The descriptions of beekeeping are engrossing, the writing is simple and lovely, and finishing the last page will leave you longing for more.

The John McPhee Collection by John McPhee

I first read John McPhee in a college seminar on writing. We were given an essay he wrote about oranges. At the time, my classmates and I couldn’t imagine anything more boring that a handful of pages dedicated to a fruit. Wisely, our professor made us read McPhee’s essay in class.  I was blown away; I had never read anyone who wielded the English language more deftly.  From that moment on I was a McPhee convert.  One of his very best books is Coming Into the Country–copies can be found in our Alaska section.   If you have yet to experience McPhee, you might want to check out The John McPhee Collection, a book comprised of selections from the first twelve books he published. But really, you can’t go wrong no matter which book of McPhee’s you pick up.

Dakota: A Spiritual Geography by Kathleen Norris

Perhaps I am biased by my Midwestern upbringing, but I found Dakota by Kathleen Norris to be one of the most powerful nonfictional accounts of the Plains on record. (The best fictional exploration of the Midwestern landscape is far and away the work of Willa Cather. Her books can be found on our General Fiction shelves.) Norris moved from New York to an isolated town in northwestern South Dakota, and explores her inner and outer landscapes in this personal account of that transition. I was not surprised to read that Norris is also a poet–her writing is at once lyrical and moving. Her later works delve more into her spiritual quests. The Cloistered Walk, her account of the time she spent living at a Benedictine monastery, can be found in our Christianity section.

Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place by Terry Tempest Williams

Although I first read Refuge over 20 years ago, it has remained one of my top five favorite books of all time. In one slim volume, Williams tells the story of her family history of breast cancer, governmental nuclear weapons testing in the Nevada desert, and the destruction of bird habitat along the shores of the Great Salt Lake in Utah. Williams weaves the bits and pieces of these heartbreaking stories into a lovely tapestry using language that is spare yet gorgeously crafted. It is a book you have to discover and experience for yourself.  When I closed the cover for the last time, I felt that my life was enriched and changed by the story William so masterfully told.

Woodswoman by Anne LaBastille

In the 60’s, Anne LaBastille purchased a bit of land in the Adirondack Mountains and built a log cabin where she lived in a Thoreau-like fashion. She chronicled her adventures, lifestyle, and personal relationship with the land in her books Woodswoman, Beyond Black Bear Lake, Woodswoman III, and Woodswoman IIII. Reading the books by LaBastille years and years ago sent me on a lifelong exploration of homesteading. My personal shelves teem with books on living off the land, cabin building, and survival manuals. I may never live like LaBastille, but her example of living in harmony with her surroundings still effects the decisions I make in my daily life.

Some other titles you might not want to miss are: Living by the Word by Alice Walker; Crossing Open Ground by Barry Lopez; Teaching a Stone to Talk and Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard; Silent Spring by Rachel Carson; and The Good Rain by Timothy Egan.

Come on down to East Side Books and discover your own favorite nature writers by browsing through our extensive collection. If you need any help locating the books mentioned above, please ask our staff for assistance.

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!