Final Hours! ABFFE Children’s Book Art Auction


Elizabeth Bluemle - December 4, 2012

Just a quick post to alert you to your last chance to add lovely art to a lucky someone’s holiday.
Suzanna Hermans from Oblong Books just emailed this reminder to booksellers, and I’m passing it along to you.
“ABFFE’s Children’s Art Auction closes tomorrow, Tuesday, at noon. There are some incredible pieces at affordable prices, so don’t miss your chance to get someone (or yourself!) a truly special gift for the holidays.
http://myworld.ebay.com/abffe
If you don’t already know ABFFE’s work, this organization is The American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression, the bookseller’s voice in the fight against censorship.
Just don’t outbid me on the pieces I want! Or, if you do, send them to a good home.
Happy bidding.

The Return of Sugar Plums


Josie Leavitt - December 3, 2012

This past Saturday was the first time we put out our sugar plum candies. This has become a great holiday tradition that staff and customers all look forward to.
Three years ago we were given a small box of sugar plums and we put them out for customers. They loved them. We bought the candies two pounds at a time and had to constantly run back to the Shelburne Country Store to restock our candy dish. There is something so lovely about this candy. It makes people happy. They evoke the holidays and they are a darned tasty sweet bite. People can easily, and often do, have more than two while they’re waiting at the register. We don’t cut folks off, but we try to make sure parents have signed off on their consumption.
Last year, we ordered 10 pounds of sugar plums and found that it was not enough to make it through the season. Often we would find little kids just camped out at the candy bowl, literally stuffing their faces. Some kids were sneaky about it and others were just happy to hang out at the bowl until a grown up noticed that they were covered in sugar and their tongue was purple. A lot of kids approach the candy dish with suspicion. There must be something about plum in the candy name that makes them think it might be a fruit. Some kids take the tiniest nibbles and others just inhale them. And kids seem to love these little treats.
I set up the sugar plum dish and PJ, our 21-year-old staffer, walked by, stopped, and exclaimed while smiling broadly, “Ooooh. The sugar plums are back.” That pretty much sums it up.

It’s Take Your Child to a Bookstore Day!


Elizabeth Bluemle - December 1, 2012

Writer Jenny Milchman used to take her children to bookstores every week and loved how her kids were drawn into the magical world of reading. She also saw how bookstores served communities. She valued the experience so much she began to wonder if other children had that opportunity, and decided to do something to bring awareness to bookstores so that young readers in the future would still get to have that magical experience that meant so much to Jenny and her own children.

So she set up a website and started getting the word out. Now people all over the world are participating in Take Your Child to a Bookstore Day. Grab your kids and head on out to, let’s face it, one of the best places on earth you can take your family: a cozy, inviting shop full of worlds and wonders. There is more life, knowledge, adventure, richness, and entertainment contained per square inch in a bookstore than there is in any other kind of retail establishment. Well, that’s our belief, at any rate. And it’s Jenny Milchman’s, too.

“Bookstores hold a place in the hearts and times of our community. They are places to discover an author, a story, a life. Nothing affords the conversation and interaction among books and book lovers that a bookstore does. In the future, whether you download your story or pluck a volume off a shelf, a bookstore will be able to accommodate. But in order for bookstores to flourish and thrive, we must expose future generations to the unique pleasures they offer. On December 1st, 2012, take the child in your life to a bookstore. Watch his face light up as you give him free access, not just to a new book, but to tomorrow.” —Jenny Milchman

Visit the Take Your Child to a Bookstore website, share their buttons and banners on Facebook or your website, and encourage friends and family who may not be as familiar with the joys of bookstores to get out there with the kids!

P.S. If you’ve got a child who doesn’t like reading and looks at a trip to the bookstore like you’re handing him a bucket and a mop to clean the bathroom, make sure you head to a shop where the staffers understand that even so-called reluctant readers just need help finding the right book at the right time.

P.P.S. If you can’t make it on December 1, we won’t kick you out on December 2. Any day can be Take Your Child to a Bookstore Day! But how delightful that Ms. Milchman has dedicated a special day to us. We thank her — and her children.

Got Books? Create Gifts


Elizabeth Bluemle - November 30, 2012

It isn’t always easy choosing gift books for well-read friends. You want to pick something they haven’t read but that – preferably – you have, so that your gift is personal and meaningful. One way to celebrate a literary friendship in a unique way is to choose some favorite books and make snazzy gifts out of them. Handcrafted presents are especially precious and appreciated these days, when most of us seem too busy even to handwrite a letter, much less make our gifts. And homemade gifts can be easier on strained pocketbooks – a not insignificant point in this economy. Best of all, anything made with or from books just looks terrific.
If, like me, you aren’t entirely sure you’re the craftastic sort, you can browse through a couple of recent titles for ideas and step-by-step instructions for projects from vases and lamps to purses and totes to wall art – all made out of books.
Playing with Books: The Art of Upcycling, Deconstructing, & Reimagining the Book, by Jason Thompson (Quarry Books)
This is a beautiful book! The publisher’s marketing info describes it perfectly: “In these pages, Jason Thompson has curated an extensive and artistic range of both achievable upcycled crafts made from books and book pages and an amazing gallery that contains thought-provoking and beautiful works that transform books into art. The content encompasses a wide range of techniques and step-by-step projects that deconstruct and rebuild books and their parts into unique, upcycled objects. The book combines in equal measure bookbinding, woodworking, paper crafting, origami, and textile and decorative arts techniques, along with a healthy dose of experimentation and fun.”
Another book along these lines came to my attention via an artistic customer, who recently ordered it from us:
The Repurposed Library: 33 Craft Projects That Give Old Books New Life, by Lisa Occhipinti (Stewart, Tabori & Chang). This one has instructions for “homier” items, including a kitchen utensil holder made out of an old cookbook, a wall-mounted shelf made of books to hold small treasures, and a real-book holder to house an e-reader. There’s even a paper wreath project – perfect for gracing the doors of booklovers’ homes during the holidays.
If you want to actually make a handcrafted book instead of making things out of books, there are lots of terrific resources out there for bookbinding. Here’s another title from Quarry Books, with a little twist:
Re-Bound: Creating Handmade Books from Recycled and Repurposed Materials, by Jeannine Stein (Quarry Books). The author shows folks how to use items from flea markets, thrift shops, even hardware stores and your house, and turn them into beautiful little books.

I must say that Quarry puts out some gorgeous books about books! Tonight, while grabbing cover images for this post, I came upon 1000 Artists’ Books: Exploring the Book As Art, by Sandra Salamony, Peter Thomas, and Donna Thomas (Quarry Books):

A delicate canoe with page tufts lofting from its bed? Teeny leather books in a bell jar?! The cover of this book alone makes me drool. I cannot wait to order it for the Flying Pig (and a copy for myself). The art objects in this collection are surely beyond the talents of many of us (or perhaps just me), but could provide inspiration – and simply delight – for decades.
Readers, what’s the best gift you’ve ever received or made out of a book?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Impulse Control During the Holidays


Josie Leavitt - November 29, 2012

As we approach the holiday season I often think of Christmases of my youth. I was raised by a single mom with an impulse control problem. This often resulted in the holidays starting as early as October with Christmas carols being sung around the house and stacks of holiday books being brought out. Part of this rush to the season was, back when I was a kid, it actually got colder earlier and there was the subtle cue of the seasonal shift.
While I like to think I can blame the rush to the holidays on the weather, the push really does rest with my mother. She would holiday shop early and then hide presents, for a day or two. Then she would bounce around like a little kid practically bursting with “I’ve got a secret” on the tip of her tongue. Often, by December 1st, she would be unable to contain herself and she’d offer, “Would you like to open a present?” And what kid can say no to that? Certainly not me. What I loved about these presents is they were often books. Sometimes I’d get the newest Stephen King in hardcover, or a great Judy Blume that would be reread for the whole upcoming year.
I remember one year I yearned for an ET doll that was astoundingly hard to get. My mom did manage to get one and she was so proud of herself that I came home from school on December 3rd and she practically flung him at me all the while doing a song and dance about how awesome she was. I loved the doll and still have it to this day. It was the really nice leather one that sits up by itself. The irony is I’ve never seen the movie, but I loved ET.
The real kicker of the early holiday was the year that all the Christmas shopping was done by December 15th. Our cat, Mittens, had decided to shimmy up the tree and knock it down. This pretty much made my mom think that we should just start opening presents right then and there. I was 13 and my mom was 35 and we dove into our presents like three-year-olds. We even opened our stockings. It was fun. Grand fun. Until December 25th came.
It was quite a sad little morning when we realized there was nothing to open. Mom had decided that since it was just the two of us we didn’t really need a big meal. So we had a tiny chicken and some mashed potatoes. While it was sad to have nothing to open on Christmas Day itself, we did have our books. After our quiet meal, we changed into our jammies and just read, all day. And it was bliss.
 
 

The Value of People


Josie Leavitt - November 28, 2012

Every once in a while I am reminded that people do matter in business. In this age of electronic ordering, cost savings, and a single-minded focus on the bottom line, real people can get lost in the shuffle. I’m happy to report that our local library has revived my faith in people.
This past year the Charlotte Library got a new director, Margaret. Margaret has been a customer of our store pretty much since we opened. I remember when she was a volunteer at the library and have seen work her way up to being the director. When our store was across the street from the library, they would order books. Not a ton of books, but a few a week. They would often walk over and grab a book two they had forgotten to order. They had a budget to adhere to and would do the bulk of their purchasing with a jobber. I totally understand that as the budget has to be publicly defended at the annual Town Meeting.
This year we have a seen a huge increase in the number of books the library buys from us. In fact we fulfill almost all of the library book orders. Every week we get an email from Margaret or the Cheryl, the children’s librarian, with a book list. As much as I love getting these emails, what I love best is that all of the ISBNs are included. Some weeks we order up to 30 books for the library. We provide a small town service for the library, we deliver the book orders when they arrive.
I asked Margaret why we’ve been getting so many orders. She explained that while they might save a little more with a library jobber, they decided to shop local. Plus, they decided that dealing with real people might be ultimately more cost-effective because mistakes are more easily remedied and there is a chance at a real conversation about books when they call us.
Obviously, I have loved the library orders for the income they generate, but I also love knowing what my library is ordering for the folks in town. This gives me a real heads up as to what might sell well at the store. I like knowing that my neighbors, some of whom might not be bookstore patrons, are reading books from my store. I feel more invested in my town because of the library orders.
And, they love getting our old galleys, so really, what’s not to love?
 

I Want One of These! (And Who Wouldn’t?)


Elizabeth Bluemle - November 26, 2012

 We all complain about Facebook — either as a time drain or a chronicle of the overly quotidian — but I must admit, it can lead to interesting places. Just this week I learned about a Kickstarter campaign by a gardening environmentalist that looks fabulous, and followed someone’s link on that site to a great design and architecture blog called freshome.com to look at photos of a rocking chair built to power an iPad (over-the-shoulder speakers included), which in turn led me to today’s blog post featured item: a gorgeous storytime rocking chair that seats one big person and two or three little ones.

Hal Taylor’s award-winning Story Time Rocking Chair, from haltaylor.com.


Designed by Hal Taylor, a Virginia woodworker specializing in custom rocking chairs, this one was built to accommodate his growing family. As his website says: “When our third child, Rose, was born, she was certain she wanted to be part of the ‘reading crowd’ at about nine months old. Well, I did not have a lap large enough for three children so I had to come up with something! This, my StoryTime Rocking Chair, is what I came up with. A ‘four passenger’ rocking chair.”

Hal Taylor demonstrates the Story Time Rocker. From haltaylor.com


I love how the two side seats are built up high to allow littler folks to perch at perfect book-sharing height. I also love what Mr. Taylor says about reading at the top of the web page dedicated to this chair: “It is my sincere belief that one of the most important things you can do for your children is to read to them. I read to my children from the time they could listen to a story until they could read better than I could. We read everything, C.S. Lewis, Mark Twain, Uncle Remus, J.R.R. Tolkien and my personal favorite, ‘Snoozeroo.’ I read to them until they were asleep every night.”
This is such a thoughtful, charming piece of furniture. It looks glossy, smooth, comfortable, and beautifully made, the kind of chair passed down through generations. It is a chair for very lucky households, or a memorable fixture that would make innumerable bookstore and library patrons beam with delight. Hint. Hint.
So Santa, if you’re listening, one of these for Christmas?
P.S. I was curious about his favorite book. It looks to be a 1968 title called Snoozeroo, the Sandman’s Helper, by Eileen Daly, illustrated by Leslie Gray. It looks very cute, and with that title, I can imagine why it would appeal to a busy dad with three young children!

A Different Kind of Black Friday


Josie Leavitt - November 23, 2012

Today is the day that marks the beginning of the retail sprint to Christmas. Many stores have outrageous sales and promise that if you showed up 5 am you’d save more than if you went after lunch. These sales require stores to bring on extra security because of the risk of people being trampled. Often people get hurt in the maddening rush to be among the first to storm the aisles.
Shopping at independent bookstores on Black Friday is a very different experience. A bookstore is a different kind of sales animal. We make our sales not by creating chaos but by talking about our love of books. This makes for a very special and personal shopping experience. We are not selling electronics, or clothes, we’re selling an experience or a journey.
Reading, while a solitary act, is, at its best a shared experience. When people talk about books they love, they do it with passion. Hearing anyone to talk about a favorite book in their lives they become animated and the listeners can’t help but be drawn in. I love the holiday season because I get to talk to folks about books I love.
Unlike regular book buying times, the holidays brings customers in who are overwhelmed by the books they have to buy, but still very selective. This is the indies’ time to shine. The passion we all have books makes shopping fun, and sometimes inspiring. Plus our joy at matching the right books for the right readers is really what we live for.
So, when you crave a different shopping experience, come to an indie. We’ll recommend great books and in most stores, you’ll walk away happier than when you walked in.

An Advent Calendar — in Books


Elizabeth Bluemle - November 21, 2012

A longtime friend and customer brought one of her friends to the store for the first time today. There’s almost nothing more heartening than hearing our loyal Flying Pig folk introduce the bookstore to their friends and family. They say the nicest things about how our small business has been part of their lives, and their enthusiasm and appreciation sends a glow through us that last through long hours. Our sense of being part of the fabric of our community is strongest at these moments. Meeting new people at the store has benefits far beyond just the potential to forge a new relationship with a happy customer; often, we learn about new authors and pick up great ideas. Today’s serendipitous encounter was with Allison, whose preschool-aged son loves books. She was in, she said, looking for some holiday books to add to their under-tree Advent calendar.
“Your…?” I said.
She laughed. “We’re doing a book every night for the 24 nights of December. They’ll be wrapped under the tree, and our son can choose whatever package he’d like that night, and we’ll read it to him before bed.”
I love this idea! A book Advent calendar! Brilliant!! Admittedly, this is a plan that could get expensive, and Allison did confide that what gave her the idea originally was a book club flyer from her son’s preschool that offered 10 books for $14.95. She’s buying the rest of the 14 books at local bookstores. That’s a compromise I can understand.
This is an idea that could also work for the eight days of Hanukkah, and the seven days of Kwanzaa. Of course, book fanatics like me would enjoy the book-a-day-all-year-round plan, but that’s neither practical nor possible (which is why we own bookstores), so this could be a good compromise.
I’ve had fun thinking of what books I might choose for my 24-day book Advent calendar, if they were all books with a strong Christmas theme. Many of mine are long-held loves, some from childhood, others from more recent days. This list is a little fluid; I’m sure I’ve forgotten some beloved favorites. But for now, here’s my Advent-calendar 24-book round-up:
The Story of Holly and Ivy by Rumer Godden, A Christmas Memory by Truman Capote, A Christmas Miracle by Peter Collington, Eloise at Christmastime by Kay Thompson, The Tree of the Dancing Goats by Patricia Polacco, Christmas Crocodile by Bonny Becker, A Child’s Christmas in Wales by Dylan Thomas, Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening by Robert Frost (the version illustrated by Susan Jeffers has a Christmas surprise), The Christmas Quiet Book by Deborah Underwood, A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, The Night Tree by Eve Bunting, Mr. Willowby’s Christmas Tree by Robert Barry, Twelve Kinds of Ice by Ellen Bryan Obed, How the Grinch Stole Christmas by Dr. Seuss, The Worst Best Christmas Pageant Ever by Barbara Robinson, The Gift of Nothing by Patrick McDonnell, Santa Claus: The World’s Number One Toy Expert by Marla Frazee, The Snowman by Raymond Briggs, The Littlest Angel by Charles Tazewell (my very first childhood Christmas favorite), The Gift of the Magi by O. Henry, The Night Before Christmas Pop-Up by Robert Sabuda, Christmas with Ida Early by Robert Burch, and Holidays on Ice by David Sedaris (hey, I don’t have kids, and this is my personal advent calendar, so the Macy’s elf story makes the tree!).
What Christmas books would be must-reads on your Advent calendar list?

Is It a Husband Book?


Josie Leavitt - November 19, 2012

Every day I lament that there are parents and kids who view all books along gender lines. If there’s a girl on the cover, most boys (please don’t get mad at my sweeping generalization, but it’s true) won’t pick it up, let alone read it. I think all books can be read happily by any gender. But I was giving this some thought and realized that the gender issue is coming from the parents.
Two women were shopping for their husbands and one of them showed the other The Tiger’s Wife, and the friend asked, “Is this a husband book?” The other woman shook her head and said no, it was more of a chick book. Here’s the thing: if adults won’t read across gender lines, how are we supposed to get kids too? Someone could easily say that The Tender Bar is really a guy book, and it could well be, but it’s also damned good. And to skip it because it’s about a boy and his growing up, really prevents those women from experiencing a great read.
This has always been a pet peeve of mine. Everyone benefits from reading books that are not thought of as books for their gender. We have a lovely male customer who comes in six times a year sheepishly asking for Nicholas Sparks type books. There is no reason for him to feel bad about liking love stories. But every time he comes in he explains why he likes those kinds of books. He shouldn’t have to explain. He should be able to read what he wants without feeling like he might be judged for what he likes.
So, here’s what I want folks to think about during the holidays as they buy books. Get one person, be it a kid or an adult, a book that is not a book thought of for their gender. Because here’s the thing: a good book is a good book. My brother loved Mrs. Piggle Wiggle as much as I did, and I loved The Great Brain just as much as he did. And if my mom had steered us away from those books, we both would have missed out.