Monthly Archives: April 2016

Claim Your Independents

April 30th will mark the second annual Independent Bookstore Day across the U.S. Followers of the Booked Blog know I’m a longtime big supporter of indie stores. Last December, I re-ran a post that first appeared in March 2013, titled Guilty as Charged. Little did I know, three years ago, the important role independent bookstores would play in the success of BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™. There are more reasons than ever to check out your local independent bookstore. You are likely to be very pleasantly surprised by the changes taking place.

Because they are not bound by the corporate strictures of chain stores and large discounters, independent bookstores have freedom to be creative in the way they serve their customers. Their hallmark has been personal service. Now they’ve expanded in-store events to feature local and self-published authors, along with nationally known ones.

Some stores have created ongoing programs to instill a love of books among children from toddlers to teens. Others have added cafés or bars, becoming social gathering spots for booklovers. Independent bookstores make it possible for libraries and clubs to bring in authors for speaking engagements, as well as support community events, by handling book sales at those venues.

The U.S. Census Bureau reports that bookstore sales increased 2.5 percent from 2014 to 2015. The American Booksellers Association, which represents independent sellers, reported 1,712 member stores (in 2,227 locations) in 2015, up from 1,401 (in 1,660 locations) in 2009. It has been reported that 421 independent bookstores in 48 states will participate in this year’s Independent Bookstore Day. Eighty percent of last year’s participating stores saw a sales increase, and those stores saw an average sales increase of 70 percent compared with the Saturday the year before. Will you be part of the fun?

Recommended

Lovers of history, mystery and great wines: If you’re in Chicago, stop by Taste Food & Wine between 6-8 p.m. on Monday, April 25th for BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™. Certified Wine Educator Phoebe Snowe will be pouring some great wines while Susanna Calkins, author of the just-released A Death Along the River Fleet, talks about the latest in her popular Lucy Campion series.

April 26th is the final day to get your discount registration for BookExpo America, to be held May 11-13 at McCormick Place in Chicago. BEA is North America’s largest book industry event. I’ll be there; will you?

Earthly Delights

April 22nd is Earth Day. Like sinning six days a week and praying on the seventh for forgiveness while promising to do better (or try to do better), we set aside Earth Day to acknowledge the wonder of the beautiful planet that sustains us, pray for its wellbeing and promise to show more reverence for it the remaining days of the year.

One day of prayer and promise can be quickly forgotten in a year full of distractions. Fortunately, there are many excellent books – non-fiction, novels and poetry — to inspire us and remind us of the daily devotion the earth deserves. One of my favorite ecologically-minded books is Echoes of Earth. Watch my 2013 video webcast interview with author Sue Baugh to see why. Then check out these other worthwhile books:

Non-Fiction
Silent Spring – Rachel Carson
An Inconvenient Truth – Al Gore
Hot, Flat and Crowded – Thomas L. Friedman
Moral Ground – Kathleen Dean Moore and Michael P. Nelson (editors)

Fiction
Ecotopia – Ernest Callenbach
Prodigal Summer – Barbara Kingsolver
The Shell Collector – Anthony Doerr
The Road – Cormac McCarthy

For Children
The Lorax – Dr. Seuss
Dear Children of the Earth – Schim Schimmel
The Great Paper Caper – Oliver Jeffers

Poetry
The Walk – Friedrich von Schiller
The Triumph of Life – Percy Bysshe Shelley
A Forest Hymn – William Cullen Bryant
Song at Sunset – Walt Whitman

Don’t forget to recycle your books by sharing them.

Recommended

There are just a few days left until the highly anticipated Season 2 launch of BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™. Appearing April 25th, from 6-8 p.m. at TASTE Food and Wine, 1506 West Jarvis, Chicago, our featured author is Susanna Calkins with her hot-off-the-press A Death Along the River Fleet (Minotaur/St. Martin’s Press). You can read an excerpt from the book at Criminal Element.com. The Book Bin will have books for sale on site and fabulous wines will be poured. Lots of other goodies will be offered.

And mark your calendars for May 16th, when BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™ welcomes model/photographer/author Rory Flynn to Chicago to talk about and sign copies of her handsome photographic memoir about her father, movie idol Errol Flynn, The Baron of Mulholland. Check out Rory speaking about her father’s life and films on TCM’s 31 Days of Oscar. You can read more about BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™ on the Booked Blog post of March 13, 2016.

Clearly Cleary

On April 12th, a Living Legend will turn 100. Beverly Cleary, the Newberry and National Book Award-winning author received that official moniker from the Library of Congress in 2000. A well-deserved honor for the creator of treasured children’s books, including Henry and Ribsy, Beezus and Ramona, Ralph S. Mouse, and Dear Mr. Henshaw.

On becoming a centenarian, Cleary mused, “I’m surprised that I’m almost 100. I sometimes write the figures down on paper to make sure.”

How does a writer become a legendary author? Many authors will tell you they loved reading from the get-go. Not Cleary. She was assigned to the lowest reading group in first-grade, considered a late reader. Instead, she’d daydream, getting beaten on her hands by her teacher. The reason Cleary gives for avoiding books was because she didn’t find them interesting.

Lucky for us, she was encouraged by her parents, discovering books more to her liking in the third grade and eventually leading her to the inspiration for writing a new style of children’s books.

In a recent interview with Publishers Weekly, Cleary recounted, “When I was young, I told my mother I wanted to write, and she said, ‘That’s fine, but you must have a way of earning a living. Work for one year before you try to write.’ It was sound advice, so I went to library school and became a children’s librarian.”

During her years as a librarian in Yakima, Washington, Cleary had an encounter with a child that would shape her writing career years later. “It was a little boy who changed my life,” she says. A boy who “marched right up to my desk and demanded, ‘Where are the books about kids like us?’ I couldn’t find any books about kids who played on the sidewalk in front of their houses. Authors back then thought their characters needed to go to sea or have big adventures. Well, most kids don’t have adventures, but they still lead interesting lives. My life is interesting to me, but I’m surprised it’s interesting to anyone else. I haven’t had any spectacular adventures or gone to sea. Finally, when I sat down to write, I thought about that little boy.”

The result was Cleary’s first novel, Henry Huggins, published in 1950. For the next two decades, the prolific author churned out at least one book a year, often starting the day after New Year’s Day and finishing in May or June. The remainder of the year was used to let new ideas take seed, much in the way a farmer lets the land seasonally go fallow. To date, hers books have sold more than 85 million copies.

Cleary’s favorite character is Henry’s pesky kid sister, Ramona. Although Cleary contends “I was a well-behaved girl,” she adds, “but I often thought like Ramona.” For example:

RAMONA drummed harder to show everyone how bad she was. She would not take off her shoes. She was a terrible, wicked girl! Being such a bad, terrible, horrid, wicked girl made her feel good! She brought both heels against the wall at the same time. Thump! Thump! Thump! She was not the least bit sorry for what she was doing. She would never be sorry. Never! Never! Never!

Of the many rewards that come with success, Cleary says the greatest reward from her writing career has been, “the children who have discovered the pleasure of reading with my books. I remember when I made the same discovery in third grade, and it was a turning point in my life.”

Happy 100th, Beverly Clearly!

Recommended

Just two weeks to go until the Season 2 launch of BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™. Appearing April 25th, from 6-8 p.m. at TASTE Food and Wine, 1506 West Jarvis, Chicago, our featured author is Susanna Calkins with her hot-off-the-press A Death Along the River Fleet (Minotaur/St. Martin’s Press). The Book Bin will have books for sale on site and fabulous wines will be poured. Lots of other goodies will be offered.

And mark your calendars for May 16th, when BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™ welcomes model/photographer/author Rory Flynn to Chicago to talk about and sign copies of her handsome photographic memoir about her father, movie idol Errol Flynn, The Baron of Mulholland. Check out Rori speaking about her father’s life and films on TCM’s 31 Days of Oscar.

You can read more about BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™ on the Booked Blog post of March 13, 2016.

Hearing Through the Eyes

I first wrote about the importance of “hearing” what we read in my July 28, 2013 post, Test-Driving Books—On the Road. Since July 2015, my BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™ events have been taking booklovers on some of those test drives. It’s a great way to decide which literary rides to hop on. Here’s why:

We tend to think of creative writing as something to read, to ingest through the eyes. But most of us hear voices in our head when we read. Our brains translate what our eyes see into words we hear internally.

Writing that is meant to be spoken (think of speeches) is approached a bit differently from writing that is expected to be read with the eyes. Speeches that sound good also read well. But what seems good in print doesn’t always sound good when spoken. You can test this yourself by picking up a handful of novels and randomly reading passages aloud. See if the writing holds up when you speak it.

The best writing, in my opinion, satisfies when read and spoken. This is why writers are advised to read their work aloud, either to others or in solitude. That exercise often turns up awkward, unrealistic dialogue, repetitive verbiage or other weaknesses that need improvement.

One way for readers to test the satisfaction quotient of a book before committing to it is to attend a reading by the author. Increasingly, authors are arranging readings from their latest book as a way to market their work. These events are usually free and open to the public — at the public library or neighborhood bookstores. Sometimes venues require a reservation and a fee – a secluded room in a restaurant, a literary conference or an arts retreat. BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™ was created to provide a very accessible, convivial way for readers to meet authors and hear about their books as well to enjoy sample readings.

Large or small, free or with a fee, bare bones or full menu, there are opportunities to hear authors read their work throughout the year. You can find out about these events by checking your community newspaper, your library’s schedule of events, your neighborhood independent bookstore’s newsletter, literary periodicals that carry event news, or simply Google “author readings”. Those in the greater Chicago area can check out BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™ by following the weekly Book.ed Blog, checking the Booked website (click on the BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™ tab), or liking Booked on Facebook.

BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™ kicks off Season 2 on April 25th, from 6-8 p.m. at TASTE Food and Wine, 1506 West Jarvis, Chicago. Our featured author is Susanna Calkins with her hot-off-the-press A Death Along the River Fleet (Minotaur/St. Martin’s Press). The Book Bin will have books for sale on site and fabulous wines will be poured. Lots of other goodies will be offered. You can read more about BOOKS ‘n’ BOTTLES™ on the Booked Blog post of March 13, 2016.

Recommended

The Chicago Tribune placed The Little Paris Bookshop, by Nina George, #2 on their Chicagoland Best-Sellers list this week. I’ve had the book since last May, when I picked it up — free — at BookExpo America (BEA) in NYC. It was one of several free books I was able to get during book signings and giveaways at North America’s largest publishing event. This year, BEA is coming to Chicago’s McCormick Place May 11th-13th. Free books are the bonuses to an event filled with useful workshops, fabulous exhibitions, author appearances and countless networking opportunities for anyone involved with the book industry. Who knows – you may come home with next year’s best sellers.

Quotable

April hath put a spirit of youth in everything. – William Shakespeare

Again the blackbirds sings; the streams / Wake, laughing, from their winter dreams, / And tremble in the April showers / The tassels of the maple flowers. — John Greenleaf Whittier

April comes like an idiot, babbling and stewing flowers. – Edna St. Vincent Millay

April is the cruelest month, breeding lilacs out of the dead land, mixing memory and desire, stirring dull roots with spring rain. – T.S. Elliot