Archive for July, 2008

July Opening Letter

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Get ready! We have some “marvelous” events planned for the upcoming months… and before you know it, we will
have the store decorated for the holidays! (oh, dear!!) Some of you are taking advantages of our great summer sales and getting early holiday shopping done… our front table has great paperbacks (buy 2 and get 1 free) and all of our gardening books are 25% off through August.

The Next Indie List

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

Next Indie List

Independent booksellers are and have always been discoverers of the next great read, the next bestseller, the next undiscovered gem. Now the monthly Indie Next List will compile their discoveries to share with readers, including complete title information for each selection. It will also include the paperback releases of previous Indie Next List titles.
 
Here’s the inaugural Indie Next List!

The Story of Edgar Sawtelle by David Wroblewski (Ecco, $25.95)
“This story of a modern-day Hamlet, set in the northern woods of Wisconsin, reaches depths of emotion rare in any novel, much less a debut. Driven by powerful characters, particularly the mute Edgar and the amazing dog Almondine, this story of a family’s destruction will resonate with readers long after completion.” –Bill Cusumano, Nicola’s Books, Ann Arbor, MI

What Was Lost: A Novel by Catherine O’Flynn (Holt, $14 paper)
“With irreverent wit and sharp insight, O’Flynn weaves a mesmerizing tale of a precocious missing girl and the people who surround her. By tapping into emotions with ease and grace, this book wonderfully weaves together characters and the love that even loss can’t affect.” –Meaghan Leenaarts, Island Bookstore, Corolla, NC

The Condition: A Novel by Jennifer Haigh (Harper, $25.95)
“Jennifer Haigh’s latest book is the intimate story of a New England family, beginning one idyllic summer on Cape Cod, before their life changes suddenly. Twenty years later their story picks up again and you get to know each member of the family, what motivates them, and how they communicate — or don’t — with each other. I loved this book.” –Kym Havens, Wellesley Booksmith, Wellesley, MA

Time Is a River: A Novel by Mary Alice Monroe (Pocket, $25)
“Told partly in narrative and partly through well-researched historical diaries and letters, this story of cancer survivor Mia Landan’s renewal in a North Carolina cabin is a very powerful novel of forgiveness, redemption, and new birth.” –Jackie Blem, Tattered Cover Bookstore, Denver, CO

How the Soldier Repairs the Gramophone by Sasa Stanisic (Grove, $24)
“A child matures in Bosnia as war comes clanking down his street and he tries to make sense of the good and the bad in the world through stories. A bold novel, and timely.” –Russ Lawrence, Chapter One Book Store, Hamilton, MT

America America: A Novel by Ethan Canin (Random House, $27)
“A wealthy landowner befriends and helps a boy from a blue-collar family. But he is also intent on ushering a liberal New York senator into the White House. This layered and intelligent look at family and politics couldn’t be more timely in this troubled election year.” –Betsy Burton, The King’s English, Salt Lake City, UT

Oxygen: A Novel by Carol Wiley Cassella (Simon & Schuster, $25)
“When Dr. Marie Heaton’s judgment in a tragic case is questioned, she begins to doubt herself and, then, others around her. I thoroughly enjoyed the book — full of action and suspense and rich in characterization and subplots — from start to finish.” –Gayle Wingerter, Inklings Bookshop, Yakima, WA

The Enchantress of Florence: A Novel by Salman Rushdie (Random House, $26)
“From the palazzi of Renaissance Italy to the battlefields of Persia and the shores of Far India, in The Enchantress of Florence we are transported effortlessly through life’s great conflicts around destiny, beauty, war, magic, and loyalty. Rushdie’s novel is a glorious tale of mesmerizing power and indelible images, an aesthetic fulfillment all its own.” –Marie du Vaure, Vroman’s Bookstore, Pasadena, CA

Northline: A Novel by Willy Vlautin (Harper Perennial, $14.95 paper)
“Allison Johnson is on the run, and she is determined to start fresh in Reno. Paul Newman is along for the ride, making sure Allison makes the right decisions. Vlautin’s honest writing will break your heart.” –Zach Sampinos, Sam Weller’s Books, Salt Lake City, UT

The Sister: A Novel by Poppy Adams (Knopf, $23.95)
“This is a stunning, character-rich novel detailing the relationship of two English sisters who have not communicated for 50 years. As the author goes back in time, we learn, through the older sister’s voice, the complex and dark secrets that bind them. Readers will be fascinated.” –Karen Frank, Northshire Bookstore, Manchester Center, VT

Hit and Run: A Novel by Lawrence Block (Morrow, $24.95)
“Lawrence Block’s hit man protagonist Keller is alone in Des Moines after being set up for murdering a presidential candidate. (After all, he was just in Iowa to do another contract killing.)The action never stops and leaves us hungering for the next book.” –Patricia Worth, River Reader, Lexington, MO

Rules of Deception by Christopher Reich (Doubleday, $24.95)
“Jonathan Ransom, a world-class mountaineer and surgeon for Doctors Without Borders, goes on the run after his wife dies in an accident in the Swiss Alps — and he finds out she wasn’t who he thought she was. A well-written thriller that takes off like a shot!” –Susan Wasson, Bookworks, Albuquerque, NM

Church of the Dog: A Novel by Kaya McLaren (Penguin, $13 paper)
“Mara, an art teacher, takes up her new job in ranch country in Washington State, moves into a bunkhouse on Earl and Edith’s property, and starts a magical relationship. This wonderful gem of a book is a story of bringing out the wonder and magic in all of us.” –Sue Richardson, Maine Coast Book Shop, Damariscotta, ME

House & Home: A Novel by Kathleen McCleary (Voice, $23.95)
“When Sam loses their home on a ‘crazy’ invention investment, Ellen, his wife, must come to grips with saying goodbye to her beloved house and with her anger. A timely and thoughtful book.” –Linda Vinstra, Great Northern Books and Hobbies, Oscoda, MI

House Rules: A Joe DeMarco Thriller by Mike Lawson (Atlantic, $23)
“Mike Lawson’s fine new Joe DeMarco thriller — set against the Washington, D.C., political backdrop — tackles what seems to be a new set of terrorist attacks in the U.S. The novel works on several levels — including vivid characters and fine and complex plotting — and Lawson addresses how fear is used to manipulate national politics.” –Dan Domike, Jackson Street Books, Seattle, WA

The Secret Scripture: A Novel by Sebastian Barry (Viking, $24.95)
“Barry’s novel of Roseanne McNulty, now in her hundredth year in an Irish mental hospital, is a haunting story of memory and how small decisions can have large consequences. The writing was such a treat that I actually got to the last page late one night and saved it until the next morning. I didn’t want to read it until I was fully awake and could relish the end.” –Rona Brinlee, The Book Mark, Atlantic Beach, FL

Telex From Cuba: A Novel by Rachel Kushner (Scribner, $25)
“Set in the last days of Cuba’s golden age (at least, for American businessmen), this saga, at once familial and national, chronicles the drama of Castro’s coming coup upon a family stuck in the center of an unstoppable storm. Kushner’s storytelling — as detailed as it is colorful; as truthful as it is fictional — reads like a vast mural in prose, covering the reader’s imagination with pages of forceful action and forthright emotion.” –Steve Shapiro, Rainy Day Books, Fairway, KS

Up for Renewal: What Magazines Taught Me About Love, Sex, and Starting Over (Atria, $24)
“When writer Cathy Alter challenged herself to change her life, she became the guinea pig in her own experiment: to live her life by the headlines of women’s magazines. Not only did her journey of self-discovery lead her to the man she had always dreamed of, but she also discovered how to cook a magnificent meal and forged a better relationship with her mother, all the while maintaining clear skin. Funny and endearing.” –Holly Nelson, Changing Hands Bookstore, Tempe, AZ

A Vengeful Longing: A Novel by R.N. Morris (Penguin Press, $24.95)
“Fans of historical crime novels, attend: here is a twisty, clever mystery set in 1860s St. Petersburg and starring Porfiry Petrovich, a shrewd, eccentric, and fascinating police magistrate investigating a murder that’s literally death by chocolate.” –Mark David Bradshaw, Watermark Books, Wichita, KS

Chosen Forever: A Memoir by Susan Richards (Soho, $23)
“Susan Richard has written a sequel to Chosen by A Horse, her wonderful memoir. Her new book relates how the publication of Chosen totally changed her life, connecting her to friends and family from whom she was estranged, and to a man who became the love of her life.” –Nancy Olson, Quail Ridge Books, Raleigh, NC

Vendors Sparkle This Summer

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

The Journey Collection
By Kay Mott
Windsor, Colorado

…carried exclusively by
An Open Book LLC
Greeley, Colorado

“Fly into the future with powerful wings and a voice that is your own.”

This is one of the first thoughts that came flying to my pen, a connection between what I see as life and what is inside my “being”. As the thoughts are displayed, an intention flows from them.

I know that I am just one, but if my words can somehow, just for a moment, cause a stillness in the reader, a smile or a brush with our source, then I am happy and have been successful.

The Journey Collection is a reminder that all of us have a voice, ideas deep in our being ready to explode and reinforce our purpose here on earth.

The words of The Journey Collection grace us with their presence and gently release their lessons. My hope is that you enjoy and want to share these messages.

Kay Mott

An Open Book LLC is happy to carry The Journey Collection line of baby apparel as well as notecards, (some ready to be framed), hats, car magnets, as well as Kay’s wonderful book of thoughts, musings, mantras and words from life.

Deb Meredith, “For the Love of Roses” has her beautiful and fragrant rose note cards, from roses she grows and photographs…at our store. Deb also has notecards with photos from the Red Feather area…gorgeous!

Mary Behling and Sally Knight have their acrylics and mixed media art on display. Their work is for sale and they are framed. Truly, these new pieces are stunning!. Sally also has prints in her print bin for sale.

Happy to say that Cindy Dennis has designed some of her one-of-a-kind bookmarks, once again…just for us. They are going fast!

July Book Club News

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008


T.A.R. (Teachers As Readers)
Change of Heart
by, Jodi Picoult

SOMETIMES TUESDAYS
Runaway
by, Alice Munro

ESCAPE BETWEEN THE COVERS
A Year By the Sea
by, Joan Anderson

DELTA KAPPA GAMMA
Pilot’s Wife
by, Anita Shreve

The House Next Door
by, Anne Rivers Siddons

WAWA’S
Jane Austin Titles

NUMBER ONE LADIES BOOK CLUB
One Thousand White Women
by, Jim Fergus

DORKS
The Bridge of Sighs
by, Richard Russo

INOMINATE
Tallgrass
by, Sandra Dallas

JEANNIE’S BOOK CLUB
Love Walked In
by, Marisa De Los Santos

NOVELS AND NOSH
Look Homeward Angel
by, Thomas Wolfe

DRAMA QUEENS/REEL WOMEN
Temple of My Familiar
by, Alice Walker
Now is the Time to Open Your Heart
by, Alice Walker
Saying Yes to Change
by, Joan Borysenko

BLUE STOCKINGS
Cranford
by, Elizabeth Gaskel

WATER VALLEY SOUTH
Loving Frank
by, Nancy Horan

FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
A Lady’s Life in the Rocky Mountains
by, Isabella Bird

WINE AND SPINE
Pillars of the Earth
by, Ken Follett

MARYANN’S
The Insufficiency of Maps
by, Nora Pierce