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Monday, December 5, 2016
Holiday Gift Certificates Available From Squid Ink
Holiday gift certificates are available this season - contact me via email or phone if you'd like to purchase one. Happy Holidays.
Friday, September 2, 2016
Friday, March 4, 2016
Harper Lee and Opus
The Letters From Harper Lee to Berkeley Breathed
The cartoonist Berkeley Breathed shared a correspondence with the author Harper Lee. After her death on Friday at the age of 89, Mr. Breathed wrote on Facebook of the letters they had exchanged over the years. Later, he shared with The New York Times four letters he had received from Ms. Lee over the span of 14 years, with the first coming in 1994 and the last arriving in 2008. FEB. 21, 2016 Related Article
The links above lead to interesting details regarding Harper Lee and her fondness for Opus the penguin - one of the creations of cartoonist Berk Breathed (Bloom County and Opus). the cartoon panel above appeared in 1995, while below is a letter Lee wrote regarding the impending demise of opus in 2008. Breathed was always one of my favorites and I miss Opus too.
However, Breathed says the letter below helped inspire him to bring back his cartoons anew as Bloom County 2015 - an online only return of his famous characters.
Monday, December 7, 2015
Holidays 2015
We will begin mailing our hard-copy Catalogue 31 tomorrow and will have a pdf posted at our web site by the coming weekend. Our themes for the listings this Holiday Season are prize-winning books and books-into-film.
If anyone would like a hard-copy via snail-mail, please send me an e-mail at:
Saturday, October 17, 2015
Bookmans In Flagstaff
We visited the Bookmans store in Flagstaff on Friday, October 9th. Katie and I both felt like it was the nicest, and most well-organized, Bookmans we’ve visited. Bookman Bob (Bob Oldfather founder and head of Bookmans) has six stores in the state now (3 here in Tucson, 2 in the Phoenix area, and 1 in Flagstaff – at one time he had a store in Sierra Vista but that has been closed for several years now). We had a nice chat with the Manager of Books at the Flagstaff store (Matt Christiansen) who was most interesting and very helpful.
Bookmans has been trending away from its original main focus
on books and CDs for a couple of years now, and this has resulted in
considerable disarray in the Tucson stores, where antiques, collectibles,
musical instruments, and miscellaneous junk has been squeezed into the stores.
It has reached a point where I actually curse to myself whenever I walk into
the store on Grant. I am not quite sure what has motivated this helter-skelter
diversification, except a desire to make more money. But the loss of focus
seems serious to me, and Bookman Bob should consider some reorganization for
the Tucson stores – the used sporting goods and outdoor equipment store he
opened on Speedway could be a model for returning at least one of the stores
back to a focus on books.
Books that came home with us:
These two books by Martin Cruz Smith were both signed and I
picked them up for a collection of novels by Smith. I am hoping to get all his
books signed and perhaps write an article about collecting his first editions. Wolves Eat Dogs is an Arkady Renko novel
– Renko first appeared in Gorky Park
and has been featured in a recurring series of eight mysteries, usually
appearing in every other Smith novel during recent years. Much of this novel is
set in the Ukraine around Kiev, especially in the Zone of Exclusion around the
site of the Chernobyl nuclear-reactor disaster. This zone has been mostly
reclaimed by nature and wildlife, including packs of wolves. I felt that this
was one of the better Renko novels, ranking it with Gorky Park as a good read.
December 6 is a
stand-alone novel that is set in Tokyo in the weeks leading up to Pearl Harbor.
The main character is an American who grew up in Japan – is he a spy? As in
most of Smith’s novel, his research results in interesting history being
interwoven into his plots. As usual, I learned much reading this book, but felt
that it dragged some and didn’t quite work as well as most of Smith’s novels.
Erik Larson’s The
Devil in the White City – Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair That
Changed America - has been hard to find locally in a first edition. His
nonfiction has become very popular with and following this title. It is about
the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893 and revolves around both the architect who
made the fair a marvelous reality, and also a serial killer who stalked victims
among the fair-goers. This book won a 2004 Edgar Award for nonfiction and was a
finalist for the National Book Award.
Small Bookstore At La Posada Hotel On Route 66
We went up to Winslow from October 8th to 10th
to celebrate our anniversary a bit early (it’s actually on the 11th).
We visit Winslow several times a year and stay at the historic La Posada Hotel
– designed by Mary Colter and the last of the famous Fred Harvey Hotels. The
Turquoise Room restaurant there is our Arizona favorite.
The Hotel also has a small bookstore that features mostly
regional books on topics ranging from Mary Colter, to the Navajo and Hopi, to
the Santa Fe railroad and Fred Harvey, to Route 66. The entire hotel complex is an interesting place to stop, if you're out looking for kicks on old 66.
Monday, September 28, 2015
Our 30th Catalogue Is Available
Squid Ink's Catalogue number 30 is available for viewing on-line at:
http://www.squidinkbooks.com/PDFs/Squid-Ink-Books-Catalogue-30.pdf
Part of the first page is shown above and photos of six of the titles available from the catalogue are shown below.
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