About this blog
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.
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Book Town Books – Grass Valley, California
On a recent trip to California we visited Book
Town Books, which is in historic Grass Valley, a town in the foothills of the
Sierra Nevada. The map here shows Grass Valley’s location (northern portion near center), other foothills
towns, and Calaveras County (shaded pink near bottom). The gold rush was focused in these foothills and
many of towns have their roots in the mining activities of the middle and late
1800s. There are many literary links to this area and period. Examples include:
Bret Harte and his stories: “The Luck of Roaring Camp,” and “The Outcasts of
Poker Flats.” Calaveras County is where Mark Twain set his famous story, “The
Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County.” This story gained Twain national
notice and was the featured story in his first published book, a collection of
stories, in 1867.
Although we visited only Book Town Books, the brochure
pictured above lists 20 independent booksellers in the area of Grass Valley and
Nevada City. Book Town Books is a cooperative with 21 dealers having booths
within the building. There is a rare book room and a huge variety of topics are covered within the various booths. Some photos of Book Town Books are shown
below.
Although there was not as much focus on collectible first
editions as I had hoped, the browsing experience was quite interesting. The books
pictured below came home with us. I picked these titles up to read, or reread,
and none of them are particularly collectible. Although the 1956 Eric Ambler mystery could fetch a fair amount if it were signed.
Finally, we had an excellent lunch to start our Grass Valley adventure at Cirino’s – see photo below and
All-in-all our brief visit to Grass Valley was a completely
enjoyable outing.
Monday, March 2, 2015
Harper Lee
I happened across a photo of Harper Lee being awarded The Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007 by George W. Bush, probably the President way on the other end of the literary spectrum from say Thomas Jefferson. I did an earlier post about Ray Bradbury and "W" - see post of April 29, 2013.
Curious as to what this medal signifies I found: The Presidential Medal of Freedom is an award bestowed by the President of the United States and is—along with the comparable Congressional Gold Medal, bestowed by an act of U.S. Congress—the highest civilian award of the United States. It recognizes those individuals who have made "an especially meritorious contribution to the security or national interests of the United States, world peace, cultural or other significant public or private endeavors".[3] The award is not limited to U.S. citizens and, while it is a civilian award, it can also be awarded to military personnel and worn on the uniform.
So Harper Lee joined a strange and varied group that includes such previous award winners as: Tony Blair, Whittaker Chambers, Dick Cheney, Alan Greenspan, Andy Griffith, Richard Petty, Nancy Reagan, Donald Rumsfeld, and very ironically, Strom Thurmond. George W kept out of Cheney's way partly by awarding many of these medals - shown below is his presentation to Arnold Palmer!
Saturday, February 21, 2015
Hemingway, Big Two-Hearted River, and Beer
I was putting together a mixed, six-pack of craft beer the
other day and saw a bottle of “Two Hearted Ale.” I thought, ah ha, a literary
brew and saw that the beer was indeed from a brewery in Michigan. Of course, I
added it to my six–pack. The name and label, showing a flashing trout, were
clearly referencing Hemingway’s short-story “Big Two-Hearted River.”
The story is outwardly about Nick Adams hiking along and
fishing in the river, located in Upper-Michigan. The story has underlying,
subtle implications about war and Hemingway’s experiences in WWI. It is
outwardly a simple, but actually, very complex story. I had first read the
story, I think, in the book The Nick
Adams Stories, which was published by Scribner’s in 1972 after Hemingway’s 1961
death. I liked the story and have re-read it a number of times since.
The background and geographical aspects are interesting.
Although the river of the story was in Upper-Michigan, the brewery (Bells
Brewery, Comstock, Michigan - below) is actually located far away from the Michigan Peninsula, just east of Kalamazoo, in southern,
Lower-Michigan. So, the Michigan link to Hemingway’s story is there, even if a
bit remote from the setting of the story.
The story has its roots in a fishing trip Hemingway took
with two friends in Upper-Michigan. This was after WWI and Hemingway was
still recovering from injuries he suffered from a mortar explosion near the
front lines in Italy. Hemingway and his
friends were actually fishing the Fox River (below), but the nearby (above) Two-Hearted River’s
name better fit the themes Hemingway was developing in the story. Early drafts
had Nick Adams fishing with friends, but subsequent versions ended with Adams
hiking the river and camping on his own.
This story originally appeared in In Our Time, which was Hemingway’s first book to be published. The
book was printed in 1924 by Three Mountains Press of Paris and was issued in a
numbered, limited edition of only 170 copies. Copies of this edition are
available on the collectors market, commanding hefty prices of around $50,000.
Other editions of In
Our Time quickly appeared. Boni & Liveright published a U.S. edition in
1925; a UK edition was published by Cape in 1926; the first edition published
by Hemingway’s long-time publisher, Scribners, appeared in 1930. All of these
editions are quite collectible.
Amazing what a simple trip to the liquor store can trigger.
Sunday, December 14, 2014
Updates Re Catalogues and Web Page
We have been struggling to keep our web page updated and are trying a different approach. We are adding special lists and catalogues to the web page with buy buttons so that books can be purchased directly from these. Catalogue 27 and the special list, Swamps, Keys, and Rip Tides, have been combined and its header is shown above. This list is available at the web page.
Our Holidays catalogue (header below - note I got a bit ahead of the calendar) will be mailed out during the coming week. If anyone would like a hard copy via snail mail, drop me an email at bob@squidinkbooks.com
The new catalogue will be up on the web page, with buy buttons, in a couple of weeks.
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Sunday, June 22, 2014
New Ad For Jul-Aug Issue Of Firsts
We have a new ad in the July-August issue of Firsts The Book Collector's Magazine - see above. The ad was designed to mesh with the article on collecting author Ross Thomas. Cover of the issue of the magazine is shown below. Info about the magazine is at: www.firstsmagazine.com
The special list of titles mentioned in the ad is up on the Squid Ink webpage and this link should take anyone interested in viewing it directly to the list:
http://www.squidinkbooks.com/PDFs/Special-List-Summer-2014-June-22-update.pdf
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)