Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: Bestsellers (Page 30 of 71)

Holidaze.

We spend so much time living our lives that it is sometimes difficult to recognize the various chapters – where we are, where we’ve been, what we have become. It was just yesterday, so it seems.

Way back then, I was hurrying up my holiday visit with the in-laws so I could drive back to Lawton to cover an early morning radio program. A day at work that had turned into Shades of Ebeneezer. I couldn’t wrangle time off on Christmas Day. Showed up for work in the chilly darkness. The program director unlocked the door and let me inside. I was surprised to see him. Apparently, he was surprised to see me. He asked me what I was doing there on Christmas morning.

The news, I replied. I’m the news director, remember?

He made a face and answered: It’s all Christmas music this morning. There aren’t any newscasts.

Oh.

The program director is in charge of the DJ staff. The news director is in charge of the news personnel. I asked him where all his part-timers were – those folks who desperately want to be on the radio.

He explained that none of them wanted to work Christmas morning, so he had fired them all. I didn’t fire my staff. But there we both were, the two top dogs barking our frustrated selves through the festival of carols at KSWO-AM.

Here I am at the bookshop counter so many years later. I have a radio in the window and music coming out of the speakers, but I’m several chapters removed from that part of my life. Now, my day starts at a more reasonable hour than morning drive radio required. I visit with people face-to-face instead of through a microphone and speakers.

It isn’t all books and bistro, as many of you know. I still do research for clients to help pay my bills. That’s what has me thinking about holidays and history.

Sifting through the records of a family it is easy to get to know them. I’m researching some folks who came to America from Europe in the late 1800s. This kind of investigating – before the internet – used to involve drives to distant courthouses and libraries. Trips to Kentucky and Virginia. North Carolina and Missouri.

It’s all keyboard skiing these days. I can type in a few words and BAM! I’m looking at treasured family portraits of young families from the turn of the century. I look at their faces and into their eyes and I trip through a juxtaposition of time – I’m much older than the people in the photograph, but even the youngest member of the family was born decades before me.

A few more searches reveal census records – that same husband and wife, a decade later. And another decade later. Age 41, Head of Household. Age 51, Head of Household. Age 61, living in Dallas. Age 71, living in a home for the aged.

A picture of the grey marble gravestone.

What chapter are you on in the book of your life?

It is too easy to skim through the pages. A place-marker comes around occasionally. A shiny Christmas morning with bright-eyed toddlers and sparkly wrapping paper. A quiet and long-overdue conversation with an old friend. A gathering of the cousins.

Make a mental note and appreciate the moments as stopping points in the narrative. Dog-ear a page or two. Come back to it later.

It isn’t a race to the finish. There are beautiful words included in the stories of our lives. It’s okay to read them more than once.

Merry Christmas all!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main St. Broken Arrow OK!

Where in the World? Front and Center

We’re on top of the world! Actually, the World is on top of us – literally. I’m flattered to notice that my next-door-neighbors and I share the background on the Tulsa World’s Broken Arrow web page. (You can click on the image for a slightly larger view, or visit the World’s webpage…)

Their logo runs right through the image of the bookshop’s storefront awning, partially obscuring the Books & Bistro lettering. (I can squint and make it out…) The sign for Star Jewelers is clearly visible, as is awning of Glamour Gowns & More and their slightly smaller lettering. I discovered the image after clicking on a link to a World review by restaurant critic Scott Cherry after he visited the newly opened Bruhouse Grill. I can attest to the fact that Mr. Cherry’s reviews can bring a crowd of dining guests, and I’ll be happy to see the additional traffic in the Rose District at the tail-end of the the street construction project.

The original photograph serving as the banner image is a credit to the remodeling efforts of the Broken Arrow couple behind four restored vintage BA storefronts. The construction work – some of which is still being completed – is much more than a cosmetic facelift. Many of the Rose District structures date back to statehood, and a number are “grandfathered in” where the building codes are concerned.

It is an expensive proposition to bring the wiring and plumbing of an old structure up-to-date. Those are things that –for the most part – aren’t even visible while walking into the store. Two of the three buildings at the far left in the image have not only been brought up to current building codes, but have had extensive structural reinforcement and cosmetic exterior updating.

What it boils down to: the buildings are better, much better, than they were brand new. Thermal glass. Inner wall insulation. Safety features.

They are buildings that not only LOOK good. They ARE good buildings.

There are two other buildings in the couple’s ownership that do not appear on the Tulsa World webpage, but they are equally sound, and beautiful residents of the Rose District community. As a history fanatic who grew up in towns much smaller than Broken Arrow (at least, smaller than BA has become in recent years), it pained me immensely to see local landmarks razed to make way for concrete parking lots.

Remodeling work on two downtown BA buildings had to be halted last fall, over concerns that the activity might bring the walls down on top of the workers. It was a case of too little, too late. The structures were in such a state of disrepair that they could not safely be brought back to life. Thankfully, the building housing the bookshop and the other storefronts in the ownership family have been given the kind of attention that will carry them forward for another one-hundred years.

Ask the planners. The heart of any city or town is the center of the original community. What we always called “downtown.” Whether it consists of a grid of skyscrapers like Tulsa or a single block of connected buildings like so many small Oklahoma towns, the original business district is vital – for a number of reasons.

When I first explored the idea of locating a bookstore in Broken Arrow (rather than Owasso, my original destination), I wanted to be “Downtown.” I wanted it to be the Main Street Bookstore. We landed on Main – just not Downtown.

How much sweeter it is!

We’re on top of the World! (Except, on their webpage, where the World is on top of us…)

Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main, Broken Arrow, OK!

Walk On!

What I meant to say, before the rant took over:

The street lamps are on in the Rose!

It’s better! Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main St. Broken Arrow, OK!

« Older posts Newer posts »