Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: bookbinding (Page 39 of 99)

Tee Off!

*UPDATE*

News of the night, for those who may have shy of the cold evening: We had a good time here at the shop, Dustin and I. After a slow start, we played host to quite a few folks – many of whom were visiting for the first time. Some of the scheduled activities were called off – the outside musicians, for example. No sense in having their talented fingers snap off in the chilly air!

For the shoppers, there were warm interiors to dash into and I heard from several folks who decided they had overdressed for the weather. I was told by several ladies that they were wearing long-underwear, and I’m not sure that conversation has ever been broached in my presence.

1a2014TeeOff

Since it wasn’t quite so crowded as last year’s event, it was easier to navigate the store and we were able to find some good homes for a good many books. (The cookies seemed to disappear, too!)

Thanks everyone, for coming out!

McHuston

============
Earlier Note
============

Chilly weather. Maybe chili weather, too. Some might call it downright – cold. Heavy-coat night or not, the Holiday Tee Off will offer specials, prizes, and merchant hospitality in the Rose District!

As for the bookshop, it is warm enough inside to make it a plenty comfortable stop, if you care to venture out. November 13th would normally be a little early for me as a date to have a tree inside the premises, but it is standing up near the front door. It’s a special kind of spruce, a Norwegian Nude. You can click on the image and see that it’s pretty bare, for a fact.

We don’t know how it will turn out, turn-out-wise, whether it will be the open-house mad-house it was a couple of years ago, or something a little less due to the need to park and walk. (Main is blocked to traffic until around 9pm.)

The cookies are out for our open house. We’ll see how long they last this year.

Grab your ski-parka and…

Come visit!

McHuston

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

Gotcha covered.

The front door chime at lunchtime didn’t always mean someone entered the shop. Some door-openings were folks checking to see how busy the old man was. Well.

That’s changed.

You regulars already know it, but it occurred to me that I never got around to a website note. So – here it is.

A couple of years ago I had stored away tables and chairs. I realized I could only wait on so many people at once and still provide good service. And taking care of guests is really important to me.

SSPX1022

My son Dustin has mastered the menu items and has taken up the primary kitchen duties. He spent a limited amount of time in the kitchen with me back in the Paddy’s Irish days and has mastered his own specialties that have proven popular. He’s behind the daily chalkboard specials. Some of them, like the Roasted Corn and Pepper Quesadillas, are strictly south-of-the-Irish border. Dustin is a salsa-aficionado and makes his own to accompany the special, along with some of the best guacamole I’ve ever tasted. It’s also found on a soft-crust sourdough bread sandwich with bacon, turkey, and guacamole. You’ll also encounter specials ranging from Pulled Pork BBQ Sliders, Grown-up Grilled Cheese with Tomato Soup, to a gluten-free vegetable soup.

Even the bacon is a new thing. Our Tulsa World restaurant review way-back-when mentioned that there was a fear that the books would begin to smell like breakfast if we fried it up in the kitchen. We don’t have that problem cooking it in the oven, which allowed Dustin to add it to his fresh ingredients list.

Together, Dustin and I dragged the tables out of storage and set them up front. Greg, our neighbor at Southern Magnolia (a great shop with everything from antiques to fireplace hearths!), contributed a tabletop that allowed the seating of an additional party of four. And here’s the news for those of you who had been peeking in to see if I was already busy…

Dustin’s wife Rachel is keeping up with the guests in spectacular fashion. As most of you have heard me admit, my days of carrying four and five plates at a time are gone. (I didn’t worry about dropping them in the past. Now, I worry.) She’s fast and efficient, and I don’t have to send parties of six or more away like I did in the past.

The bistro has always been licensed for low-point beer, but I didn’t stock it during the Rose District renovation project. The construction fences and barrel barricades are gone, and we’ve stocked a limited selection of beers, including Killian’s Irish Red, Blue Moon, PBR, Coors & Bud Lite, and Amber Bock – among others. On draft is Boulevard Wheat, a craft beer from Kansas City.

The hours are expanded, too. Lunch is served from 11am to 2pm, including Saturdays.

No need to peek inside the door to check the tables. Come in and let us serve you.

There’s no more old bookman racing like crazy, solo.

Come visit!

McHuston

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

Steel popping up changes in the Rose.

Things are reaching upward in the Rose District. Solid growth, too. Solid steel.

Some folks commented on Saturday about the changes in downtown Broken Arrow. They’d moved away and had just returned. Another fellow was visiting from Edmond and said he wondered whether BA even had a downtown. He mentioned how impressed he was with it.

MVC-048F

If it’s been a time since you’ve visited, you’ll spot changes once you get back here. (And that ought to be soon, by my reckoning!) On our block, things are up-to-snuff (there’s a grandpa-ism!) with the completion of the utilities at the sidewalk by the park on Broadway.

It’s a different matter from Commercial to Dallas.

You’ll encounter a road construction sign at the intersection, but no orange barrels or barrier fences. Most of the work is actually being done on Dallas and El Paso, with some detours required on some days. (Many days a single lane is kept open.) It also comes into play at night; the streetlamps have been dark south of Dallas Street for the past couple of evenings while the utility work is completed.

MVC-047F

Going up between Spoke House (bicycle shop) and the In the Raw, Rooftop, and Pinot’s Palette building are some sturdy-looking grey columns and girders that will be the supporting structure for what will amount to a skyscraper here in the Rose District. My small-town upbringing still keeps me marveling at any structure with multiple stair-landings. (I won’t go into my fear as a kid, riding up the rickety elevator at Diamond Hardware in McAlester, while delivering early morning newspapers to above-the-store apartments.)

The steel supports here in the Rose will provide the structure for upstairs apartments, which will be located above the ground-floor commerce. At street level will be Andolini’s Italian, with an anticipated opening next year.

Between Dallas and El Paso there is a similar crop of grey steel, as well as a wide staircase near the center of the project. The bank building will also feature a tower similar to a clock or bell tower, and if the completed structure looks anything like the architect’s rendering on posters at the bank-front, it’s going to be a beauty. That part of Main is going to be busy for quite some time, since voters approved funding to change the old bank building into a district Arts Center.

Exciting stuff.

MVC-046F

I was personally excited to get an invitation to the pre-opening of the Rooftop from Jason Scarpa, whose Main Street Tavern continues to attract crowds. Unfortunately, I had a previous commitment that kept me from attending. (Work related, you know, as my social life is as fictional as the stories I read…) It’s good to see the lights on up there, and I’m in hopes of paying a visit before too long.

Great to see Stogies, Fiesta Mambo, Pinot’s Palette, and Main Street Tavern open on Sunday. I’d love to be able to keep the bookstore open on Sunday, but there are things I can only finish while the door is locked, since I don’t have a clerk to tend the front counter. I know that Sunday is typically a slower restaurant day, but there are plenty of people looking for a place to eat, and the more businesses that remain open on Sunday in the Rose, the better it will be for everyone. (Goes for Monday, too. I can’t tell you how many apologies I’ve made to customers on behalf of my fellow merchants who remain closed on Monday. I have never been able to understand the logic, although it could have something to do with family or social lives, I don’t know.

MVC-045F

We’ll have the street blocked off next Saturday for Grills and Grilles, a car-show and food event that brought out some beautiful automobiles for the inaugural edition of the event. You can make a plan now to work in a visit in between your football games or pumpkin patch visits.

Chef Dustin is back in the continental US after his tropical vacation. The bistro will be open for business again on Monday after the short break, with fresh soup, stew, sandwiches, and specials prepared just for you.

Come visit!

McHuston

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

« Older posts Newer posts »