Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: Books and Bistro (Page 57 of 92)

Late nights. Little sleep. Great story.

Thank goodness The Doll is back on the shelf. Maybe now I can get a full night’s rest. It has been some time since I’ve found a book compelling enough to trigger that “maybe just one more chapter” reader’s syndrome. Finally put the book down and – next thing you know – the alarm clock rings in the morning’s start.

Here’s the thing. The author’s own story is as gripping as those involving her semi-psycho heroine.

The Doll is actually the third outing for Texas author Taylor Stevens and her somewhat androgynous character, Vanessa Michael Munroe. Some aspects of the character might have been clearer had I read the first two books, but The Doll manages to stand alone with a minimal amount of character backstory-rehash. Unlike some authors, who awkwardly reach into the character cupboard for the box of honey-covered recaps, Ms Stevens works those details into the narrative without a glaring spotlight.

Munroe, the book’s heroine, might be a cross between Jason Bourne and Lisbeth Salander. There is a dark history that shapes Munroe’s actions, which are often reactive and delivered with the speed of a striking viper. She has the combat proficiency of super-survivor Bourne and the same hyperawareness that enables him to escape the many deadly situations he encounters. Salander, the dark genius of Stieg Larssen’s Girl with the Dragon Tattoo trilogy, must be a near-cousin to Munroe and the physical and mental scars she bears from her abused past.

It’s easy to envision a movie producer jumping on Michael Munroe, with ideas of a strong-female protagonist film franchise.

And the writing?

Ms. Stevens has a style reminiscent of several others, with her own quirks and techniques. Some work for me better than others, but there are passages in which the author gives the reader credit for some intelligence rather than hanging an “explain all” billboard in the next sentence. You may have read those CSI-type abbreviation references in some books, where the author explains the words behind the letters in the next sentence.

Here’s a concocted example: The SAMSAT brigade rolled up in their armored rig and poured out like center-ring clowns at Barnum and Bailey. The San Antonio Medical Society Attack Team was known for their SWAT unit approach to fundraising. And it was no surprise that the Special Weapons And Tactics unit had failed to make good on their pledge three years running.

Taylor Stevens sometimes gives a full explanatory reference much later on, and it seemed to me that on more than one occasion, she offered no glossary at all. Which was just fine. Acronym schooling rarely pushes the story forward and is usually incidental to the plot.

As for the author’s history, I wish I had waited until I finished reading the book to satisfy my curiosity. When I’m enjoying a story, I often look up the writer’s bio. Tom Clancy, for example, wrote highly-technical military espionage stories, but never served in the armed forces. He was an insurance agent who wrote The Hunt for Red October in his spare time.

When I went in search of Ms. Stevens’ background, I discovered a bio that included cult communes, nomadic lifestyles, separation from family, street life, and a lack of formal education. Of course, I understand that educational experiences often relate to intelligence only tangentially.

As well as any autodidact, I realize that life presents itself as a global classroom and that day-to-day interactions can be the fodder for fantastic fiction and character development. We “live and learn,” as they say.

Her website includes an admission that Ms. Stevens has fallen into cliché on occasion, due to her limited exposure to fiction. I can relate to that, having once written what I thought was the greatest science fiction time-travel conundrum ever put down on paper, only to learn it was probably the most hackneyed dead-horse of a plot ever left for reworking. I was young.

As I read The Doll, I found myself, upon encountering a particularly impressive passage, falling out of the story to reflect on the fact that it was produced by an author with little formal education. I imagine after reading her somewhat vague bio, I had fashioned a clunky stereotype – one that made the sophistication of her writing incongruous with her professed training (or lack thereof).

For all I know, Ms. Stevens may have gone through an immersion similar to mine, when I discovered I’d missed many of the 19th century classics, and read Dumas, Dickens, Hardy, Defoe, and the like – at the kitchen table, where I could keep a large dictionary placed nearby. I have a pretty good (though conversationally useless) Victorian vocabulary as a result.

With so many authors and so many books, I feel slightly guilty when I read more than one book by any particular author. People ask me “Who writes like James Patterson? I’ve read all his books.” I read a variety to be able to answer. The Girl with the Jason Bourne skills? That would be Vanessa Michael Munroe, the next installment of which I hope to be diving headlong into – forthwith.

Want a copy of your own?

Come visit!

McHuston

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

Teaching an old book new tricks.

Weak spine. Sunburn. Bumped head. Maladies of aging that aren’t that surprising after more than one-hundred years on this old Earth. I hope I hold up as well as these old books. At the very least, I hope my appendages don’t fall off from overuse, like the leather book covers did on this two volume set.

Back when these volumes were printed, paper was a lot sturdier. In general, books printed and bound before the mid-nineteenth century hold up well over time. Like everything else, it depends on how they are cared for during their life on the shelf.

If you never change the oil in the car, the engine could fail eventually, if pressed hard enough. A lot of shiny cars turn rusty on the coasts. Sun does its damage over time, too. Particularly when it comes to books parked near a window.

It might have just been constant opening and closing that ruined the leather-bound boards on this 1860 set. A well-read book of that time would be more likely to lose only the front cover. Sun and humidity will ruin even fine leather over the decades, and I’m guessing that’s what happened to Lord McCauley’s Miscellaneous Writings, published by Spottiswood and Company of London.

When the books arrived, the back cover of volume two was missing in action. The three others were completely detached.

There are ways to repair loose boards, but the process is much more involved and – to tell the truth – many antique books don’t warrant the time and effort required to put them to rights. Like old car restoration, some classics will benefit from a frame-off, ground-up repair. Others just need the dents pounded out and spray painted.

I’m hoping the work on these two volumes will increase their value, and it’s probable, since I picked them up on the cheap due to their condition. Since one board was gone, reattaching the covers wasn’t an option. The back board of volume two came courtesy of an old Clive Cussler novel that had seen better days. Sort of like the organ donor program. It was sky-blue and hardly suited for an antique, but that’s all right. It’s well hidden after the repair.

The Cussler-cover is now underneath a new leather binding at the spine, and an 1860s-design-appropriate piece of cloth. Rather than lose the nice marbled paper used in the original free end page, I photocopied the board interior and used it as the new paste-down page, which covers the binding work on the inside.

As you can see in the third image, Volume One is still waiting for the emergency room doctor, but Volume Two is now complete and ready for another 150 years.

With a little good fortune, it will spend its second incarnation out of the sunlight and in the comfort of a good home, so those covers won’t come loose again.

Of course, after 150 years, I won’t be surprised if my arms simply drop off one day. I’ll keep the binder’s glue ready, just in case.

Come visit!

McHuston

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

What a difference a year makes.

Time was, you could fire a cannon down the middle of Main Street after 5pm and not worry a single soul. It wasn’t that long ago. Before moving the shop into the Rose District, I would occasionally take a slight detour after locking up and drive through Old Downtown BA.

Dead.

You could have parked anywhere, but wouldn’t have had much of a reason to do so. Nothing much was open. I should know. For years, I was probably the last retail shop open after five or six o’clock on Main.

Take a look at the picture. You can click on it for a slightly larger view, if you like. The snapshot was taken about seven-thirty this evening. As you can see, it’s a completely different scenario these days. The image is looking south through the Main and Commercial Street intersection, from in front of the shop. When I looked the other direction, the parking spaces were filled all the way to Broadway.

Since I don’t own an NSA secret-agent look-around-the-corner camera, you can’t see the cars parked east and west along Commercial.

And in the public lot on Ash Street.

The photo was taken about the time of day I would occasionally drive down Main before heading to the house, back when the shop was in the Oak Crest Center. Back then, you could have had your pick of spaces in which to park, but not many shopping or dining options.

That was before Main Street Tavern and the Bruhouse Grill and Fiesta Mambo. And with yesterday’s announcement about The Rooftop (to open in June above In the Raw’s new restaurant location), and the rumored restaurant to be located right next door, the evening activity will certainly make for busy sidewalks and happy, hungry guests.

But no more firing of cannons down the middle of Main.

Come visit!

McHuston

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

« Older posts Newer posts »