Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: Books and Bistro (Page 61 of 92)

Goodbye Speedway. Hello Casual Shopping.

It may have some folks “seeing red,” but I think it’s a thing of beauty. Talking about the color of the north-south traffic signals in the Rose District. I got shivers the other night when I was leaving the shop.

It was after dark, as usual, and something caught my eye in the rear-view mirror. I started to pull to the side of the road, thinking it was an ambulance or – more typically – a fire department truck barreling down Main.

It wasn’t.

The flashing red was a traffic light – one that I had stopped for without thinking much about it at the time. When I looked back in the mirror a few moments later, the lights at every intersection along Main were stopping traffic, glowing red.

Now – I’ll admit to being aggravated when traffic in three directions is halted at red lights, while no cars are even approaching the green. It happens frequently at Elm and 91st (Washington St, as it’s labeled in BA).

But downtown Broken Arrow is not an expressway or a thoroughfare. It should not be the fastest route to traverse that two mile stretch from Kenosha to Washington.

So. There are some drivers wondering why they have to stop at Main and Commercial. No cars are coming. Some have been angry and it is easy to spot them. They are the drivers now pushing fifty-miles-an-hour in the length of a city block, trying to make the next light before it turns red.

Those folks are missing the point. Badly.

When Rhema hangs millions and millions of colored lights on the trees at Christmas, they expect drivers to cruise through at a reasonable pace, to be able to look at the brilliant splendor, while avoiding smashing into other cars and people ambling through the crosswalk. When you pack the relatives into the backseat to go tour the Rhema display, I’m guessing you don’t attempt a land speed record driving down Kenosha (71st as you Tulsa people know it).

But that is what has been happening on Main. For years it has been the quickest way to whip through that two-mile stretch. No speed traps. No red lights. Four fat lanes of traffic and crosswalks be darned (family blog, you recall). That phrase that aptly describes fear, looking “like a deer in the headlights” originated in Broken Arrow. Except, it was actually: looking “like a ‘dear’ at the green light.”

Mother, holding the hand of her toddler, impatiently waiting to cross Main: No, dear. We have to wait for the green light.

Toddler: But Mommy! The light IS green.

Mother: Yes, dear. But I meant that figuratively. We only have a green light to cross when the nearest car is more than a block away. Get ready now… When I scream GO! Fly like the wind!

My own life was saved the other evening by my mother, as we stepped from the sidewalk onto the street. The light was green, the little walking man shining on the post was green, the new gizmo was beeping that we could cross with ADA impunity. We were halfway across when a pickup sped through the red light, directly in front of us. Had I been walking at my normal pace, I’d be dead.

Or laid up, wishing I was.

The soap box here is beginning to sag under my continued use of it. The point? Rose District is no longer business as usual. Changes are afoot. Literally.

It isn’t a deserted stretch of buildings in which you might park to visit your tax-preparer or attorney’s office. Plenty of people have recounted to me the great times in downtown BA of old – when there was the soda fountain and the drug store and the movie theater and the dime store.

Sorry. But the Rose District has a history museum for that stuff. If the city is to raise tax revenue from this area, it can’t be a largely forgotten group of buildings. Broken Arrow is now one of the largest cities in Oklahoma, and an embarrassing percentage of our residents have never visited Main Street between 71st and 91st. Others know it only as a shortcut where speeding is ignored.

Newsflash. It has not been ignored. There was simply no recourse for those of us trying to get people to stop and shop.

But red lights at the intersections might allow some drivers to look around. Maybe spot a gift shop. A restaurant. New buildings under construction. A specialty chocolatier. Antiques dealers. Florists. A bicycle shop. Clothing. Furniture. More restaurants. A cigar bar. An art gallery. Women’s formal wear. Gold and diamonds at the jeweler’s shop. A deli. A vendor’s consortium. Another one with completely different offerings. A coffee shop/restaurant at the far end. Antiques and specialty furniture restoration.

Oh. And there is the gym and the medical office and the cellphone store. Oh, and another restaurant. I’m sure I’ve left some of my neighbors out, but this is already running long and my cognizance has a limited-time efficiency.

(Oh, yeah. May I also mention a bookstore in the Rose?)

What? Didn’t realize all this could be found along the edges of your 71st to 91st racetrack? What can I say? Pull up a redlight and give up 90 seconds of your life. Take a deep breath and a look around.

You might see something you like.

And those of you who already understand the point of this historic part of Broken Arrow – Come visit!

McHuston

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

I’ve been framed! (Well, technically not me…)

As long as we’re sharing recently framed artwork (one of my FB friends recently posted an unusual find), here is my just-displayed project finished up ever-so-nicely by the Pro – Alisa, owner of the Rose District’s art gallery: Your Design.

Several years ago I was asked to find out some details about a fellow named Nils Thor Granlund. Part of a research project (I do contract research to help pay the bills (remember I’m a book dealer in an iPad world…). Granlund was a pioneer broadcaster who lived in New York City during the Roaring Twenties, at the time of the very first experimental radio broadcasting stations.

I had never heard of him.

Not much information could be easily found about him. That fact struck me as odd, since from all appearances he was quite famous in his heyday. I dug and dug, researched, wrote letters, copied from newspaper archives. Took over a year.

The research wound up as a biography, completed with pictures and footnotes (required by the publisher – a major pain). As part of the research, I ran across an eBay auction featuring a WWII era copy of Billboard Magazine with Granlund on the cover. Figuring there would be an article with some juicy insights, I bid it up enough to win it. (Broadcasting Magazine is still around, a trade magazine for the music and entertainment industry.)

Inside, on the table of contents page, was a little note to the effect that – on the cover was Nils Thor Granlund – currently extending his record run at the Florentine Gardens nightclub in Hollywood. Nada mas. Not even a little paragraph more. Oh, well.

I thought at the time that I ought to have the old magazine framed, and Lo! All these years later I finally carried it over to Ms. Inglett’s gallery (211 S. Main Street, in Broken Arrow’s Rose District). In truth, I thought the magazine looked pretty tacky, but since NTG (as he was popularly known at the time) was the subject of one of my books, I thought he deserved a spot on the shop wall.

Whoa!

Got the framed magazine back. The magazine is tacky no longer. The off-balance-out-of-whack front cover layout has been completely brought back into symmetry by Alisa’s artistic eye and framing skills. Some kind of magical scalpel-work on her part produced lines in the matboard that match the magazine. Unfortunately, my old phone-camera doesn’t do it much justice (you can click on it for a larger view), but the matboard art sets off the cover ink of the magazine, and it looks quite nice. Nah. It’s the Cat’s Pajamas, as Mr. Granlund would have put it, in his day.

Most importantly, I did not fall from the ladder while pounding the nail.

When I wrote the book, I had high hopes that I could rescue Mr. Granlund from his historical obscurity. Alas, the book sales did not accomplish that.

Perhaps the nicely framed magazine will have a greater impact regarding his fame.

Come visit!

McHuston

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

Have a Heart!

There should be some smiles on Friday. And not just among those receiving the heart-shaped boxes of chocolates. Unless your shopping is done exclusively online, you’ve no doubt seen the all-green aisle featuring shamrocks and kiss-me-I’m-Irish stickers. It’s called the Seasonal section. And St. Paddy’s day is waaaaay next month.

Since the removal of the glitter and Christmas wrap, the seasonal aisle has been red-hot red with hearts and candy. Those stores are where some of the smiles will be found.

Any business selling those heart-shaped chocolate boxes will be ringing up sales on Valentines Day. Oh, there are some serious planners among the love-struck who have already made their purchases – but there will be plenty of shoppers who have just realized they are heading home to the better half empty-handed.

A marital no-no, as you know-know.

So expect some jam-ups at those retailers. Same thing with the card stores. Last minute Valentines are just fine, as long as they are hand-delivered. The post office will be a heartbreaker if you’re hoping to send that love missive cross-country (or even cross-town for that matter).

Here in the Rose District you’ll find a unique shop perfectly suited for Valentines Day. The sweets are hand-made daily at Nouveau – Atelier de Chocolat, an Old World Belgian chocolate shop that has plenty of special one-of-a-kind treats that will keep you out of a New World of hurt.

Of course, my neighbors at Star Jewelers have been busy for days. Diamonds are a girl’s best friend. Watch repairs are a guy’s distant acquaintance. There ought to be some smiles in the neighborhood on those counts.

Oh, and the flower shops. Nothing says “I Love You” like a dozen roses or a ribbon-wrapped arrangement. Nothing says “I enjoy your company occasionally” like a potted plant. Nothing says “I admire your gardening skills” like gift-tagged shrubbery. Now, there’s a smile, in spades.

Not to mention the restaurant trade (except I’ll be mentioning it in depth for this next paragraph, exclusively): According to the National Restaurant Association – those folks who are paid to lobby our elected officials on how to vote on dessert issues – Valentines Day is firmly entrenched in the top five Dining-Out days of the year. Here they are, according to 20 years of research by the NRA (not the rifle people). Mother’s Day remains the top holiday for dining out followed by Valentine’s Day, Father’s Day, New Year’s Eve, and Easter. (Personal note: I understand the top four on the list, but really… Easter? Was Grandma’s glazed ham so bad that dining out became a family tradition? Did someone misspell the occasion as EATER? And how come the Top-Eating-Holiday ever invented – Thankgiving – did not even make the list? Are you kidding? Really? We love to home-bake our turkeys.)

There will be some smiles around the tables – candlelit and otherwise – from both diners and those serving up love-on-a-plate. It’s all about impressing on Valentines Day, and that includes the tip. Servers love that. Servers work double shifts for that. Servers miss their own Valentines Day dinner for that.

So – Friday is smiles-all-round day.

Unless, like me, you’re among the Valentines Day challenged. (This blog is all about political correctness.) Some of us stop in the Rose District chocolate shop just to smell the rarified air, wishing there was a reason to buy a boxful, knowing that a least one or two will be shared after the gift-giving.

I’m thinking there should be a special occasion for those of us who think outside-the-chocolate-box. A date on which we could feel noticed and appreciated. A non-Valentines-Day day, if you will. But, not necessarily a day when a card or a flower arrangement purchase is required. A day that the rest of us could go out to a restaurant (but not necessarily feel pressured to look at the special meal menu prepared just-for-the-day’s event).

A day, perhaps, that we could recognize the importance of others in our lives, although flowers and potted plants wouldn’t have to figure into the equation.

Kind of a Not Valentines Day, for the rest of us.

Oh. Wait a minute. We already have that.

All the other days of the year.

In the words of that noted card-writer Ann Nonimus (in text printed over a talking bowling pin): You BOWL me over, Valentine!

Come visit!

McHuston

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

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