Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: books (Page 113 of 128)

New releases…

In stock (for now…) Just released: the controversial Navy Seal tell-all, Olympic gold-medal winner Hope Solo’s memoir, and the biography of Joe Paterno. All discounted from publisher’s price, as usual! Also have in stock some of the required school assigned titles, like the Lightning Thief, the Great Gatsby, and the Giver.

The much sought-after Devil in the White City (the true story of a serial killer at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair) is expected to be restocked Tuesday or Wednesday after a big run on the book Thursday.

When the TV season ends…

Shame on me!

As someone who usually reads the book before watching the movie or program, I’m embarrassed to admit that I’ve gone straight to video where Game of Thrones is concerned. The fiction series by George R. R. Martin is actually titled A Song of Fire and Ice and there are currently copies of several installments on the McHuston shelves.

I’ve read Martin stories in the past and have enjoyed them. He’s been writing a long time, and has covered a lot of territory, but has settled of late in the fantasy genre. A Song of Fire and Ice is set in medieval times and centers on struggles between rulers of the “Seven Kingdoms of Westeros.”

One of the problems I have with reading fantasy material is the language. Tolkien invented not only languages, but dialects as well, to accommodate the beings in his Lord of the Rings trilogy.

Here is an excerpt from a different author, as an example:

“I am Ghashai,” said the leader. “I speak for the Atkhorakha, the People of the Weeping Towers, now that Ukku is no more.”

When author Chris Pierson penned that passage for Volume III of the Taladas Trilogy, no doubt he had a pronunciation rolling around in his head. For me, there are some questions. Is the leader called Guh-ha-ash-eye-ee? Or maybe just Gash-ee. Gush-eye, perhaps. The entity that is no more: is that You-cue, Uck-oo, Yuke-cuh? Uck-kuh-you, maybe?

In a well-written story, I find I make my own version and stick with it, or simply jump over the invented name or word. The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo had a lot of Swedish towns and references, but I waded through and enjoyed that series.

I haven’t cracked open A Song of Fire and Ice. For one thing, my copies have been new, and if I read them they suddenly become used. But after watching two seasons of the television version I may have to tackle the series while awaiting season three.

There are seven separate kingdoms in the series, represented by that many families and more. At least in the book version, it’s possible to refer back to see what name is associated with what Royal House. Doing that with the video is a little hit and miss.

But I do like that Martin has tagged some of his characters with simple monikers like “Ned Stark.”

That one, at least, is easy to read and remember.

An Irish literary treasure lost.

When the bookstore originally opened, my sister Linda presented me with a housewarming gift: appropriately, it was a book.

A hardback copy of the just-released Whitethorn Woods by Irish author Maeve Binchy. I’d already sold a number of her titles in my capacity as a bookstore clerk previous to opening McHuston Booksellers. I knew she was popular.

She was also a great writer, as I learned after cracking open Linda’s gift. (That’s figurative speaking there – I would never crack a book spine!) Coupled with my experience traveling Ireland with my daughter and mother just a few years before, I greatly enjoyed Binchy’s story of Irish progress versus tradition.

“We have lost a national treasure,” the Irish Prime Minister Edna Kenny said today, following word that Maeve Binchy died Monday at age 72.

The author was in a Dublin hospital with her beloved husband at her side after battling a brief illness. Many of her 16 novels were dedicated to her husband.

Her worldwide sales topped forty million books, which included her novels, four collections of short stories, a novella, and a play. Much of her work was set in her native Ireland – both Dublin and rural communities.

I thanked my sister for the book, but I’m not sure I made her understand how much I truly enjoyed it. It was not a title I would have purchased for myself, having incorrectly assumed that Binchy was strictly a romance writer. I have nothing against the genre and have read my share, and probably more – as people ask questions about authors and I feel I need to have some experience.

The rich characters in her books are as vivid as the Irish landscape in which she places them.

A few minutes ago, a copy was placed on the sales counter along with a couple of other books.

“I was sorry to hear she passed away,” I said. It happens regularly that the death of an author spurs sales of the books.

“She died?” asked my customer.

“Sorry,” I replied. “I figured that’s why you were buying the book.”

It turns out, the customer was simply a fan who had read a number of Maeve Binchy titles. It was appropriate that the one she bought this afternoon was Light a Penny Candle, the author’s first novel.

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