Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: Broken Arrow (Page 119 of 141)

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.

Smarty/Bossypants

The title is Bossypants, but it could have easily been called Smartyhead. Comedian Tina Fey is a funny woman. Maybe a little smart-alecky, but that’s what we expect of comedians. She’s obviously a bright woman. Maybe it could have been called Smartypants.

She had a lot to say when she sat down to write.

Just short of two-hundred pages into the book, Ms Fey addresses her readers on a subject, and then presumably realized that her public isn’t necessarily comprised exclusively of women. She compares applying her newly bought contact lenses to activities required by feminine hygiene products.

“If you are male,” she writes, “I would liken it to touching your own eyeball and thank you for buying this book.”

Since I am a male reader, I appreciated the recognition while bearing up under her condescension – not that I particularly cared to visualize the analogy she had offered to women readers. I think I caught the drift of it. But I’m guessing she didn’t expect men to read the book.

It’s for the most part entertaining, as would be expected from a comedian. Humor isn’t the sole focus though, and that’s where it bogs down a little, particularly for the men. Birthday party planning, breast feedings, bad dates. I wasn’t looking for slapstick, but I was caught off-guard by some of the contents.

There is a how-to section regarding comedy performance. I guess there are up-and-coming comedians who might read the book for insights in honing the funny-skills. Personally, the guidelines for improvisation are wasted on me. I don’t see myself – near future or long-term – trying out a humor routine in front of an audience.

Similarly, the topics she covers in the space given to her Boss experiences have already been covered in greater detail by business management and human relations authors. Her insights are interesting, but seem wedged in and slightly out of place in a memoir (That’s how the book is categorized on the back cover).

Bossypants speaks to female equality, maternal issues, and Oprah. ESPN is not mentioned once. Therein lies the appeal – or lagging interest – depending on perspective. (I didn’t really expect sports jokes. There are some places that might have benefited by the inclusion of one or two as a distraction from the strict female orientation.)

Still, Bossypants is a quick and easy read, offering plenty of familiar cultural references. Some of the funniest lines are those throw-away types:

Two peanuts were walking down the street and one was a salted.

That’s her token joke, one she says she included for book buyers expecting a humorous read.

I guess that is enough for me.

Lord ha’ mercy.

I thought about my high school days the other evening, catching an episode of Two and a Half Men. Young Jake was pouting in his room, guitar in hand, shaking the house with an overly-amplified version of Smoke on the Water.

It occurred to me what an enduring song that has been.

Maybe it isn’t played all that often on the radio anymore. It might be more of a cultural reference now, I don’t know. It seems to me that the song – along with several others – pretty well defined an era of rock music.

Hearing Jake thump out the three or four notes, bum-bump-bummmm, bump-bum-ba-bummmm… made me think about way back when. Those things tend to make me feel older, since I realize that younger people probably don’t care one whit about the song or that time.

Today’s news made me feel even older (with all due respect to my youngish octogenarian friends and customers).

Jon Lord, the keyboard player for Deep Purple and a co-writer of the song, has died at age 71. Perhaps because I was high school age when the song was released, I have retained a mental image of the band members as young men. Maybe I thought they had found the Fountain of Youth.

They didn’t.

In fact, Jon Lord was quite a bit older at that time when I assumed he was near my own age.

He never slowed down, even after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer some years back. When Deep Purple disbanded, he played with 80’s rockers Whitesnake. Deep Purple reunited later, but in between Lord kept busy. He even had a classical work that was performed at Royal Albert Hall in London.

I’m sure there will be plenty of hits on YouTube this evening, bringing up videos of concert performances.

Jon Lord – a big part of the music scene of that time – will live forever in that venue.

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