Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: Jenks (Page 121 of 122)

Sure’n I recall a fain eve full o’ St. Paddy.

The night was party-perfect and I was helping host one of the bigger celebrations in Tulsa. It was Eire-crazy, enough so that we had to post an Irishman at the front door. There was a line outside.

St. Pat's hats

For the US Irish: a BIG day.

A man and his daughter worked their way to the front, and Robbie says in his fain Dublin brogue, “Aye, the fire marshall says we’re full-up.”

“I see you are,” the man answered. “I’m the fire marshall.”

I was summoned immediately, the words “fire marshall” shouted into my ear over the blaring Irish music. Yikes, I thought, in an adopted Irish brogue. I ran to the front.

Well, ‘ran’ is an overstatement. I leaned and elbowed my way through the human-carwash to where Robbie stood. The man in front of the podium introduced himself and said he was happy to see that we were limiting entry.

The way he said it made it clear that – in his scanning of our happy crowd – we were clearly over capacity. I hadn’t counted but I figured it was a cinch we were. As fire marshall, the man had the option of marching everyone outside and then counting the re-entry until our maximum seating capacity was reached.

He didn’t.

He leaned in and said to me, “My daughter has never been to a St. Patrick’s Day celebration before. I thought we’d try your corned beef.”

I was nodding my head and smiling like a fool.

“If you can find us a table,” he continued, “we can eat a quick meal and you can get back to your little party.”

I told him I’d be back to escort him there presently.

Seating had been a premium since before noon, and those standing about were eyeing potential tables like Irish-vultures. Amazingly, I found a group just starting to push back their chairs.

I grabbed a waitress and had her stake a claim while motioning for another to quickly come clear away the dishes. Another run through the robo-wash and I directed the fire marshall and guest to their sparkling spot.

St. Paddy’s Day continued uninterrupted: the Irish music blared, the bagpipers paraded, the green beer poured, and corned beef was consumed.

I covered the cost of the meal. It was the least I could do. He realized we were trying to do the best we could in a crazy situation. After a smile and wink, the fire marshall went out the door.

I hope his daughter enjoyed her first St. Paddy’s. It was quite the party for us.

A decade later, I think about donning the kilt and finding a celebration… but the bad knee won’t hold up standing too long, and the workday Friday begins at the usual hour.

The restaurant business is a tough way to make a living, about as tough as profiting from book sales.

But there are days I miss the raucous, happy bleeting of bagpipers making their way through my establishment.

Davy vs Goliath: Barnes & Noble on the Sales Rack

First of all – I don’t see our little enterprise as competing with behemoths like Barnes & Noble, even though the many independent bookstores of the past became the few indies of today – largely due to the presence of B&N store openings. Then, in the same fashion that affected other sorts of businesses, the playing field changed.

Now, Barnes & Noble has listed itself for sale.

The Wall Street Journal reports the decision as being make due to low stock prices. Low sales figures have to come into play somewhere. The other behemoth – Amazon – turned the bookselling world upside down when it promised books on your doorstep in days, at lower prices. They’ve been able to keep that promise. Barnes & Noble has been trying to catch up ever since.

They have a website, like all of us. They ship books worldwide, like all of us. Are we competing? Are we the Davids anticipating the fall of Goliath? Not hardly. The independents of the world are surviving because we love books. Reading about them, talking about them, listening to other readers – in other words – knowing books. On my last visit to B&N, the cashiers simply took money and bagged books. The sales associates were so young as to be forgiven knowledge of authors and titles without a computer search. I don’t think that represents age-ist thinking on my part. It takes time to read a book. It takes years to amass a library of books read.

My neighbor closed her doors for good at the beginning of this month. It makes me sad to see such things happen. She was competing with the “big boys” who had a competitive price advantage and deep pockets.  I don’t enjoy the idea of anyone going out of business. It’s the sort of thing that makes for restless nights, worrying.

I won’t be purchasing Barnes & Noble, but I hope the buyer knows books or the brand won’t be long as an anchor tenant. In the meantime, I’ll take in your used books for trade, and be happy to talk to you about authors that may write in the same style as your favorite – whose new title won’t be out for a year.

Literature Aisle Additions

New Arrivals: American and English lit (some admittedly borderline): The Outsiders, by S.E. Hinton, very nice trade paper edition; The Crying of Lot 49, by Thomas Pynchon in trade paper; Night by Elie Wiesel, the new translation by his widow; True at First Light, by Ernest Hemingway in trade paper.

Also, a couple of Native American non-fiction volumes dating from the late-fifties in hardback, and some contemporary Sci-Fi-Fantasy including hardbacks by Jim Butcher and paperbacks by Raymond Feist.

Come visit the store!

Artwork for businesses:

Arte Brillante

« Older posts Newer posts »