Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: McHuston Booksellers (Page 123 of 125)

Too Hot to Cook? Read a Cookbook!

Even if the grill has overheated in the summertime sun – you can recline under the fan or air conditioner and read up on those exciting meals you’ll prepare when it cools off again. Just in – used copies (sort of scarce…) of Joy of Cooking and the red and white plaid Better Homes cookbook. (Used to have this one myself.)

A large collection of alternative history fiction – Harry Turtledove – in mass market paperback, has just found a spot on the shelves, as have titles by Steve Berry, James Patterson, and others in suspense.

Visit the (air conditioned) store on Main Street in Broken Arrow, OK.

Home Employment opportunities: http://workfrommyhomemom.com

Tulsa Hispanic Connection: http://tulsahispano.com

New from Inlandia Press

In the pipeline – and scheduled for a late summer 2010 release is Living on this Water Planet called Earth by Dexter MacBride, who draws upon his longtime legal and civic background in Southern California to produce a series of observations regarding the ever-changing state of our fragile planet. The author resides in Oklahoma City, Ok.

Visit the Bookstore!
McHuston Booksellers, 1603 South Main St. Broken Arrow, OK

http://mchustonbooks.com

Cultural Connection!

http://tulsahispano.com

Obscure but Commonly Requested

Do you have a copy of…. I’m looking for a certain book… Can you look up your books in stock and tell me if you have… By phone and front door, these are regular questions. Surprisingly, a good many of the inquiries are about obscure or scarce titles. Someone Cry for the Children is an example. Another inquiry about it today. It’s been out of print for years. We had three copies before Christmas 2009 and sold them all. It’s not been back in stock since. The Mullendore Murder Trial is another one. It concerns an Oklahoma murder case in northeast Oklahoma’s Osage County. Hard to find, and not cheap. The odd part? When scarce books are in stock, they sell infrequently. Folks just wonder “Do you have it?” and that seems to be reassurance enough.

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