Category: Get to Know… (Page 3 of 3)

Get to Know Brock

IMG_2580How long have you worked at Lemuria? Four weeks.

What do you do at Lemuria? I’m very much still getting to know the store and my place in it.  I just took on the science/sports/nature section, and I am really excited about it.  I studied environmental and nature writing in college, and I’m a huge tennis fan!

Talk to us what you’re reading right now.  I just started Garth Risk Hallberg’s debut novel City on Fire, and I can tell I have my hands full with this one.  Chapters are from the points of view of a substantial list of main characters living in New York City in the 70s.  At 900+ pages, this one will take some time, but long books are my favorite!

What’s currently on your bedside table (book purgatory)?  Tolstoy’s The Gospel in Brief.  It’s literally a rewriting of the four gospels as Tolstoy sees fit (with some not-so-minor changes).  Like the Bible, it’s best digested in small pieces over a long period of time.

How many books do you usually read at a time?  Occasionally as many as three, but I have a pretty obsessive personality, so if I’m really liking a particular book, I won’t pick up anything else until I finish it.

I know it’s difficult, but give us your current top five books.  I’m all about ranking favorites. 1) Blindness by Jose Saramago, 2) Les Miserables by Victor Hugo, 3) Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy, 4) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling, and 5) A Storm of Swords by George R.R. Martin

 

Any particular genre that you’re especially in love with?  I love classics.  These books have stood the test of time and continue to appeal to future generations for a reason.  I like to imagine myself in these past settings, even if I am just a casual passerby entering the narrator’s line of vision for a moment.

What did you do before you worked at Lemuria?  Everything from making lattes in an Oxford coffee shop to working on a sustainable pig farm in Como, Mississippi.  Most recently I painted houses in Nashville over the summer.

Why do you like working at Lemuria?  It’s such a stimulating environment intellectually.  Every day I am flipping through new books that we get in and listening to coworkers and customers talk about books that they’re reading.  The only downside is that my reading list is starting to become overwhelmingly long.

If we could have any living author visit the store and do a reading, who would you want to come?  Toni Morrison.  I’ve watched her read and deliver speeches on YouTube.  Her voice and her presence are absolutely enthralling, and her representation of what it means to be black in America could not be more important right now.

If Lemuria could have ANY pet (mythical or real), what do you think it should be?  I’ve been saying that we need a cat since I first started.  Cats seem to embody the lazy elegance of a bookstore like Lemuria, and if you’ve never read a book with a cat sleeping next to you, you don’t know what you’re missing.

If you had the ability to teleport, where would you go first? Teleportation: easily the most functional superpower.  I’d go to Paris.  I’ve only been once, and it was as alluring as I ever imagined.  It’s no surprise why so many authors have called such a beautiful and historically rich city home.

Get to Know Clara

Pssst. Drew Daywalt (author of The Day the Crayons Came Home) will be at Lemuria on September 15 at 3:30!

Pssst. Drew Daywalt (author of The Day the Crayons Came Home) will be at Lemuria on September 15 at 3:30!

How long have you worked at Lemuria? In my current position, I’ve been at Lemuria for 1 year, although I worked here in the summers in high school. It is definitely the best job I’ve had and I’m glad to be back.

What do you do at Lemuria? Most days I’m Dorothy who has been spit out of the tornado. On good days I’m Glinda the Good Witch, and on AWESOME days I’m the Wizard of Oz. Oz, for those of you not familiar with Lemuria, is our children’s book section! I order all the books for newborns all the way up to teens. I also arrange for authors who write books for kids to visit Jackson. You can catch what children’s books I review each Sunday in The Clarion Ledger!

Talk to us about what you’re reading right now.

I just finished Fates and Furies by Lauren Groff. For every 10-20 children’s books I read, I try to read one adult book, and this one was a winner.

Anna and the Swallow Man by Gavriel Savit. A WW2 story told from Anna’s perspective, who at the beginning of the story has just turned 7. Her father, an intellectual linguistics professor in Poland, leaves for work one day and never returns. The Swallow Man finds her and an incredible journey ensues.

Drowning is Inevitable by Shalanda Stanley. Four teens find themselves in a heap of trouble in Louisiana and set off to New Orleans. A little Kate Chopin, a lot of Southern Gothic, and I love it.

After Alice by Gregory Maguire. We all know the story of ALICE, but what happened to the other girl listening to Carroll’s story, Ada? This is her story, and the book will be out just in time for the 150th anniversary of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.

The Blackthorn Key by Kevin Sands. Kevin Sands will be at Lemuria September 18! This is a fast-paced adventure and mystery story set in London, and Christopher Rowe is an apprentice to Master Benedict Blackthorn, an apothecary. When Master Blackthorn is murdered, Christopher is left behind to unlock the key, or code. Really fun, and I can’t wait for the event.

I know it’s difficult, but give us your current top five books. THIS IS SO HARD. This fall in particular there are so many debut authors whose books I am obsessed with, so come talk to me about them because the list is too long.

1. Illuminae by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff (out in October!)

2. Wolf Wilder by Katherine Rundell

3. Haroun and the Sea of Stories by Salman Rushdie is always in my top five and

has been ever since I read it in 5th grade. It’s his only children’s book.

4. The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

5. The Nonsense Show by Eric Carle

What did you do before you worked at Lemuria? I was a student at Vanderbilt University in Nashville (anchor down!), a student in Florence, Italy, a substitute teacher, a Spanish tutor, a painter at Old Tyme Commissary, a hostess, a research intern at the Mississippi Museum of Art, a magazine editor for Mississippi Magazine and a receptionist in a doctor’s office.

Why do you like working at Lemuria? When you take an author to a school and see the effect they can have on a child, it’s wonderful. Also, finding that perfect book for the perfect person is all the more rewarding when it’s a child who has just discovered reading.

If we could have any living author visit the store and do a reading, who would you want to come? J.K. ROWLING!!! I think I would die.

If Lemuria could have ANY pet (mythical or real), what do you think it should be? Hedwig!! I would love receiving mail by owl post.

If you had the ability to teleport, where would you go first? You mean apparate? Hogwarts, duh. Except not in Hogwarts (nobody’s able to apparate into Hogwarts grounds) but I’d apparate to Hogsmeade.Tumblr_lsfx45f81Z1qhxlx1o1_500

Get to Know Joe

IMG_2333How long have you worked at Lemuria? Since January 2002!

What do you do at Lemuria? I’m the events setter-upper. calendar keeper, advertising maker and scheduler, publisher contacter, sales rep meetinger, and other stuff.

Talk to us what you’re reading right now. The Dodgers by Bill Beverly (out in the Spring), My Struggle Vol. 4 by Knausgaard, Elena Ferrante’s The Story of a New Name (Vol. 2).

What’s currently on your bedside table (book purgatory)?  Nothing. I actually don’t read in bed. but my house is full of book purgatory.

How many books do you usually read at a time? 4 – 6. Always one each of different genres; Usually 2 fiction and 2 non-fiction.

What did you do before you worked at Lemuria?  I was a DJ, a student, an umpire, but I never juggled in the circus.

If you could share lasagna with any author, dead or alive, who would it be? What would you ask them?  Cormac McCarthy. I want to know if he really built a house with the bricks from a torn down James Agee house.

Why do you like working at Lemuria? Books/people/action.

If we could have any living author visit the store and do a reading, who would you want to come? Since I’ve already had dinner with Cormac I guess I’d like a reading from Marilyn Robinson.

If Lemuria could have ANY pet (mythical or real), what do you think it should be? Buckbeak?

If you had the ability to teleport, where would you go first? To my reading chair in the dusty corner of my house.

 

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