Category: Newsworthy (Page 2 of 30)

Nicola loves All the Light We Cannot See! No wait, she doesn’t. No, wait….

JacketMy opinion of this book changed about three times over the weeks after I read it. Usually, my internalization and musings of what I read last a few days, and then I move on to the next book. But after weeks, when I sipped coffee, when I buttoned my coat, when I went about my day, this one stayed in my mind. Had I missed something?

During the flurry of wrapping paper that was Christmas at the bookstore, this book flew off the shelves. I’ve heard rumor that one reason for this was publisher bottlenecking, and people want what they can’t have. But I was curious and read it anyway.

When I first read the book, it sucked me in. I had to look up words like herbarium, escutcheons, and gendarmes. The story goes back and forth between two main characters, a young blind girl growing up in Paris during World War II right before Nazi occupation, and a young German orphan who must join the Hitler Youth. The story is interesting because there is buildup behind the scenes of what is going to happen while the main story is occurring.

After reading, I became a bit disillusioned with the story. It was a flash in the pan, fad of a book, plenty of World War II novels have been written (because few people are easier to make villains in a book than Nazis), and the children in the book are a bit too innocent and sweet all the time. I don’t like it when children are treated as innocent props for a story instead of given personalities and weaknesses, like real children. I laughed as I called this book “World War II with maple syrup on top”.

So that had settled things. But as I mulled over the things I did like about the story, I remembered some of my favorite books. I love Ulysses by James Joyce and The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak. One reason I love these books is because they both have an interesting plot, but focus on the everyday aspects of life. The characters may have purpose, but they also hang up their laundry, they let their thoughts wander, they still live. All the Light We Cannot See also does this, and apparently this book would have nagged at my mind until I discovered the link.

I don’t think everyone will have such a journey when they read this, but hey, who really knows what will happen when they read a book?

 

Written by Nicola 

Spoiler Alert: Erik Larson actually makes history super interesting

Jacket (1)This won’t be a spoiler if you know anything about history.  The luxury ocean liner Lusitania was torpedoed out of action on May 7, 1915, killing 1,195 passengers and crew including 27 out of 33 infants on board.  Of those killed, 123 were Americans.  The Lusitania was the most luxurious ship in service.  Wasn’t America, a neutral country in a war already ravaging Europe, exempt from the targets of unseen German U-boats skirting the underseas of the Atlantic? No one in his or her right mind would have booked tickets on this fastest and biggest of ships if they had thought otherwise. Once again, Erik Larson has plopped us right down in the middle of an historical tragedy and beguiled us with stories of the Lusitania’s passengers–with their intrigues, their treasures, and celebrities like the Vanderbilts–all aboard a doomed ship, in the freshly released Dead Wake. He’s done it before in his widely acclaimed books In the Garden of BeastsIsaac’s Storm, and The Devil in the White CityLarson succeeds in describing individuals on both sides of the war with similar hopes and fears.  He renders the captain of the Unterseeboot-20, Walter Schwieger, not only as a man with a mission from the highest levels of German admiralty, but also as a human being, burdened by grief and empathy after seeing the damage and suffering he has inflicted on the passengers of the ill-fated ocean liner.
While Larson so easily engages us in the lives of the passengers, he adeptly describes the lives of those on land who are central to the politics of the time.  He casts Woodrow Wilson as a melancholic widower whose black moods often trumped his interest in a world at war.  But Larson, seemingly an exuberant writer and optimistic sort, doesn’t let us drivel in the mire of the strictly personal for long.  He has a history to tell and the facts galore keep us grounded, moving forward, and educated in such a way that we hardly realize we’ve come to understand such scientific things as, say, how a boat floats.

Historically, we see the blunders made by governments on both sides of the Atlantic, the significance of the Lusitania as a deciding factor in entering WWI, secret codes intercepted and decoded by the British in equally secret places, lifeboats that kill rather than save as they are loosened from their moorings.  Larson is one of the best writers of our time at making history come alive through facts and personalities woven together.  I finished this book in just three days.  And I only read before going to bed.

 

Written by Pat 

Make it personal: I wasn’t expecting Camden, New Jersey

In 2006, in an attempt to avoid graduate school and getting a real job, I signed up to do work in an urban setting for a year. This was the summer after my senior year of college and I had been accepted into Candler School of Theology, but I didn’t want to go to school for three more years. So I googled “social justice mission work” and a program called Mission Year popped up on the screen. Naturally, I applied to this program that promised to send me to an urban area affected by poverty in Chicago, Philly, San Francisco, or New Orleans.

I ended up in Camden, New Jersey.

Camden is outside of Philly, but it is in New Jersey, and it makes Philly look like Mayberry from the Andy Griffin show. Okay, not really, but Camden is Camden. It is one of the most dangerous cities in the U.S., it is one of the poorest cities in the U.S., and it is one of the most hostile cities in the U.S. Needless to say, I fell in love with this city and her people.

I lived in a house with six other people. We were six strangers, brought together, to live in a house in a neighborhood in East Camden. We went to church together, we worked together, we ate together, we shared all of our resources; some of us even shared our clothes! It was an incredible opportunity to live in community. It was an amazing place of vulnerability. If you were dealing with crap, then it was going to come to the surface, because we were always in each other’s faces. It was crazy because it was like this weird marriage of seven different people from all over the United States. We were also all privileged white kids who found ourselves in the midst of a community that did not look like us. Looking back, I think, “What in the hell was I thinking?” but it was a beautiful, chaotic, and messy time in my life.

My housemates and I all volunteered at organizations in Camden. I, the only one with a degree in education, and I ended up working at Urban Promise Academy of Camden. UP has a private high school that was basically a home school for students who had fallen through the cracks at the city high schools. I taught consumer math and 10th grade remedial English. My students were teenage mothers and gang members, sexually active, and foul-mouthed; and each one of them was beautiful. I mean, sometimes I really was frustrated with them and wanted to fail them all because they could be absolute twits, but they were beautiful nonetheless and they taught me more than I could ever teach them. I had been this naïve white boy who thought he was going to be a savior to all; but I was the one who was saved.

It was during my time in Camden that I picked up a book entitled, Let Justice Roll Down by John Perkins. This book would change my life forever. In order to spare you a book report, I’m not going to delve too deep into the book. However, I will tell you this: The 22 years that I had lived prior to this moment were deconstructed before my eyes and my perfect little world was shattered.

Let Justice Roll Down takes place in Mississippi, and here I was, in Camden, New Jersey reading about incidents that took place in the town where I grew up. Things I never knew. The way John Perkins was treated by the sheriff in town, the same man who was a principal at the same school I grew up going to. I recognized other names of people who did terrible and horrid things towards people of color and John Perkins himself. It was an awakening for me. It is no coincidence that my friend gave me that book. He knew I was from Mississippi, and he also knew that I had never really learned about the civil rights movement in Mississippi. He also knew that there was so much white privilege that I had never confronted in myself. So when I say that a book changed my life, I mean it.

And that is why I love working here at Lemuria Bookstore, because I can sell people books that may change them. My story seems to be a bit more dramatic because of the period of my life I was in. Yes, the book changed my life, but I was also inserted into a place and situation where my life was going to change. However, you don’t always have to be uprooted from everything you’ve ever known to have your life turned upside down. There are books out there that will change you. There are books out there that will challenge you and make you question everything that you have ever known. Books have the ability to make you a better person, so that you can create a better world around you! Why do you think some of the most repressive and oppressive regimes don’t want people to read? Why do you think that so many schools and institutions have banned books lists? Books change people. I’m a testament to that.

After that year in Camden I did go to Divinity school at Duke University. I held Camden deep in my heart, and I told everyone that they needed to read Let Justice Roll Down. I’m sure I was overzealous in my trying to make people read it. All that being said, reading Let Justice Roll Down instilled in me this ethos that all people matter. When we forget that people matter, we turn them into commodities. Black lives matter. Gay lives matter. The lives of women matter. Peoples’ lives matter.

So, this holiday season, when so many of us celebrated that good in humanity, don’t be afraid to pick up a book that might challenge you. And if you want a suggestion, come see me at Lemuria. I’m sure I can help you find a book that will at least make you think!

Written by Justin 

If I Ever Get to Read Again… (No. 2)

As I said in my last blog, there are many books piling up around me; threatening to cave in and come crashing down upon me if I do not show them the proper attention they deserve- and soon. Luckily all book lovers (or should I say book hoarders) know that there is no shame in having stacks of books around the house. They’re an extension of furniture and decoration; but I can see where it can be a slight inconvenience in a small space like a dorm room (many apologies to my roommate). So let’s raise a book to the piles and endless stacks in your home as we count down the novels I’d like to get my hands on, as soon as possible.

Part Two

Novels, of the Adult Variety:

Tell the Wolves I’m Home by Carol Rifka Brunt

Two summers ago a customer came into the store and successfully sold this book to three Lemurians. I am the last of the three who has not yet read it, and it eats me up inside. Hannah can tell you, this book is amazing.

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The Tropic of Serpents by Marie Brennan

I love the first book in this series, A Natural History of Dragons, and I mean love. Then again, I do love dragons, but there’s more to this book than just mythical creatures. Personally, I think the main idea behind this series is really creative. It’s a memoir of a fictional woman in a fictional world where there are such things as dragon naturalists. Did I mention the action and adventure?

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The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde

HOW HAVE I NOT YET READ THIS?? My life is missing crucial elements and experiences and this book is one of them. One day, Mr. Wilde, I will read this book of yours, hopefully, in the not too distant future.

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Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte

While Jane Eyre is not necessarily something Ron Weasley would describe as “a bit of light reading,” (that’s a Harry Potter reference for you crazy kids out there who have yet to read the series) I have always wanted to read this classic. And I think this winter, under the cold and rain-drenched skies, would be an excellent time to start.

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The Orenda by Joseph Boyden

If you have found yourself within Lemuria during this past year, then you have most likely heard of this book. It’s even been blogged about before, by Hannah and Andre; and for good reason, it’s amazing. Maybe I’m not allowed to technically say that yet since I’m only halfway through, but who cares? I’m going to say it anyway. IT’S AMAZING.

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The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon

Have you ever experienced that moment when you come across a book and find yourself drawn to it without knowing anything about it, other than what the cover says, that this is the book for you? Well, that is how I feel about this book. I can’t say whether I will love it or not since I have not read it yet, but there is something inside me that says I don’t have a choice in the matter. Just read this excerpt:

“Once, in my father’s bookshop, I heard a regular customer say that few things leave a deeper mark on a reader than the first book that finds its way into his heart. Those first images, the echo of words we think we have left behind, accompany us throughout our lives and sculpt a palace in our memory to which, sooner or later—no matter how many books we read, how many worlds we discover, or how much we learn or forget—we will return.”

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The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss

This just looks wonderful, if you’re into fantasy, then this is the book for you. When anyone comes into the store looking for something in this genre, it’s one of the first books either Austen or Daniel will recommend.

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The Kept by James Scott

I’m not far into the story, just thirty pages or so, but it was interesting enough to get me to buy a copy of the book for myself. Which is saying something, because I am a poor college student who can’t afford to purchase a copy of every book I want to read.

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Written by Elizabeth 

Let’s Talk Jackson: Pat’s blog-not edited

Sometime back, around 1996, Willie Morris emceed a dog show and adopt-a-thon right in Banner Hall’s own Lemuria Bookstore. 10 dogs with colorful bandanas sashayed over the green carpet to the easy crooning of our dear Willie, a ham of a performer and a dog-lover himself. Most of the dogs got adopted that day, and mostly to the employees. It was a feel-good event for everyone and for dogs sheltered at the city of Jackson Animal Shelter, located across WLBT at the time (now located at 140 Outer Circle).

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It’s amazing how much sheltering and rescuing is going on around this city. Jackson has two no-kill shelters, CARA and ARF. Then we have the Mississippi Animal Rescue League in a beautiful almost new building housing everything from dogs and cats to pigs, birds and horses or anything else brought their way. Of course, there is my own volunteer group, Jackson Friends of the Animal Shelter, the support group for the city pound or City of Jackson Animal Shelter. There is Cheshire Abbey, a foster and rescue group without a building of its own. And if you go to www.petfinder.com, you will find quite a few small groups doing what they can to save specific breeds. It’s totally amazing how many more animals are being saved due to these shelters, the tireless volunteers, the individuals who pick strays up off the streets, vet them and find them homes.

My favorite phone calls are those that go like this: “I’m looking for a dog for my mother who lives alone or for a family whose kids are looking for a four (or three) legged best friend”. It’s a heartwarmer to see a family meet their new best friend at the city shelter on Sunday afternoons when all the volunteers are there from 1 to 3, washing, bathing, playing with, feeding dogs and cats. And the volunteers keep coming, new ones every week. The fellowship is extraordinary.

So talking about Jackson to me is sharing the good news that homeless furry friends stand a much better chance of a second chance than they did, say, just 10 years ago. There’s still a lot to do. And doing it together gathers so many people of all races and ages throughout our city. All for the love of dogs. . .and cats, too.

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Handsome Caesar is one dog that constantly has us scratching our heads. From his cuddly demeanor to his silly prancing, he is one of the most charming dogs at ARF. Unfortunately, he has also spent every day of his life – NEARLY EIGHT YEARS – sitting in the confines of a shelter pen. Caesar was born in February 2007, in the midst of chilling cold spell. His mama was a street dog, but she was resourceful: the pups were delivered under the hull of a boat at the Jackson Yacht Club! Two of the four puppies born that winter day have been adopted, but Caesar and his brother, Augustus, remain at ARF. Caesar is an active pup who is full of curiosity; the way he prances around the play yard with his tail curled high reminds us of a show pony! Despite his silliness, there’s no forgetting his handsome, regal face. He is good with dogs, good with people, and good to cuddle at all times. With many years left, this bright-eyed, medium-sized (~40 lbs.) dog is ready for a home NOW. He’s been a joy to have at ARF, and loved his volunteer walks and play time, but it’s time for Caesar to find a new home — help us find one for him today! For more information, call 769-216-3414.

It’s not too late to give a home to an animal who needs some love this Christmas!

Written by Pat

 

Jackson: photographs by Ken Murphy is available now for purchase. To order a copy, call Lemuria Books at 601.366.7619 or visit us online at lemuriabooks.com.

The Slow Regard of The Kingkiller Chronicle  

by Austen Jennings

The Slow Regard of Silent Things, Patrick Rothfuss’ latest novella, is a stray moon beam in an otherwise unlit cellar. Focusing on a mysterious character from the first two (full length) installments of the trilogy baptized The Kingkiller Chronicle, Slow Regard comes as a much appreciated lens, though not without a warning from it’s author.

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As Rothfuss prefixes – ‘If you haven’t read my other books, you don’t want to start here.’ He’s referring to the aforementioned LP’s The Name of The Wind and The Wise Man’s Fear.  Slow Regard concerns one of the ‘lesser’ characters named Auri. She, despite being lesser in page count, occupies a pivotal space for the hero of the tale, Kvothe. Like Mr. Rothfuss, I too will provide a caution before you read the rest of this. While it contains no spoilers, some of the references will ‘fall on deaf ears’ if not familiar with at least his first book. Don’t let this discourage you as it’s unimportant. What is important is that it may prompt you to read the books, which is the best decision you could make at this point in your life. So too much caution is ill advised.

I’m prone to saying I rarely reread books – at the expense of abusing this qualifier once again to (over)articulate my feelings for The Kingkiller Chroncicle, rarely do I read a book twice. Mid-way through Slow Regard I found myself desperately craving a second romp in the barn with Name of The Wind (I will refer to this book from here as Name or, simply as N).  The first go around I had with Name was quick and passionate, ergo the romp. So I put down the novella and picked up N expecting to come back to the same sexy flash as before. But I found this vixen to be quite different from what I remembered. While still exhilarating, she had matured a great deal. I now found subtlety where before I had only experienced pace and the new. I found intricacies and complexity that were overlooked in my former hast. It was bliss, as before, but now aged and refined. This change is of course my own advancement as a reader. I was an enthusiastic E’lir; now, I’m sure Master Rothfuss would sponsor me to Re’lar.

Not ready to pick the novella back up, my lust unabated, or rather bewildered, I looked to Wise Man’s Fear (Wise or W) with a curious eye. And so, with my strange second encounter with Name, I wanted to see if the same would hold for Wise.

This was the case upon my initial reading of the series: N > W. In Wise I felt the Felurian bit was way too long, among other things, and that the story advanced in a slipshod fashion in places and not at all in others. I still loved W, but N was the one. Though, now after my second reading of the two, I’ve found the orientation of my desire to have been inverted. I found Felurian’s scene to have been the perfect length and the story never fell. So now: N < W. Not only have I found the second book to be better than the first, but I like the first book better than the first time I read the first book. In all ways it is better. Don’t let me confuse you. The books are spectacular. That’s all you need know. And if you haven’t read them, you must. Simple.

And with this I pick up The Slow Regard of Silent Things once more. I finish it and love it. It satiates aspects of the story that get (rightly) left out from the other books. It’s fresh, odd, and entirely different from anything he’s done yet. The remnants after distilling Rothfuss’s works is his prose. It’s beautiful and highly lyrical. His books feel like a tragic song, something Kvothe would be proud of.

The only books I’ve found myself doing a yearly with is Moby-Dick and Infinite Jest. The Kingkiller Chronicle is close to finding itself among them.

 

Written by Austen 

Make it Personal: In which you find out entirely too much about my college experience

Wine in a can. That, my friends, is representative of the darkest that a dark time can get. Picture a young Hannah, a sophomore in college with the dewy freshness of being away from home for the first time finally worn off. I was barely employed at a job I hated, struggling through my math and science classes, and wishing that my literature courses would stretch me more. My boyfriend was living in Argentina, I had very few friends, and more than enough time to feel very, very sorry for myself.

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At the time, I had only taken a few introductory lit classes, and they were all (in my haughty opinion) boring and easy. I mean, this was my higher education for god’s sake! I needed to learn! I needed to wear thick glasses and read Kerouac underneath old oak trees on campus and make everyone feel intimidated by my intelligence and suave coolness! I needed to brag about my short stories that I was writing on my godawful electric typewriter that I could barely lift. I needed intellectual companions who would discuss their opinions about the nature of the Picaresque novel with me at coffee shops! I wasn’t asking for much, people.

Disappointment settled on me as I began to realize that:

A. I had unrealistic expectations of what college was supposed to be like

B. I had become an asshole who was ignoring the few friends I already had

So naturally, instead of doing anything to salvage the situation, I dragged out my aforementioned typewriter and began banging out story after story about damaged, unhappy, un-fixable people who I was sure were thinly veiled versions of my tortured self. They were unlucky in love, had enormous daddy issues, and said lots of curse words. I was so proud. This was my destiny, and if it was my destiny to be miserable and write genius fiction, then so be it.

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I decided that I should start smoking and drinking since that’s what serious writers do, and so I began, rather shakily, down the road to badassdom. I was terrible at it. It was hard to keep up the affect of aloof anger and literary-ness when I had to take a shower after every cigarette I smoked and the only wine we had was canned. Who in the hell buys canned wine? Who even thought of that? I’d like to exchange words with that person. Regardless, it was what was on top of our apartment refrigerator in large quantities, so canned wine it was.

I was literally forcing myself to be unhappy, and it was working. I sank into a hole that I began to think I was never going to escape from, and it didn’t feel cool anymore. It just felt lonely. I was ignoring my best friend, and constantly complaining to her that I didn’t have friends anymore. To this day, that is what I regret the most about that terrible year, that I undervalued and ignored the person who reached her hands out to help me the entire time.

Eventually, I transferred schools, moved to a new city, and started drinking wine from glass bottles. My boyfriend came home, I got a job I liked, I began to study under authors like Tom Franklin and Jack Pendarvis, and life began to creep back in. Every now and then, I would pull out the giant typewriter when I felt blue, and I’d stamp out a quick, sad, story, which all of the sudden felt like they had a real, tangible stomach-sinking melancholy to them, even though I wasn’t so sad anymore.

Right before I graduated from college I put my typewriter away for good. I associated good writing with inexplicable, cancerous sadness, and I didn’t want to be sad anymore, I wanted to be loved by other people, and I wanted to love them back. It felt like I was incapable of loving things besides myself in that dark time. The sad thing is, I never found the balance. I stopped writing fiction for good, and years later, I still miss that stupid, terrible typewriter.

I go back every now and then and read what I wrote in college and marvel at it how decent it actually is. It almost proves to me that misery breeds creativity, which I want so badly to be a lie. Was Hemingway’s genius really fueled by his alcoholism and anger? Would Virginia Woolf’s writing have been mediocre if she had felt loved and content, and not always trapped under watchful eyes? I so wish I had an answer to this question, and I guess it’s because I want to feel like I made the right decision. That by deciding not to write, I decided to live. But that feels wrong. It feels like I should be able to have both. I just don’t know.

Incidentally, someone wrote a book about the connection between alcoholism and genius. It’s called The Trip to Echo Spring: On Writers and Drinking by Olivia Laing.

 

Written by Hannah

I can’t believe it happened to an ordinary, regular boy like me: a YA adventure

In an effort to be a more well-rounded book seller and to figure out what the teens were talking about, I was persuaded to read Divergent.  I understand why it is so popular, and it’s surprisingly dark, the way old Disney movies used to be.  The female lead just coming to understand her emotions and desires in an easy to understand 5 point system was a clever way to simplify everything.  Not to mention- scratching a personal itch of mine-  I finally got to see some protagonists with tattoos and piercings.  I wasn’t a fan of the way everything developed in the story and the cheesy romances, but the book wasn’t aimed at me.

I don’t know about you but there is always a moment of panic after I finish reading a book: what do I read next?  What if I pick something only realize 200 pages in that I’ve come to hate all the main characters and hope they all somehow blow each other up?  Unfortunately, if I don’t have a next-book already lined up I tend to read the first book my hand physically touches. In such a manner I came to read Catcher in the Rye right after I finished Divergent.

I’ll skip the summary of a book everyone knows (what a big phony, can’t even review the book he’s writing about).  Except to say, I truly loved Holden Caulfield.  I was more proud of the way he handled himself than any other protagonist in recent memory, despite his self-desctruction and confusion; let’s just say I could see where he was coming from.  Yes, he ruined everything he touched, but I don’t think he can be directly blamed (or at least, should be forgiven) for the stupid things he did.  It was so nice to see a classic live up the reputation… Now that I’m thinking YA thoughts, Perks of Being a Wallflower is sounding pretty good again.  If you need me, I’ll be the one in the group of crying teenage girls that has the beard.

Written by Daniel 

Creamy Brains

Jacket (5)Haruki Murakami released Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage earlier this year and it was pretty lackluster in the “creamy brains” department.  Oh, you haven’t read Murakami?  You’re unsure why someone would title a blog Creamy Brains.  Well, Murakami is a master of magical realism, and magical realism is probably my favorite genre of books.  Think plot-lines like those of 2010’s Inception directed by Christopher Nolan, add men that wear sheep costumes and fry donuts, and you have the basics of a Murakami novel.

Colorless rarely ventured into the realms unknown and left me extremely underwhelmed.  I think if the book would have completely omitted the dream sequences and replaced those pages with more of what the novel is actually about (a middle aged man examining a life once lived) it would have been much more enjoyable for me.  As it stands, the book is a great reflection of the title character: it was somewhat colorless, and drab.

The Strange Library is the second book Murakami has released this year, and I consider it masterful.  The book is a concise tour de force of magical realism.  Knopf has paired Chip Kidd +(designer and art director) with the author Murakami to create a beautiful book that allows the reader to fall into an uneasy and uncomfortable experience.

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It tells the story of an unnamed narrator.  He quickly finds himself trapped inside of the library, uneasy and intruding.  He is tasked with memorizing three tomes with a one month deadline.  His only companion, the aforementioned sheep man.  His captor tells him if he completes this task, he will be set free, but conflicting information tells him his captor traps young minds, has them read for one month, and eats the brains to absorb the information.

The more information, the creamier the brain.

Creamy brains.

This is all weird stuff, and if you have ever read any of my past blogs here on the Lemuria Blog, you’ll understand that I love weird.  The Strange Library is like a bad dream.  A bad dream of a small Japanese boy that is fundamentally incapable of disobeying the wishes of an elder.  Despite his terrifying predicament, his primary concern is that of worrying his mother by showing up to dinner late.  The book reminds me of a Studio Ghibli film.  Ghibli is famous for turning Japanese parables and fairy tales into modern masterpieces.

The Strange Library is available now at Lemuria Bookstore, and is absolutely perfect for an afternoon away from reality.

 

Written by Andre 

Christmas in Small Business, Mississippi

“Why are there 10 people behind the desk right now?!”

It’s a frequently asked question here during the holidays at Lemuria. You could say that we prepare for Christmas the way armies prepare for war…but it’s less terrible and way more fun. We beef up the staff, pump up the inventory, order pizza for the troops, and wait at the front lines to take special orders, ship presents to your cousins in L.A., and find you the perfect novel for your best friend.

Working at Lemuria during the holidays is undoubtedly my favorite time of year. Tis the season for Kelly and myself to don dresses and blazers, lovely earrings and kitten heels, sore feet be damned. It’s when I can put my favorite classics into the hands of parents to give to their children. Classics for Christmas! I can’t explain it, but it’s definitely a thing. It’s when we get to reflect on all of the books that we read in the past year and tell you all about them. Me? I killed some pretty incredible middle grade this year. Oh and graphic novels? Don’t even get me started, it’s been 12 months of nothing but wonderful discovery in that area.

Christmas in a bookstore is when we’re stretched both mentally and physically. Those boxes of of the Jackson book are definitely heavier than they look. Christmas is about lifting with your legs, not your back. We get asked some pretty weird questions around this time of year, too. You guys love your friends and family so much that you’re willing to go to almost any lengths possible to get them what they want for Christmas, and we appreciate that. Still, there’s only so much we can do when you ask for books by “Jill Lasagna”. (not a real person)

Anywhere else in the world, working retail during the holidays can truly be a nightmare, but here at this little bookstore, we are so lucky to be selling something that we all love so much to people who have kept us in business all these years. A lot of times, I tell my friends that it’s like something from a movie with all the bustling about with wrapped packages and the warm coziness of being surrounded by books. The store is full, and although we wish it was this full all year long, we cherish the few weeks leading up to Christmas. We love talking to you all. We love recommending books that will spread joy and imagination.

 

Written by Hannah

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