Category: Virtual Bookstore Tour

2015, I’d like to kiss you on the mouth.

dbdb37f2-a00d-4114-b5d6-1e42a0bc65cfThis year was a doozy. I consumed everything from nonfiction about animal consciousness to the modern classic Fates and Furies by Lemuria’s new best friend, Lauren Groff. I can’t even get into the second paragraph without telling you that The Godfather was hands down my favorite read of the year. You can read my blog about it here. I had the chance to sit down and talk to Garth Risk Hallberg about his meteoric rise in the literary world. Jon Meacham made me cry.

I personally made the move from the hub that is Lemuria’s front desk to the quieter fiction room, where I now am elbows deep in the mechanics of our First Editions Club; and am coincidentally even more in love with fiction than I was before. My TBR pile has skyrocketed from about 10 books to roughly 30 on my bedside table. It’s getting out of control and I love it.

[Sidebar: This year, I fell even more in love with graphic novelsNimona surprised us all by making one of the short-lists for the National Book Award, and we were so pleased to see it get the recognition that it deserves. Go Noelle Stevenson! You rule!]

As a bookstore, we were able to be on the forefront of some of the most influential books of 2015 (see: Between the World and Me– when we passed that advance reader copy around, the rumblings were already beginning). Literary giants Salman Rushdie, John Irving, and Harper Lee put out new/very, very old works to (mostly) thunderous applause, and debut novelists absolutely stunned and shook up the book world. (My Sunshine Away, anyone? I have never seen the entire staff band behind a book like that before. We were/are obsessed.) Kent Haruf’s last book was published; it was perfect, and our hearts ache in his absence.

We marched through another Christmas, wrapping and reading and recommending and eating enough cookies to make us sick. We hired fresh new faces, we said goodbye to old friends, we cleaned up scraggly, hairy sections of the store and made them shiny and new. We had the privilege of having a hand in Mississippi’s first ever book festival. We heaved in the GIANT new Annie Leibovitz book, and spent a few days putting off work so that we could all flip through it. In short, this year has been anything but uneventful; it’s been an adventure. So here’s to 2016 absolutely knocking 2015 out of the park.

Read on, guys.

 

9XL0vUY

Did you know…

Did you know that we also sell coffee?

coffee

And reading glasses?

reading glasses

And postcards?

postcards

And journals?

journals

And music?

nonbooks05

And DVD’s?

DVD's

And photos?

photos

And tote bags?

tote bags

And T-shirts?

T-shirts

And crayons?

crayons

And stuffed animals?

stuffed animals

And puzzles?

puzzles

And crafts?

crafts

And mylar book covers?

mylar book covers

And if you need a book to go in your new mylar book cover, we can handle that too.

The Dot Com Building

If you’ve been to one of our super fun events ($1 beers y’all!) then you have been to our Dot Com Building.  You may have also heard it referred to as the Annex Building, the Auxiliary Building, and the Events Building.  Even though we spend a lot of time down there listening to great authors, it is called the Dot Com Building for a reason.  It is the physical representation of what is available for sale on our website.  It is a building where we like to house  a lot of our fun and collectible books: signed first editions, first editions, limited editions, and uncorrected proofs.  Sometimes if you hunt really well you’ll find books that are only available from the Dot Com Building.  I took time out of a rainy Saturday to gather up a few examples of what you can find down there but not in our main store.

Manhood for Amateurs by Michael Chabon

New York: Harper Collins (2009).
First Edition. Signed. $25.99

 

 

Waveland by Frederick Barthelme

New York: Doubleday (2009).
First Edition. Signed. $35.00

 

 

Hitch-22 by Christopher Hitchens

New York: Twelve (2010)

Advanced Reading Copy. Not Signed $30.00

 

 

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by J.K. Rowling

New York: Scholastic (1997).
First Edition. Not Signed. $125.00

 

 

The Time of Our Time by Norman Mailer

New York: Random House (1998).
First Edition. Signed. $75.00

 

 

Gold by Chris Cleave

New York: Simon and Schuster

Advanced Reading Copy. Not Signed. $30.00

 

 

A Month of Sundays by John Updike

New York: Knopf (1975).
Limited Edition. Signed. $200.00

 

 

The Last Coyote by Michael Connelly

New York: Little & Brown (1995).
First Edition. Signed. $75.00

 

 

Certain Prey by John Sandford

New York: Penguin Putnam (1999).
First Edition. Signed. $40.00

 

 

So just a reminder, those books are NOT just for show.  Take a peak at some of them next time you at one of our great events (seriously. $1 beers).  And ya know what?  It doesn’t even have to be an event.  If you decide you’d like to browse that building just let one of our helpful hands know, and we would be more than happy to take you down there. Anytime.

Also.  Don’t forget about our First Editions Room and our Fine First Editions Room.  They are open for browsing as well!

by Simon

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