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Miss Welty at the Mayflower

Charlie Brenner kindly shared this humorous story with us.

Here is my true Welty story: Sometime in the late 80s or early 90s, I was enjoying some oysters alone at the Mayflower when Miss Welty came in with an attractive middle-aged lady friend who I had seen before but did not know. They sat in the booth next to me and began to talk. I continued eating my dinner until I had finished and they were finished ordering theirs. I greeted Miss Welty and her friend. I might have said something like, “I enjoy your literature like I enjoy oysters, Miss Welty” and she seemed very pleased.

I pointed to their pint bottle of bourbon and asked if they would mind pouring a swallow for me before I left. Miss Welty’s face frowned up immediately, but her friend said, “How much would you like?” as she picked up the bottle. I made a mark on the small water glass that would be barely a fourth of the glass and she smiled as she poured up that amount. I knocked it back, thanked them, and promptly left the scene. It was pure drama.

Written by Charlie Brenner

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If you have story about Miss Welty that you would like to share on our blog, please e-mail them to lisa@lemuriabooks.com.

Click here to learn about Carolyn Brown’s A Daring Life: A Biography of Eudora Welty

Click here to see all blogs in our Miss Welty series

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Wilderness: A Review by Jeffery Lent

Magnificent, Masterful, Stunning: I remember reading the praise on the front of Wilderness. I also remember finishing it and thinking that it lived up to every bit of it.

Our bookstore friend and author Jeffrey Lent is responsible for some of the praise. Jeffrey, author of In the Fall, Lost Nation, A Peculiar Grace and After You’ve Gone, shares his thoughts on Lance Weller’s Wilderness.

After reading a bound manuscript copy of Wilderness, I used the word ‘magnificent’ to describe it. But in the several months that have passed since that reading, another more potent word has come to mind. Majestic. Majesty settles over this novel following patient but inevitable contemplation. Such meditations aren’t thrust upon you, it’s simply part of the novel’s stark beauty that returns to your mind over and over. Unbidden, scenes flash in memory, narrative threads tangle and clarify, only to re-tangle again, as other clarities press in. And it occurs to you that you have been changed, perhaps profoundly so, by reading this lovely, heartbreaking novel.

The usual places in print and electronic media will soon enough fill up with myriad plot descriptions and analyses debating textual choices and Lance Weller’s prose. Such is the nature of modern life. I’d interject only to offer a quote from Thoreau: A critic is a navigator who has never sailed from sight of land. And Weller takes us out onto wild and choppy seas with the calm assurance of one who has charted a careful thoughtful course and then masterfully pilots us through the voyage.

For this is a novel of a voyage; of several journeys that ultimately become the single journey of a lifetime. Of an old man, who many years after losing the war in the battle that gives the novel its name, sets out from the coast of Washington to make his way east over the winter mountains, on a quest he suspects he’ll fail at but must nevertheless attempt, to the much younger man who found his way from his home in upstate New York to a life in the south, where, even before the dreadfulness of the war descends, has been visited by the depths of horror in the destruction of a daughter, and then his wife. With the war, he fights because he must, and learns also that he can; the warrior emerges. In the most terrible of ways, the war restores his humanity, and then strips it away again, from comrades standing and fallen, from the slaves who save his life but at the cost of their own, from the wounds he sustains, and that remain, daily, during his long years of self-exile on the north Pacific coast, where in the weeks we travel with him he takes one last stab at life. It stabs back. Hard. This is not a man who is healed, he simply hasn’t yet died.

In the end Lance Weller has given us not simply another Civil War novel but a deeply and profoundly American novel. In the years after that conflict the country was filled up with tens of thousands of broken men, with rudimentary prostheses, or none at all. Look at the photographs of those veterans in old age, at the hard staring eyes, and know it’s not the camera, the photographer, their glare lies upon. Consider our own grandfathers and fathers, veterans of the First and Second World Wars, of Korea. Of the heartbreak that was Vietnam, a war that divided and broke the nation in ways not seen since the Civil War, and that I’m far from alone in thinking led in ways both dire and stunningly obscene to the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. And of the years that now lie ahead for those damaged service men and women, our sisters, brothers, children, neighbors.

It is them, finally, all of them, that inhabit Wilderness.

And yes, the man, while struggling with humanity, does maintain an ongoing link with love, creation, and life, through the shared devotion and dependence with dogs, from the war to the mountain trek at the end of his life. I hesitate to belabor a point but can’t help but be reminded of the strong bonds between our present military personnel and their service animals- see the Wounded Warrior Project website or related ones.

I know I intimated I’d leave comments about Lance Weller’s prose to all those who’ll otherwise chime in, but can’t let myself sign off without a comment of my own. Weller writes a graceful seemingly effortless but lyric and thoughtful line. Followed by another and yet another. In his hands the ordinary appears extraordinary, the extraordinary nothing beyond what is called for. A stylist of the highest mark, bringing subtle but tactile delight to the page, to the work entire. And thus, rarely but time to time, we’re offered a gift. With Wilderness, you face such a moment.

Reach out your hands and take it up.

-Jeffrey Lent

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Lance Weller will be signing and reading at Lemuria on Wednesday, September 5th at 5:00 and 5:30.

Wilderness our September selection for First Editions Club and is published by Bloomsbury We’ll have signed copies available for $25.

Click here for another take on Wilderness.

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Knowing Miss Welty: “The Popsicle Lady”

Writer Susan Cushman shared a portion of this story with us in a comment on our first Miss Welty blog. She has graciously allowed us to republish her original blog post from June of 2012. I love this story! Enjoy. -Lisa

What I didn’t see coming at this past weekend’s Murrah High School mega-reunion in Jackson, Mississippi (classes of 1968, 69 and 70) was the joy of sharing childhood memories. It seemed that most people were (finally) over needing to talk about how successful we are (10th reunion), how great our children are (20th reunion), how great our grandchildren are (30th reunion), and the latest surgery we had or were planning to have (40th reunion). Sure, there was some talk of those things this year (*guilty*) but my favorite stories were those shared from our Mississippi childhoods.

Like Sally McClintock, who lived on my street in first grade. I think she’s the person I’ve known the longest of anyone from my senior class in high school. Sally reminded me of some funny things that happened back in 1956-7 on Belvedere Street in the Broadmoor neighborhood. Most of us didn’t have air conditioning yet, so we spent a lot of time outdoors, looking for shade trees and sneaking out of the neighborhood to get ice cream at Seale-Lily, which was dangerous because we had to cross the railroad tracks. Can you imagine letting your 6-year-old walk a half mile and cross train tracks without any adults? (Of course our parents never knew, and thankfully we lived to enjoy those memories.) The air-conditioning was on full power at Seale-Lily. We sat at those tall bar stools with the plastic covers, which felt cool on the backs of our legs. They served ice water in little paper cones that sat inside aluminum holders. We drank and ate slowly, not wanting to leave the comfort of the air-cooled building.

Seems like lots of our memories from the 1950s involve ice cream. Or Popsicles. The heat plays a huge role in our memories growing up in Mississippi. Another of my classmates, whom I knew not only from school but also from church, told me about going to visit the Popsicle Lady, who lived near her family in the Belhaven neighborhood. The Popsicle Lady lived alone in a big Tudor house, and had lovely gardens.  She was always surprised when she would invite her in for a popsicle and let her eat it inside the house, something our mothers never did back then.

One day she noticed that the Popsicle Lady was often sitting at a typewriter when she was there, so she asked what she was doing. I’m writing stories—would you like to read one? And then she would let her read one of her freshly typed stories. It would be many years before my friend would realize that she had been reading the unpublished manuscripts of Eudora Welty. -Susan Cushman

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Susan Cushman was director of the 2011 Memphis Creative Nonfiction Workshop, co-director of the 2010 Oxford Creative Nonfiction Conference (Oxford, Mississippi) and a panelist at the 2009 Southern Women Writers Conference (Berry College, Rome, Georgia). In June of 2011, she was one of the first “colonists” at the Fairhope Writers Colony in Fairhope, Alabama. Susan is a six-year “alumni” of the Yoknapatawpha Summer Writers Workshop in Oxford, Mississippi. She lives in Memphis, where she will soon be seeking agent representation for her novel, Cherry Bomb, which made the Short List for the 2011 Faulkner-Wisdom Creative Writing Competition. Susan’s essay, “Chiaroscuro: Shimmer and Shadow,” appears in the anthology, Circling Faith: Southern Women on Spirituality (University of Alabama Press, 2012).

You can read more from Susan Cushman at Pen & Palette

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If you have story about Miss Welty that you would like to share on our blog, please e-mail them to lisa@lemuriabooks.com.

Click here to learn about Carolyn Brown’s A Daring Life: A Biography of Eudora Welty

Click here to see all blogs in our Miss Welty series

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Lemuria Goes to Market!

This Thursday Lemuria will be going to Livingston Farmers Market with Carolyn Brown, author of A Daring Life: A Biography of Eudora Welty.

We will also be lucky to have Susan Haltom, author of the beautiful One Writer’s Garden. We’re so excited to be honoring Miss Welty at the Livingston Farmers Market.

They’ll both be signing their books. Come on out and join us for music, food, fresh produce and arts and crafts items!

Keep up with Livingston Farmers Market on Facebook.

 

Creepy Carrots for Adults

I wasn’t always a fan of science fiction. I started watching Star Trek because it was one of my Sweetheart’s favorite shows. I didn’t like it at first. The costumes were so dated, the sets and special effects were far behind the entertainment industry’s current innovations. But then I began to like it.

I liked it because of the quiet. That soft hum of the space ship was calming. I also noticed that I was not overwhelmed with rapid sequences of flashing images. All I needed was to fall in love with the stories. And I did. I fell in love with the complex issues we still debate in modern society. Issues revolving around government, war, race, gender and what it means to be human.

A few days ago we were having trouble finding anything to watch on TV. We don’t have cable, a dish or subscribe to any TV service! I finally landed on a low budget channel airing an episode of The Twilight Zone and pretty soon I was mesmerized by the sparse sound and lighting. There was only one actor for the most of the episode yet I was hooked. It may have been sparse but it was all a beautiful strategy employed while the rest of television programming was basking in the glory of color technology.

This episode, entitled The Invaders, originally aired in 1961 and credits two actors: Agnus Moorehead, an older woman alone in a house and the second actor is only a voice coming from a mysterious spaceship which has landed on the woman’s house and is filled with tiny spacemen. So my Sweetheart and I began to discuss the simple beauty and strong effect of black and white, of limited dialogue, of light and shadow. Like Star Trek, this often futuristic show dealt with the same broad issues which, in addition to the show’s artistry, make it worthy of watching over 50 years later.

Switch gears to Peter Brown. Doesn’t he look like he’s up to something? He’s the children’s book illustrator coming to the bookstore on August 23rd.

I’m doing a little research on him and find a video of him explaining his inspiration for illustrating Creepy Carrots. Watch carefully and you’ll find the tiny invaders. They’re only six inches tall! But watch out for those Creepy Carrots, too . . .

Join us on Thursday the 23rd for a reading and signing with Peter Brown. Creepy Carrots is written by Aaron Reynolds published by Simon and Schuster and is available at Lemuria for $16.99. Read more about Peter here.

Miss Welty: “A woman, alone, with a car and a camera.”

Steve Yates is assistant director/marketing director at University Press of Mississippi, publisher of 28 books by or about Eudora Welty. We knew he just might have a Miss Welty story. -Lisa

While she probably never photographed anything with the intention of being an ambassador, Eudora Welty was this outworlder’s first experience of Mississippi, my first concrete connection to the state. Not through her fiction, though, but through her photography.

One of Welty’s phrases in Country Churchyards very much fits the experience of growing up in the Missouri Ozarks in the 1970s and 1980s. She says in that wonderful book, her last photography book published while she was alive, that cemetery art was one of the only art forms worth traveling to see in Mississippi in the 1930s. It was almost all they had.

In the Missouri Ozarks, literature was something forced on us hillbillies. It didn’t exist around us in actual walking, breathing people who claimed a profession called writing. Someone in high school forced us to read William Faulkner’s “The Bear,” and “Spotted Horses,” but I never understood them as set in a state and a landscape apart. They seemed like rousing rural stories to me, especially the one about the horses and the raw deal. Sounded like people from Chadwick. If we read any Welty in high school, it would have been “Why I Live at the P.O.” Once again, a provincial hick, I would have assumed that setting and those contentious, quirky people could exist just as well in Buffalo or Niangua. My eyes were not open yet. I didn’t know there was a place as different as Mississippi.

Photographs came out when I was in college at Missouri State, junior year. And I remember vaguely someone named Eudora Welty being on CBS’s Sunday Morning, and some buzz around the English department about the woman who had written “The Wide Net” and so many other short stories taking all these spectacular photographs.

Now there’s a book I will never forget opening. Photographs. A well-meaning but doomed girlfriend set us out one evening to buy Photographs as a gift for a retiring professor. We found it in a Walden’s in a Mall; Springfield did not have anything like Lemuria. Photographs. Such a plain title. And so large and expensive—this was the hardback edition!

But on opening it, I knew I had something very different in my hands, something from far away in time and certainly in place. And the framing, the narrative in each photograph, the men throwing their terrible knives, the black women in costumes and shopping at the window, the toughs, the wags, the innocents, the idiot. Every photograph bore the seed of a story. So much emotion: people were real-live bored, tired, dirty, enthralled, in love, in pride, sparkling, dressed to the nines, ready to sing. Humanity. And not my people. Some other people, clearly now, from a place called Mississippi. I was racing over bridges, over seething big rivers. Walls were crumbling.

The poor girlfriend was talking and talking, mistaking my reverie for a balk at the price—I was a noted, cheap, and very boorish knothead. She was giving her whispered all in the bookstore to get me to buy this book with her and gift it to a sweet, dedicated man who had taught us, especially taught me. There was only the one copy on the store shelf. Who knew when anything like this would be back?

“We cannot give this to Dr. Heneghan,” I said.

She had a great big chin and could wear dismay twisted like someone in a Thomas Hart Benton painting. I wanted my camera; and I wanted this book. I didn’t want to give it to anybody.

When I came to Mississippi for the first time in 1998, it was to work at University Press of Mississippi, the publisher that brought Eudora Welty’s Photographs to the world. If that wasn’t a buzz enough, within two years the Press brought through the publishing process a new collection of photographs Eudora Welty said she had always wanted to publish. One on Country Churchyards.

I was beginning to understand some of Mississippi. Things were so different from the Ozarks— no real winter, such soil heaving up and down, no limestone, but azaleas, anolis, bamboo, and gardenias. I longed to get out in the country, get away from Jackson and Flowood, and really immerse. When this picture was taken, Hunter Cole, who taught me more about publishing than any one, and more about English than almost any professor, struck on a scheme to visit the cemetery sites and churchyards Welty photographed. We would see what was left.

We set out very early in the mornings, because we also intended to photograph. And the light, Hunter explained, at midday and afternoon was far too bright. Seeking these places where she took photographs, especially in river country around Rodney and Port Gibson and Grand Gulf, was like hunting something elusive and alive. I even saw my first bobcat alive and running, and touched my first alligator gar on these treks. We passed the Rodney church Welty photographed, with the cannon ball still stuck in its brick. We crept way up on a ridge until any fear of trespass was overthrown, the place was so abandoned.

“Imagine Eudora back then coming all the way out here from Jackson,” Hunter said. We were easing through archways of slick, green thorns, funerary plants gone haywire and wild. “The roads were terrible. It was a long way. A woman, alone, with a car and a camera. Nothing else. Those men with the knives in ‘At the Landing.’ Think of it. It was brave. Daring.”

This photograph Hunter took of me in the Rodney cemetery, where we found extant the remarkable tablet-like crypt that Welty photographed at the edge of a ridge where the sky opens up in her photo as if the river were again near. Now vegetation covered a once bright place in green and black murk. There were, I swear, frigid spots along the ground amid the graves, though it was the blast furnace of summer. Above me in a cedar tree thousands of bees are swarming with a low, urgent hum. I have not seen the bees, and my hands are aghast in one of the cold spots. I never heard the camera snap. I was all in, fully in the moment, truly in Mississippi, probably for the first time. And it was Welty’s photography that brought me there.

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Steve Yates is assistant director/marketing director at University Press of Mississippi, publisher of 28 books by or about Eudora Welty. His novel Morkan’s Quarry was published in 2010 by Moon City Press. His collection, Some Kinds of Love: Stories, won the 2012 Juniper Prize for Fiction and will be published by the University of Massachusetts Press in April 2013. He lives in Flowood with his wife, Tammy. And Lemuria is his hometown bookstore now.

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If you have story about Miss Welty that you would like to share on our blog, please e-mail them to lisa@lemuriabooks.com.

Click here to learn about Carolyn Brown’s A Daring Life: A Biography of Eudora Welty

Click here to see all blogs in our Miss Welty series

My Aunt Dodo by Mary Alice Welty White

As we get ready for the signing and reading for A Daring Life: A Biography of Eudora Welty by Carolyn Brown, Mary Alice Welty White shares her memories of a very special aunt.

Dodo was the name my sister Liz and I called our aunt Eudora until we went to college. We were the only children in the family, and Eudora was our Auntie Mame. She drove cool cars. The first in my memory was a red Ford convertible. Her last was a two-door, four-on-the-floor Oldsmobile. She always chose cars with a standard transmission.

Eudora enjoyed travel and took us on trips. We would go to Vicksburg and picnic in the park. Our favorite stop was the Illinois Memorial where we would go inside the large monument to hoot and holler and listen to our echoes reverberating around the marble walls. We would ride the train to New Orleans, stay at the Hotel Monteleone, eat at Galatoires, and listen to jazz at Preservation Hall. When Eudora took us on a two-day train trip to New York, we had our own private compartment. We stayed at the Algonquin Hotel and toured the usual sites including the Empire State Building and Museum of Natural History. Because Eudora loved the theatre, while in New York we went to see Damn Yankees, No Time for Sergeants, and Auntie Mame. Eudora appreciated all the performing arts. She loved to dance and won a Charleston contest while she was a student at the W in Columbus, Mississippi.

Our Aunt Dodo doted on Liz and me. She fixed up the sleeping porch in her home so we would enjoy spending the night, which we did quite often. The bookcase in the room was filled with fairy tale books for us to enjoy. We were even allowed to type our “stories” on her typewriter.

Eudora arranged for local artist Helen Jay Lotterhos to give Liz and me art lessons, and she sent us to camp. For college graduation, Eudora gave me a two and a half month trip to Europe. I sailed on the France and visited 16 countries – a truly wonderful gift.

I will always be grateful to Eudora for imparting a love of family, books, travel, art, and humor to Liz and me. -Mary Alice Welty White

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If you have story about Miss Welty that you would like to share on our blog, please e-mail them to lisa@lemuriabooks.com.

Click here to learn about Carolyn Brown’s A Daring Life: A Biography of Eudora Welty

Click here to see all blogs in our Knowing Miss Welty series

Swooning “For poems” in The Dog Stars

You know the point in a book that makes you stop and swoon and realize that you are going to love a book? Joe mentioend that point yesterday when he wrote about Dog Stars. I’m going to share my Dog Stars moment with you, but first let me give you a little set up.

The main character Hig is remembering when he went back to his house to get some of his poetry books. It wouldn’t be a big deal if a catastrophic flu and blood disease had not already devastated the planet.

Here’s the story from author Peter Heller.

“I have a book of poems by William Stafford. It’s the only thing I went back for: my poetry collections. Landing at night on no power, no lights, in the old King Sooper’s parking lot, one row a thousand easy feet between low cars, the wings went over and no light poles. Just over a mile from there to the house. Fires burning west and south, some punctuating gun shots. Waiting in the plane with the AR-15 between my legs waiting to see if anyone was left to bother the Beast for the half hour I’d be gone.”

. . .

“When I got back to the parking lot I circled in from the outside rows and there were two figures leaning into the open doors of the plane, one about to climb in. I cursed myself and checked the safety, heart hammering, and stood and yelled to get the fuck away, and when they grabbed hunting rifle and shot gun I shot them at twenty yards the first ones. For poems. I gave their guns to Bangley, refused to answer when he asked.”

“The Stafford book is called Stories That Could Be True. One poem is called ‘The Farm on the Great Plains’ and it begins:

A telephone line goes cold;

birds tread it wherever it goes.

A farm back of a great plain

tugs an end of the line.

I call that farm every year,

ringing it, listening still

He calls his father. He called his mother. They are gone for years only a hum now on the line but still he calls.”

 The Dog Stars is our First Editions Club pick for August. Signing/Reading Tuesday, August 21 at 5:00/5:30.

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The Story behind the Pick: Dog Stars by Peter Heller

I keep the Beast running. I keep the 100 low lead on tap, I foresee attacks. I am young enough, I am old enough. I used to love to fish for trout more than almost anything.

We don’t know much of what happened, but in the first few pages of Dog Stars we learn that most everyone has died. Pretty much alone Hig, the survivor, explores the foothills of the Rockies by a small 1956 Cessna airplane fighting off attacks from other, more desperate, survivors with the help of his crazy neighbor and his loyal but old dog. That’s pretty much all you need by way of set up. The important thing to know is that this is no Hunger Games and this is no Cormac McCarthy throwback. Heller’s novel is an intensely human exploration of loneliness and the inner life. His mix of introspection and action is breathtaking – and I mean that. There are times when you are crying and other times when you are turning pages as quick as you can to follow the action.

One of the great elements of Lemuria’s First Editions Club is that we really love to pick first novels. The idea being that on one hand we have the “cred” to know who is going to grow as an author and on the other hand that we are able to help someone who could use a little help.

Above that we try to pick author’s who don’t fall into the typical first novel traps. I think a lot of first novels have pacing problems. The plot seems to stop and start, rush ahead and slow down. In this respect Dog Stars almost can’t be a first novel – my prediction is that when we ask Heller he’ll admit to having those first two or three “failed” attempts in a drawer somewhere.

When I first read Dog Stars back in the spring the style was off-putting. Opening the first page illustrates my points – short choppy little sentences here on the first page. I’m a Hemingway fan and this was even too much for me. I put it down, gave up. But my friend Liz, from Random House, urged me on. I committed to starting over again and when I got the Dr. Pepper scene I knew it was going to be a great book. “Fuckers tried to kill me. For Coke.” Anyway, as soon as I finished Dog Stars I raced to work and pitched the book to Knopf as an event for Lemuria and a First Editions Club selection. They liked the idea and here we are. Enjoy!

Peter Heller is a longtime contributor to NPR, and a contributing editor at Outside Magazine, National Geographic Adventure, and Men’s Journal.  He is an award winning adventure writer and the author of four books of literary nonfiction.  He lives in Denver.

Dog Stars is our First Editions Club pick for August and is published by Knopf. First Printing: 60,000.

Click here to reserve a signed copy: $24.95.

Peter Heller will be signing and reading Tuesday, August 21st at 5:00 and 5:30. 

All photos courtesy of Peter Heller.

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Cloud Atlas: Read it before the movie comes out!

Hey y’all, been a long time since you’ve heard from me huh? Well, not really. I’m new here to Lemuria, sort of. New here as a bookseller, but I’ve been a customer for quite some time. I love this shop and all the people that make it what it is. At some point I may write something more of an introduction to myself, but today I’m too excited about a book that was recommended to me a year ago by Simon, so this is going to be more of a testament to the sellers here and their powers of perception. Also, I would like to note that this book has been blogged about a few times already and I will leave links to those at the bottom of this page for further reading.

What has got me so excited about this book is that it is being made into a film directed by the Wachowski brothers (The Matrix) and the trailer looks amazing. It is scheduled to be released 26 October 2012. Watch it below…

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWnAqFyaQ5s?rel=0-A&w=500]

One final note I would like to add that isn’t mentioned in the blogs below is its theme of time and history in relation to Tom Stoppard’s play Arcadia. I wont say much other than i think the two make great analogs. Stoppard’s play and Mitchell’s novel are quite different in tone and method but both move through heavy philosophy with an ease that leaves the reader in awe. With that said, they are both a blast to read.

Come by and snag Cloud Atlas before the movie release, and enjoy!

Lemuria Book Sellers love David Mitchell–Check out these blogs on David Mitchell and his work:

Cloud Atlas by Simon

David Mitchell . . . Beast by John P

David Mitchell: Part 2 by Susie

David Mitchell: Part 1 (The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet) by Susie

What I’m Reading (Black Swan Green) by Kelly

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