How long have you worked at Lemuria? Just shy of a year, I came to the mythical land of Lemuria last November.
What do you do at Lemuria? I work at some of our off site events (Fondren’s First Thursday WOOP WOOP), I help keep our new website updated, and I work in our art, drama, movies and tv sections. Oh, and sometimes I bring snacks.
Talk to us about what you’re reading right now. I’m currently reading City on Fire, a debut novel by Garth Risk Hallberg that will be released October 13th (and is our First Editions Club pick for October). It’s a long book and I’m only about halfway through it, but I think it is worth the marathon of a read. So far I am really enjoying the scenes of NYC in the 70’s and how the layers and complexity of the city are seen through the characters he writes about. Ask me again when I’m finished! P.S., Garth will be here on October 19 at 5:00 for a signing and reading.
I’m also almost to the end of this new collection, Adam Johnson’s Fortune Smiles is reminding me why I love short stories. I have a tendency to react audibly to what I am reading (sorry, again, to everyone in Cups), and the stories here have brought out all sorts of loud and rude reactions. I also just finished reading John Logan’s Red, a play about the abstract expressionist painter Mark Rothko, and I am a few pages into In Montmartre: Picasso, Matisse and the Birth of Modernist Art by Sue Roe, a sort of group biography of a number of artists in Paris.
What’s currently on your bedside table (book purgatory)? My “book purgatory” IS my bedside table and now stands taller than any other furniture in my home, so I’ll just list the books up to bat: Salman Rushdie’s newest novel Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights, Jesse Eisenberg’s book of stories Bream Gives Me Hiccups, and A Doubter’s Almanac by Ethan Canin. I can’t decide which is stronger: the feeling of accomplishment at finishing a book and moving it out of the purgatory, or the excitement of picking another one up and making room to add to the table…
I know it’s difficult, but give us your current top five books. You’re right. This is difficult. Here are five books that are floating around my head for one reason or another.
Fates and Furies by Lauren Groff. This novel is at the top of the list of books I’ve read this year; an instant favorite. If you haven’t picked it up yet, shame on you! Go! Now! Run to Lemuria!
Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino. Another favorite, this is the kind of book that will strike a variety of people for a variety of reasons. I like the conversations that follow recommending it; conversations about imagination and perspective, and the possibilities people see in the world.
The Secret Wisdom of the Earth by Christopher Scotton. I mention this one because I was really, really surprised by how much I liked reading this book a few months ago. It wasn’t a big blip on my radar at first, but when a coworker could not stop talking about it, I decided to give it a shot. I admit it, I cried.
Naked by David Sedaris. It is very difficult to choose which of his books is my favorite, but for anyone unfamiliar with David Sedaris, I think Naked is a good place to start. To say that he is a funny writer writing funny stories about the sad/funny things in his life is doing a great injustice.
The Neverending Story by Michael Ende. I don’t read as many children’s books as I should these days, BUT I DARE ANYONE TO FIND ONE BETTER THAN THIS. The Neverending Story was one of my favorite books as a kid and it still holds up. It was books like this that made lil Matty believe having an imagination was a good thing. Kids need that. So, I don’t care how old you are, I don’t care how cool you are, and I don’t care how you feel about the 1984 film adaption (a classic in its own right), you MUST read this book.
What did you do before you worked at Lemuria? Before I came to Lemuria, I was doing freelance design work and living like a nomad. Before that, I worked for a printing company, a blue jeans store, a screen printer, a university, a daycare, etc…
Why do you like working at Lemuria? Never a dull moment. If you visit and hear loud laughter, its me. Those Lemurians are a funny bunch. Really, Lemuria is such a unique environment. You can see it on the faces of new customers walking in for the first time; the atmosphere of the place truly has a power over anyone inside. It is why people keep coming back and it is what makes coming to work every day so easy. It’s the combination of the people in the place, their ideas, the conversations, and everyone’s desire to read and to learn. Lemuria offers a shared experience that is hard to find anywhere else.
If we could have any living author visit the store and do a reading, who would you want to come? Hmm. JK Rowling? I think it would be a lot of fun to see that many people just lose their minds in the presence of that kind of magic and celebrity.
If Lemuria could have ANY pet (mythical or real), what do you think it should be? We aren’t counting the Basilisk in the walls? Yeah, HP references are still cool.
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