I Heart Stationery

March 24, 2012 by

2012. Technology is ever changing and ever present. In some ways, it appears to be putting an end to paper but… Bookstores? Important staple in our lives. Holding a  real book seems to have an effect on me more so than reading on my Ipad. There is some comfort in having a book in my hand and a bookshelf to place it on after I’m finished. Good old fashion mail? The rarity of getting a letter in my mailbox makes my day more so than an email from a friend.

Stationery is one of my favorite things. I’ve invested in a lot of stationery…almost just as much as I have in my books. I have a large collection: some with my name, some for a certain occasion, some for a specific person. You just never know when a card needs to be sent. In that case, I’m prepared.

On top of of our “how to art” books, I Heart Stationery by Charlotte Rivers was on display. I didn’t even have to flip through it to know I wanted to purchase it. It has a lot of pretty pictures in it but in addition to that, there are a lot of resources.

This tiny book, which is divided into eight chapters, provides individual artists and their information as well as pictures of their creations. Chapters vary from screen printing to calligraphy to block printing to digital illustration. The talent of the practitioners is incredible. Their creations include: gift wrap, stationery, invitations, calendars, and notebooks.

Because our book is housed in the “how to art” section, it is possible this book could spark an idea. You may have an idea for stationery after looking through this book. In fact, one of the artists in this book simply used a moleskin (which we now carry!!) to create altered journals. This art work is inspired by folktales, nature, music and literature.

There is a listing of all the resources  in the back with some incredible finds. This provides you with a list of  many websites to peruse and drool over.

The trouble with that is that you might end up like me..I’m waiting on a few packages. All filled with…paper goods.  -Quinn

 

 


Bring your Bobby Keys Vinyl on Saturday

March 23, 2012 by

Bring your old vinyl to share and Lemuria will give you a free beer.

Bobby is bringing his horn and we hope he’ll blow. Lemuria is encouraging all fans to bring old records he has played on to share. Bobby said he would be glad to sign them.

Last Sunday, I hunted through my records and found two with Bobby playing. Both are gems to me.

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Just a kid in elementary school in 1961, I purchased a 45 by Dion which I’m sure juiced up my “need to be cool” fantasies at the time. “. . . Tear open my shirt I got Rosie on my chest . . .” sure lit me up at eleven-years-old. Listening to this 45 now, it still sounds good. Fifty-one years later this record seems in better shape than me.

Here’s some fun trivia from Bobby in Every Night’s a Saturday Night:

” . . . I ended up recording the sax part, solo and everything, for “The Wanderer.” Now here’s the kicker: Unbeknownst to me until very recently, during my take of “The Wanderer” I was slightly out of tune, so they had somebody come in after me and copy what I’d done, but in tune. Well, I always thought that it was me because the solo on the record was exactly what I’d remembered playing. The licks were exactly the same. And it sounded really good. But it wasn’t really me playing. After forty-five goddamn years, I found out it was somebody else playin’ my solo. . . And no one thought to tell me I’d hit the cutting room floor.”

The other gem I found is from 1970: Delaney & Bonnie & Friends on Tour with Eric Clapton. At that time on the west coast, Delaney, who was born in Mississippi, led the only band playing original music with a very Southern Stax Record-like sound. Bobby fit in just right.

It was a helluva band backed with the great chic vocal power of Bonnie and Rita Coolidge. Clapton, Delaney and Dave Mason on guitar. Bobby and Jim Price blowing horns driven by a strong rhythm section, this record still screams.

The cover art with two feet sticking out the window? Bob Dylan’s.

Bring your vinyl, meet Bobby and share memories you’ve had listening to Bobby play.

JX//RX

More details about the event here.

See our other blog on Bobby Keys here.

Every Night’s a Saturday Night: The Rock ‘N’ Roll Life of Legendary Sax Man Bobby Keys

by Bobby Keys and Bill Ditenhafer

(Counterpoint, 2012)


Recalling The Black Flower and Howard Bahr

March 22, 2012 by

I am pleased that a new edition of The Black Flower by Howard Bahr has been released. In this time of transition for readers, booksellers, and the physical book, one never knows when a great physical book could fall into the out of print pit. That a publisher knows when a book is great enough to deserve re-release causes much-needed hope and encouragement in me, especially during “these dumbass greedy times” as Barry Hannah once said.

Of course for me The Black Flower represents an excellent and beautifully wrought story, but it also reminds me of a time, a place, and the good man behind the story’s creation. Howard Bahr is a man whom I greatly admire, certainly for his ability with language, but also because of what he has done for me and so many others who have had a desire to be better at the writing craft.

When I first began working at Lemuria in 2008, one of the first writers I met was Howard Bahr, and I was stoked that someone with such a considerable pile of books lived so close by. I was searching for a mentor at the time, someone who would be a guiding light to the process of telling a story. I had no idea what I was doing. I’d become an English major because I knew that I wanted to read great literature, and I met Howard around the time that I was feeling the burn of literary theory. When I asked him, “Do you think about any sort of theory when you are writing?” He responded with kind firmness: “Absolutely not I don’t.” Howard had no reason at all to take an interest in me, but he did out of the goodness of his heart. He took me under his wing, encouraged me, and shared his time with me. Despite his own writing schedule and the students he was already teaching, he carved out time to look at my work. He assured me that all I needed to do was keep reading great literature, and keep “showing up” as he put it, to the word processor daily, even if all you did some nights was “play.”

And so, after a few conversations I decided to work up enough courage to give Howard a piece I’d written. I am ashamed to say that at this time I had not read any of Howard’s work. I am certain that if I had read The Black Flower at the time, with all of its delicate power and heartrending force, that I would have been much, much more hesitant to put the story that I did into his hands: a college campus piece involving an anxietal young student with a crush on a nursing school beauty, topped off with an epigram from Eudora Welty and a redemptive moment involving a sphygmomanometer.

Howard wasn’t impressed. The look on his face alone when he came by the store with the manuscript in hand told me that I was in trouble. He started with that epigram: “An epigram is a mite pretentious for a short story.” I am thankful he did not add: “…especially for a story as awful as this one.” The metaphors were too many and out of place, the syntax was horribly overwritten, and most importantly, not a thing in the world was at stake in the piece. He left me humbled, not discouraged, but completely and totally humbled. He had done what any great teacher and mentor does: he told me the truth. The piece would not cut it, and no piece rendered in the same way with the same methods would ever cut it.

I had to write, and rewrite and rewrite again, and then be satisfied that much of what I did when I showed up to the word processor would ultimately be failure. “You will have enough rejection letters to make a suit,” he once told me. But he didn’t give up on me, he never told me that I just wasn’t going to ever write a single sentence that sang, he never said he didn’t have time for me. He continued taking my work and writing meticulous notes in the margins, and he told me that I was getting better.

It wasn’t until I left for graduate school for creative writing that I finally made time and opened The Black Flower. I was criminally late in doing this. I already knew that my mentor was knowledgeable on the subject of writing. He was generous and kind, but reading his work gave me an entirely new perspective on what he was teaching me. Every sentence sang, every splotch of punctuation did work on the page, and at no point whatsoever did the story fail to keep the stakes high.

It was a novel of the Civil War; thus, there was nothing but life and death, glory and honor, sweetness and light—and all from the very opening paragraph: “Bushrod Carter dreamed of snow, of big round flakes, drifting like sycamore leaves from heaven. The snow settled over trees and fences, over artillery and rumps of horses, over the men moving in column up the narrow road. A snowflake, light and dry as a lace doily, lit on the crown of Bushrod’s hat; when he made to brush it away, he found that it was not snow at all but a hoe cake dripping with molasses. All the snowflakes were turning into hoe cakes the minute they hit the ground. The road and the field were covered in them, but nobody else seemed to notice. The boys went on marching as if nothing had happened.” Right from the start I knew that the man who had been gracious enough to be a mentor and friend to me, was a master.

Some writers don’t have the best sentences, but they can tell a good story that makes the book worth finishing. Other writers have amazing sentences without the greatest story, and you keep reading just to see what they’ll do next with the language. There are others who have neither, but they’re so honest and true that the reader finishes the book based on those qualities alone. The Black Flower contains all of these attributes: a wonderful, gripping, and heartbreaking story told in language eloquent and moving and as explosive as gunpowder. And above all, Howard’s story is true, not in that every detail is factual though I am certain it is close, but because it speaks to those places in the human heart susceptible to love and war, damage and heartbreak, life and death.

Such books only come from the best hearts I am certain, and Howard’s heart is big and generous. Whenever I struggled with whether or not I could write and finish my Master’s, whenever I felt like I was down for the count, I’d write Howard, and he would always write me back a thorough and uplifting exchange, telling me that all I was going through was what every writer went through, that the discouragement and the rejection and the doubt were simply part of the writing life, and that if I would accept those things and keep writing that they would become instruments by which I would learn. And learn I did. I learned from Howard because amongst other things Howard pointed me to the blank page. I am forever grateful.

Indeed, The Black Flower is a great novel. A novel that should be cherished, kept in print, and talked about. Howard once told me to remember that when it came to storytelling, “nobody gives a shit about the writer, but the story.” In some sense, he is absolutely right, but I cannot be objective about The Black Flower. Its re-release calls for me to celebrate the man behind the story, because I do care. I care because he chose to care about me.

Please join us tonight at Lemuria for Howard’s reading from this excellent novel, a novel that I hope is re-released and reprinted again and again, by a teacher I hope others are fortunate enough to call friend.  -Ellis

The signing will begin at 5:00 with a reading to follow at 5:30.

The Black Flower by Howard Bahr (Nautical & Aviation Publishing, 2012)


Every Night’s a Saturday Night by Bobby Keys

by

Keith Richards introduces his pal’s book:

Bobby Keys is a master of blowing hot air thru a brass tube by manipulating a series of valves. This must be true because I have played along side him for over 40 years. He has also told me that a Rico reed has something to do with it. In other words he is the hottest sax (not to be confused with sex) player on the planet. My most treasured friend , this beloved maestro is going to take you on a rock ‘n’ roll journey that will leave the reader gasping. We have been thru thick & thin together, and I’ve always found his love of music and people to be an antidote for the blues. Bobs: I love you

Bobby Keys’ passion for his horn started early. In his teens, he hung out in Buddy Holly’s garage. He chose sax as his high school band instrument. He dropped out of high school to go on the road to rock n’ roll. In 1964, he hit the road with Dick Clark Caravan of Stars. By 1969, he was playing out west with Delaney and Bonnie and Eric Clapton. Joe Cocker got wind of Bobby and in 1970 he became a mad dog and Englishman. In England, he befriended Lennon and George Harrison.

In 1970, he found his soul touring with The Rolling Stones for the first time. Since then he has been a Stones “The World’s Greatest Rock Band” fixture. With the Stones Bobby found his musical soul mate in Keith Richards, either on stage dueting or off stage partying like hell-raising demigods.

Bobby’s Every Night relates his ride all over the world with the great musicians of the Rock era. It’s amazing how many records he was on and how many friends he blew for. This is not just his story but the story of an era’s moods and how partying defined the culture.

Out of all of Bobby’s great stories I want to share two of my favorites:

Bobby’s mom’s first trip to see Paris and hear her Bobby play with the Stones. The other standout was about when Keith and Bobby were hanging with Hugh Heffner at the Chicago Playboy Mansion. What a blast that must have been!

The strength of every night for me was the way Bobby related the chemistry of the bands and the quirks of the musicians. The problems of the music business crosses with the excessive partying distraction. Grovelling work loads and routines seem to over shadow the fun of just playing the music. Rock became a huge business as Bobby migrated from Buddy’s garage to its top as the industry exploded. His story is a unique part of this history.

Those who know my interest in music know I’m not a big rock guy. So with that said, Please listen! I enjoyed Bobby’s ride from Lubbock to London immensely. If you like Rock and/or follow the Stones, the book is a must read. The words flow out just like the music from Bobby’s horn.

Please join us to welcome and celebrate Bobby at 3:00 Saturday March 24th.

Bring any of your old vinyl with Bobby playing. He has agreed to sign album covers. Adding to the fun of sharing old vinyl art, anyone who brings an old record gets a free beer or beverage.

Charlie Winton, my publishing/music pal will be hanging around and said Bobby will bring his horn. As we all know, anything can happen when we rock ‘n’ roll on a Saturday.

JX//RX

Click here for more info on the event.

Read “Bring your Vinyl” here.

Every Night’s a Saturday Night: The Rock ‘N’ Roll Life of Legendary Sax Man Bobby Keys

by Bobby Keys and Bill Ditenhafer

(Counterpoint, 2011)


Very Hungry Caterpillar Celebration

March 21, 2012 by

We all know the story of The Very Hungry Caterpillar: On Sunday he hatched and was quite hungry. He eats his way through the days of the weeks and Eric Carle beautifully drawn fruits and desserts and at the end of his food journey, he is quite full and quite tired. He builds himself a cocoon, rests and emerges as a beautiful butterfly.The Very Hungry Caterpillar

Brilliantly innovative designer and artist Eric Carle has dramatized the story of one of Nature’s commonest yet loveliest marvels, the metamorphosis of the butterfly, in a picture book to delight as well as instruct the very youngest reader or listener. Cleverly die-cut pages show what the caterpillar ate on successive days, graphically introducing sets of up to 10 objects and also the names of the days of the week in rotation, as well as telling the central story of the transformation of the caterpillar.

Originally published in 1969, The Very Hungry Caterpillar‘s striking, colorful pictures, with it’s simple text in large, clear type have become a perennial favorite, not just at Lemuria, but in homes around the world. As I have been writing this blog, just about everyone here has shared a story about this book from their childhood, or their child’s early years.

Very Hungry Caterpillar day is March 20 every year, and in celebration of this great book, we will be hosting our own Very Hungry Caterpillar Celebration on Thursday, March 22nd at 10:00 in our dot com building (to the left of Banner Hall.) We plan on having activities for the kids and a bookstore employee will be dressed in a Very Hungry Caterpillar costume to add to the entertainment. The event is open to the public, and we hope that you will join us!