Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Bests, faves, and so forth
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Labels: lists, Must-reads
Sunday, December 28, 2008
State of the TBR pile
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Labels: TBR pile
Friday, December 26, 2008
Poetry Friday

Click here to see the fully decorated poem with its holly and mistletoe border, which was designed in 1881 by Queen Victoria's youngest daughter, Princess Beatrice.
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Labels: Poetry Friday
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Holiday tasties
First Kirby Larson did it, and then Barbara O'Connor did, too. So here I go -- a couple sacred family holiday recipes of my own.
First, Great Grandma Gass-Ball's molasses cookies:
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Labels: Just me
Monday, December 22, 2008
WINTER LIGHTS, by Anna Grossnickle Hines
WINTER LIGHTS
by Anna Grossnickle Hines
(Greenwillow)
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Labels: holiday books, Must-reads, review
Sunday, December 21, 2008
State of the TBR pile
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Labels: TBR pile
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Stars upon thars
On Goodreads lately, I've noticed there are a number of folks who have a habit of rating books they didn't like well enough to finish. This may be a holdover from my anti-censorship days at the bookshop, but it still strikes me as unfair to rate a book without seeing it through to the end. Seems to me, marking a book as "abandoned" pretty much speaks for itself without adding the extra wallop of a one- or two-star rating, especially since Goodreads, unlike Amazon, allows you to review without rating, and vice versa. (Not that I'm immune to this myself, mind you -- I just took a reconnaissance break to visit my own Goodreads profile and discovered I had a handful of ratings to retract from books on my own Abandoned shelf.)

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Labels: laments, Literary ethics, rating, Reading
Friday, December 19, 2008
Poetry Friday
After the meal we light the first light in our lamp of stone.
Mother touches the flame to the wick. We are thick with tart and thankful,
for though we have lost much,
yet this much remains. I hold Aaron,
crumbs clinging to his moist chin,
I hold my brother up in the glow of the Hanukkah light,
and the flame dances
in Aaron's dark eyes.

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Labels: Poetry Friday
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Poll: The Graveyard Book
Someday I will learn how to embed a fancy push-button poll into a post. Today is not that day.*
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Labels: Poll, Reading, What to do?
*gibbers incoherently*

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Labels: Annie Sullivan, galley lust, Must-reads
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Merry Christmas to me
[Confessions of Regicide]
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Labels: historical ambulance-chasing, Just me, Romanov
About Kids vs. For Kids
Seems like once or twice a season, we'd get a book in at the shop that was exquisitely written, yet didn't stand a chance with kids. (Every now and then, one of those books wins the Newbery, but that's another can of worms.) And any time a debate arose about whether such a book should have been marketed for children or adults in the first place, the term "Adult Sensibility" usually came up. All of us bookstore broads knew exactly what a story with an adult sensibility felt like, but God help us if anyone wanted an actual definition. It's still not something I can define concisely; nevertheless, I'm going to try to at least explain.
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Labels: craft, genre standards, publishing
Monday, December 15, 2008
A SMALL MIRACLE, by Peter Collington
A SMALL MIRACLE
by Peter Collington
(Knopf)
From the Ingram wholesale website:
"Back in print by booksellers' popular demand, this wonderfully satisfying contemporary parable features the wooden figures in a church's Christmas Nativity scene that miraculously come to life to save a starving old woman who has done a good turn for them."
Back at Halfway Down the Stairs, we liked to claim credit for bringing this sweetheart back into print a few years ago. Ok, probably we weren't the only booksellers who adored it enough to beg for a reprint in Publisher's Weekly's Cuffie awards year after year, but still. Like Mo Willems's Pigeon, we have dreams, you know.
Anyhow, I could hardly walk a customer through this story without stifling snivels and snurps. Once the nativity figures come peeping out of the church to help the gypsy lady, I was mostly reduced to pointing and grunts. Which actually works remarkably well as a sales pitch, because this is a wordless picturebook. COMPLETELY wordless. Go on and see if you can make your way to the end without letting it slay you. I triple-dog-dare you.
Sunday, December 14, 2008
State of the TBR pile

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Labels: TBR pile









































