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Big book that reads fast! |
We don't want your data -- just your business and your satisfied smiles! Winter hours: Wed.-Sat., 11-3
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Big book that reads fast! |
It’s next Wednesday, August 13, that Tim Mulherin will be at Dog Ears Books with his presentation on This Magnetic North: Candid Conversations on a Changing Northern Michigan. See my Books in Northport post for July 11 to learn more about the book between now and next week.
Do you ever wonder why we need a Black History Month? Or a Women’s History Month? Isn’t it all American history? Indeed it is. Having one month of the year focused on Black American history (and, in my bookstore, literature) is not a denial of more inclusive American history but an acknowledgement that parts of American history have been swept under the rug for too long and that we don’t make a better future by pretending the past didn’t happen. As Isabel Wilkerson has written, those of us alive in America today did not build our national “house,” but we’re here now, living in it, all of us, and it’s up to us to do the necessary repairs and maintenance.
Besides, you wouldn’t want to miss some of these fantastic writers!!! Biography, fiction, poetry! The essay collection Black Joy: Stories of Resistance, Resilience, and Restoration, compiled by Tracey Michae’l Lewis-Giggetts, challenges the idea that all of Black life is just hardship and trauma, while Aaliyah Bilal’s Temple Folk, a National Book Award Finalist, brings us masterful and diverse stories about members of the Nation of Islam. And/or, have you read a novel by Jesmyn Ward or Colson Whitehead yet? If not, maybe now is the time.
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Have you asked this question? The author answers it. |
There’s more already here, and I’ll have additions to the front table next week, too. Come browse!
Although the total numbers of titles published is smaller, there is as much variety in Native American books as there is in the book world at large. Today we’ll peek at a few offerings in the new book section of my store (used books, our original mission in 1993, still predominate Dog Ears Books inventory), titles that are definitely on my must-read list for 2024.
From National Book Award winner Ned Blackhawk (Western Shoshone) comes The Rediscovery of America: Native Peoples and the Unmaking of U.S. History (Yale University Press, 2023). Blackhawk offers a synthesis of Native and non-Native histories of our country, from early Spanish explorers in the 1600s to the late 20th century. The first 445 pages are text, followed by extensive notes and the all-important (to any book of history) index of names and subjects.
History is not only for adults, however, and Traci Sorell (Cherokee) and Frané Lessac, illustrator, creators of the 2018 We Are Grateful, subsequently put Native American history into an attractive children's picture book, We Are Still Here! Native American Truths Everyone Should Know (Charlesbridge, 2021), with twelve young people giving presentations to other students and their parents at Indigenous People’s Day. Each two-page spread highlights an important concept in a history that is still ongoing, emphasized by the repeated “We are still here!” at the end of every topic. The book is designed for children 7-10 of age, but many parents and teachers will learn from it, also.
A 50th anniversary edition of God Is Red: A Native View of Religion (Fulcrum Publishing, 2023; orig. pub. Putnam, 1973), by Vine Deloria, Jr. (Standing Rock Sioux), with introduction by Philip J. Deloria, includes critical essays by Philip J. Deloria, Suzan Shown Harjo, Daniel Wildcat, and David E. Wilkins. The author was named by Time magazine as one of the greatest religious thinkers of the 20th century. Why was I not introduced to this book when studying religion at the university level, why did I continue to be ignorant of its existence for so long after? If you need further motivation to read the book, here is an interview with Philip Deloria by Foreword magazine reviewer Kristen Rabe.
Survival Food: North Woods Stories by a Menominee Cook (Wisconsin Historical Society Press, 2023) is a second memoir from Thomas Pecore Weso (Menominee), whose first was Good Seeds: A Menominee Indian Food Memoir. The book comprises essays that combine memory and food, from those hunted, fished, and gathered to commodity foods distributed by the government – all of it “survival food.” Wild rice, maple syrup, and twice-baked cheesy potatoes are all here. And stories!
From memoir to poetry, we come to Living Nations, Living Words: An Anthology of First People’s Poetry (Norton, 2021), collected and introduced by Joy Harjo (Mvskoke Nation, also known as Creek). Harjo was the 23rd U.S. Poet Laureate and gathered the contemporary Native voices in this book together in the form of a map. Open this book anywhere. I’m not kidding.
A novel for young people, Eagle Drums (Roaring Brook Press, 2023), is by Nasugraq Rainey Hopson (Inupiaq). Angeline Boulley (and you read her Firekeeper’s Daughter, didn’t you?) says that Hopson, who also illustrated her story, “has accomplished something truly monumental” with this book. I’m happy to report that she also says it is for “readers of all ages,” although the target audience is middle grades. More than a young man’s vision quest, Eagle Drums is a retelling of a creation myth. Kidnapped by golden eagles, the protagonist must learn lessons (where his two older brothers failed) in making drums, singing and dancing and writing his own songs, building large sod gathering halls, and bringing small, isolated groups together to form a community and a people.
I will stop here today with these six titles, only because I have a lot of reading to catch up on, only adding only a quick reminder that Bonnie Jo Campbell’s long-anticipated new novel, The Waters, is also now on sale at Dog Ears Books.
A couple books have been bestsellers ever since they first appeared. Trails of M-22 is one such (I’m glad to note that the author doesn’t stop at the top of the M-22 loop but comes through Northport and clear up to the lighthouse), and another is the Lake Michigan Rock Picker’s Guide.
Suttons Bay, Peshawbestown, and Bingham Shores, the second of Kathleen Firestone’s monumental “Meet Me at the Dock” trilogy, is here now, and you won’t want to miss it. Perfect for the local coffee table to get visitors reading about the area's history.
The public clamoring for another Robert Underhill murder mystery is in luck this summer: Bob's new novel, One Cold Coffee, is here now!
Anne-Marie Oomen’s Michigan Notable As Long As I Know You: The Mom Book, is her latest memoir, and I have a few signed copies on hand, along with two signed copies of an older Oomen memoir, Pulling Down the Barn.
The first speaker in this year’s Summer Author Series sponsored by the Leelanau Township Friends of the Library is Dave Dempsey, and I have his Great Lakes for Sale now, ahead of his presentation at the Willowbrook, which will be July 11 at 7 p.m.
Dr. Bill Blair, of the Johns Hopkins University Space Telescope Science Institute, Department of Physics & Astronomy, is this year’s speaker in the Belko Peace Lecture series at Trinity Church. Dr. Blair, whose presentation will take place on Saturday, July 29, at 7 p.m. at Trinity, recommends Dacher Keltner’s Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life.
Finally, just in time for July 4th, I have Amanda Gorman’s inauguration poem, The Hill We Climb. Not banned in Northport!!!
These are but a small taste of the treasures, new and used, awaiting you at Dog Ears Books, 106 Waukazoo Street in Northport, celebrating its 30th anniversary this July. I’ll be sharing more book news throughout the season. For meandering thoughts on books, language, and my Up North world, see “Books in Northport”; for images that catch my eye, “A Shot in the Light”; and for random rants and musings from your Up North bookseller, “Lacking a Clear Focus.”
Summer bookstore hours are posted here on this blog.
Happy 4th, everyone! There will be a reading of the Declaration of Independence on the post office steps in Northport at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, the 4th of July.
You know the saying: “Good things come in small packages.” The new Wildsam Field Guide, Northern Michigan, is the example that came across my bookstore desk today. Only 115 pages (with several bloc-note pages in the back for your notes or sketches), it measures just 6-1/2” tall and 4” wide. There are no photographs and only a few two-tone color illustrations.
But what a pure delight!
Northern Michigan contains more history than you would find in the ordinary Midwest travel guide, along with stories by Michigan authors (past and present) and interviews with noteworthy individuals of the region. (Hemingway fans will be particularly pleased with the coverage given their favorite writer.) Pressing issues faced by the area, such as water quality and affordable housing, are briefly discussed. And amid tips about area farmstands and festivals, you will also find introduced to U.P. Hedrick (Do you know that name?) and not just cherries but also wild rice.
Places covered or mentioned range from those as far south as Idlewild, east to Grayling, and north to the Straits of Mackinac and beyond, though “northern” focuses mostly on the northwest lower peninsula and Lake Michigan. Older people will recognize familiar names, and the younger generation will come to know those who have gone before and something of the way things used to be.
“Founded in 2012, Wildsam is an American travel brand that sits at the intersection of story and place. The acclaimed field guides go beyond typical travel information, instead revealing a deep sense of place through archival heritage, local commentary, cultural landmarks and inspired writing.”
This book certainly lives up to the claim made for the series.
Northern Michigan, from Wildsam Pursuits
Paper, $24
Summer Notes:
Dog Ears Books is closed on Sundays and Mondays, but whenever the bookstore is open, David Grath’s gallery of paintings is also open. This will probably be the last summer for the gallery, so don’t miss a chance to visit.
Have you long dreamed of visiting England's famous Lake District, exploring the Cotswolds, hiking in the Dales or the Welsh or Scottish border but feel that time has robbed you of the possibility? It’s never too late or too arduous for armchair travel, and the “Regions of Britain” series of books, written by various authors and published by Robert Hale Limited, might be just what you’re looking for.
Breckland and Breck are arresting, alien words, suggestive of the stony, barren district they describe. It lies partly in Norfolk, partly in Suffolk, some four hundred square miles which might be roughly circumscribed by a line drawn through Narborough, Castle Acre, Watton, Attleborough, East Harling, Garboldisham and Mildenhall. Within that line the characteristics of the country are curiously like those of the steppelands of south-eastern Europe. For though it is bounded by chalk and peat, Breckland itself is covered by a pall of sand of varying thicknesses, where flowers, birds and insects flourish, some of which are unknown in other parts of England, while others are found only by the sea. Large, flint-strewn open fields and derelect areas are typical of every parish. They are known locally as Brecks….
So begins Chapter I, “At First Sight,” of Breckland, by Olive Cook. Published in 1956, Breckland is illustrated with photographs by Edwin Smith, the author’s husband.
Cook was born in Cambridge and received her M.A. from Newnham College. She met her husband, artist Edwin Smith, while working with artists through England’s National Gallery, and the two of them collaborated more than once, his photographs accompanied by her text. Cook wrote other books on the English countryside and country houses, as well as children’s books, and earned her own place in the art world with her paintings.
Flints and sand, heaths, warrens, and rivers fill the pages of Olive Cook’s account of Breckland. Open at any page, and you are offered the opportunity to lose yourself in delight.
The rabbit is king of the heath, the animal that flourishes best in Breckland. The very aspect of the warren is due in part to the rabbit’s activities. Where he has cropped it, the heather is as green as grass and so short that it rarely blooms; he keeps the turf smooth and springy, he levels the moss which lines heathland tracks; he tunnels into every slope, kicking out the sand with his strong hind legs....
These are but brief glimpses into a single volume from the Robert Hale series. Volumes may be purchased individually, or the 17 volumes I have (thirty-one were published in the series) may be purchased together, at great savings and for lifelong enjoyment.
Sunshine, sparkling water, blooms and blossoms and boats. Northport is definitely the place to be as May's undecided weather settles down to perfection for the holiday weekend. This Saturday, don't forget, is our village's annual Cars in the Park.
And Dog Ears Books in Northport will open for the 2023 season on Friday, May 26, the first day of our 30th anniversary year! There may be a little lingering dust here and there, as well as wonderful items not yet out of boxes (let alone priced and shelved), but we'll be here to greet and supply you with reading material both Friday and Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. of this holiday weekend.
Blossoms and blooms and boats and books. What else could your little heart desire?
The director of the International Dark Sky Assocation, Dr. John Barentine, says of author Mary Stewart Adams that her “grasp of night sky lore is second to none.” Nevertheless, this book is one for the whole family. As the images above suggest, there are illustrations and rhymes for the young fry, along with plenty of textual detail for teens and adults.
Now, late summer under dark northern Michigan skies, is a perfect time to pick up your copy of The Star Tales of Mother Goose (“For those who seek the secret language of the stars”), but it would also make a fantastic Christmas present for the whole family to share and enjoy
The Star Tales of Mother Goose
By Mary Stewart Adams
Illustrated by Patricia DeLisa
Hardcover, 97pp.
$29.95
And speaking of Christmas, Bill O. Smith from Traverse City has a new book out, Chickadees in December, another collaboration with Traverse City artist Charlie Murphy. Fun! And if a child has an opportunity to open one single book before Christmas, let this be the one. When you read it, you’ll understand why.
Chickadees in December
By Bill O. Smith
Illustrated by Charles R. Murphy
Hardcover, $19.35
Soon-Young Yoon, Citizen of the World:
Soon-Young Yoon and the UN.
Seoul: Ewha Womans University Press, 2021.
Paper, 327pp.
$25