Books

November 02, 2007

A good trick: Cat, Hat, thing, do...

Cathat2 From our friends over at Boing Boing comes this sweet little idea: Write a poem, or a story, or whatever, using only the words that appear in the Dr. Seuss classic “The Cat in the Hat.” Ready, set... GO!

But what are those words? And how many are there (articles cited either/or/and 223 or 236 words). And though I did (eventually) find an online list, I needed something better.

My solution? Type every word of the book into a spreadsheet, run a couple of filters and functions on the prose and ... voila! I got an alphabetized, numbered list of every word Dr. Seuss used to write his easy-reader. And yes, I eventually came up with 236.

You can find that list on Charleston.net, or as a numbered list right here, or as a single-page, printable PDF. And if you do bother to try this little challenge, please send me the results  (if snail-mail suits your results better, try: Dan Conover, The Post and Courier, 134 Columbus St., Charleston, SC, 29403).

June 01, 2007

List's list: Lowcountry books

Bookstores_007_2 It’s June, which means it’s time to get serious about that summer reading list. Speaking of lists, we asked Michelle List of All Books in Summerville to indulge her special talent: recommending books. Category: Books that feature the Lowcountry...

BksrichRich in Love
Josephine Humphries
1987
Lucille Odom is a teenager from a funny but dysfunctional Mount Pleasant family. “There’s just something about this book,” List says. “Usually when people think of the Lowcountry they think of Charleston or the beach. They don’t think of Mount Pleasant. And Lucille is just trying to get through her adolescence.”

Recommended for: “This is probably going to appeal more to women than to men, but it will appeal to mature teen readers, too.”

Bksprettier We’re Just Like You, Only Prettier: Confessions of a Tarnished Southern Belle
Celia Rivenbark
2004
Rivenbark is a columnist for the Myrtle Beach Sun-News. Here at Friday 5 we think that’s the Grand Strand, not the Lowcountry, but List isn’t one to quibble, and when she really likes a book she doesn’t let the finer points of geography sway her recommendations. “These essays are just hilarious. And they’re short.”

Recommended for: “Moms who are going to the beach or the pool with other moms, because you can take turns reading while you keep your eyes on the kids in the water. I don’t know if you’ve ever taken kids to the pool, but you can’t your eyes off your kids for a second near water.”

Bkssantini2 The Great Santini
Pat Conroy
1976
I figured List would offer up The Lords of Discipline at some point, but instead she went with Conroy’s coming-of-age-in-Beaufort novel. “I like The Great Santini because it’s the father/son thing and you always have that great conflict, but I think he found a way in that book to find good in both sides.”

Recommended for:
“That one is, I think, the most manly of his books. I also think it’s a good book for a teenage boy.” Honorable mention: The Water is Wide, Conroy’s first novel, which tells a story about his time spent teaching on Daufuskie Island.

Bksboxcar The Boxcar Children No. 54: The Hurricane Mystery
Gertrude Chandler Warner and Charles Tang
1996
The Boxcar Children series dates back to the 1940s, and this one brings them to Sullivan’s Island (cover blurb: “Henry, Jessie, Violet and Benny used to live alone in a boxcar. Now they have a home with their grandfather, and they’re in South Carolina during hurricane season, looking for a pirate’s gold!”). “I always keep this one on hand,” List says.

Recommended for:
“It says ages 7-12, but I think the 7-year-old would need to be read-to, and it’s a little young for a 12-year-old. So maybe a 10-year-old for a read-alone.” And relax, parents: FEMA doesn’t make an appearance, so it doesn’t qualify as a horror book.

Bksbeach The Beach House
Mary Alice Monroe
2002
The novel that made local writer Monroe a star takes place on the Isle of Palms and features a mother, an adult daughter and loggerhead turtles. “It’s a relationship book, and don’t take from that that it’s a love story,” List says. “It’s not.” It’s out in paperback, and the franchise continues this year with a sequel, Swimming Lessons, and a children’s companion book, Turtle Summer.

Recommended for: Women, basically. “Beach House and Swimming Lessons are more-or-less women’s fiction, but they are not romance fiction. They’re about healing and growing and the environment.”

April 06, 2007

5 Bookstores you love

It’s been a rough decade for most independent booksellers, beset on one side by Web-based retailers and on the other by ultra-mega-bookstores with pastry cases and enormous inventories. Most locally owned bookshops simply cashed out, turning a once diverse segment of the retail economy into a virtual monoculture.

Yet for serious readers, there remains something intangibly seductive in the appeal of a locally owned bookshop, something that goes beyond the cold math of unit price and availability. We asked y'all to tell us your favorites, and what we found were five local shops that have survived by providing one of the most basic human needs: Connection.

All Books
210 E 1st North Street
Summerville

Bookstores_002 Michelle List’s bookstore was already a downtown favorite before she bought it in 1995, but rising utility bills eventually convinced her to relocate to a cozy house down a side street. The heart of its business remains List’s knowledge of books – and her clients.

“We could change the name to ‘All the Books We Really Liked,’ because if we’ve read it and we liked it, we can sell it,”  List said.

Bookstores_017 Customers become friends, sitting behind the counter to drink coffee and talk with the staff, and List does the little things – like delivering to shut-in customers for free – that keep people loyal.

“The thing that’s really sad is there is more to books than just the price stamped on them, and there are a lot of books that nobody is going to hear about because there’s nobody to tell people about them.”

Boomer's
420 King St.
Charleston

Bookstores_037 Writer Jonathan Sanchez began learning the used-book business when he went to work at Boomer's in 1998. He and his wife bought the business earlier this year, acquiring an inventory of roughly 40,000 books and a lethargic cat named Purdy.

Today the shop is headed toward a name change (“Blue Bicycle Books”) but retains the narrow, engulfed-by-books ambiance that has been its trademark for 12 years. Boomer's serves as something of a literary gathering place on the peninsula and its inventory, Sanchez estimates, would stand 1,500 feet high if stacked.

“Not all businesses are thought of as ‘the little guys’ just because they’re independent," he said. "I think we’ve gotten to the point that people understand independent bookstores are not charity cases.”

Indigo Books
472 Freshfields Drive
Johns Island

Bookstores_041 Linda Malcolm and her husband Nat may serve a transitory, resort-based clientele, but their shop has the feel of a place where longtime neighbors congregate.

“I think it’s because we are chatty," Linda Malcolm said. "We love for people to say ‘I don’t know what I want to read. What do you like?’”

The store has been around since 1995, the Malcolms have owned it since 1998, and they moved three miles to Freshfields when the retail complex opened two years ago.

“We’ve got people that come from Mount Pleasant to buy books here. (The mega stores) have got so many books on the shelves that you don’t see the individual titles so well. Here’s it’s like looking at someone’s library.”

Ravenous Reader
792 Folly Road
James Island

Bookstores_048 Pat Giacinto got into the book business on James Island in 1995 after examining her life and deciding to do what she loved. “I love books, and people can see that.”

Rising rents pushed her farther out Folly Road in 2006, but Ravenous Reader survived the move, even if it shook up the clientele’s routines a bit. Today it’s a shop with roughly 11,000 books in stock and a business based on personal service.

“I stock books that are worth reading. I like to think that I sift through the flotsam and the jetsam and keep the cream of the crop.” That’s not the only reason her regular customers keep coming back, either: “There are people who are committed to their community, and they want a well-rounded community. They feel that they should have something besides restaurants.”

The Scoop
7685 Northwoods Blvd
North Charleston

Bookstores_021 The Scoop stands out for several reasons, including free wi-fi and a drive-through window. The books on display are donations, and 25 percent of the store’s net profits benefit the Communities in Schools program.

“We’re not a musty, dusty, dog-jump-up-on-you bookstore,” said Susan Gates, one of two partners in the shop. There’s a coffee counter, ice cream, a menu of smoothies, a TV going in the background, and tables where customers can read or browse the Web.

Wrote one blog commenter: “The Scoop is great!...The people are really nice and the atmosphere is very inviting." (Photo: That's Kristine Schaffer of Summerville browsing the collection. She works nearby and is a store regular. --dc)

February 26, 2007

Great old-school book stores

This is the age of the book mega-store, and we spend quite a bit of time in them (or in their online equivalents). But sometimes we're just in a mood to go someplace quirky and distinct, someplace where it smells like books, or where there's a sleepy cat in the window, or where there's something about the staff that makes you want to come back.

So We Want To Know: What are the best old-school, locally owned bookstores in the Lowcountry?

Leave your suggestions, impressions, links and arguments in the Comments section below. If we get good info here, a 5 List could be coming to a Friday section soon...

Write to Friday 5

  • Want to "order off the menu?" here on Friday 5? E-mail Dan at conover AT postandcourier.com.