Notes: 'Our Own Bookmasters'; Sooty Christmas
Greta Kanne and her husband, Chris Harper, recently purchased the Book
Juggler, a 22-year-old used and new bookstore in Willits, Calif., about
halfway between San Francisco and Eureka. Kanne wrote to Shelf Awareness
that she worked at the store as a teenager before going to work at
Chaucer's Books in Santa Barbara, where she met Harper. "Between the
two of us, we've worked in seven bookstores and are just thrilled at
last to be our own bookmasters."
Founded in Hayward and moved to Willits in 1987 by Steve and Susan Grimes, the Book Juggler houses more than 70,000 volumes, roughly 75% of which are used. The rest are new health, yoga and music books. In used books, the store's strongest categories are genre and literary fiction, history, children's and health. Kanne and Harper plan to maintain the current inventory and strengthen the home/garden, arts and biography/memoir sections.
Kanne added that Willits, a town of 10,000, has a large percentage of bibliophiles. "Willits has supported both the Book Juggler and Leaves of Grass Books, a great new bookstore, for more than 20 years. We are both proud to help carry on the bookselling tradition."
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The Day tells the sad tale of the Book Mart, Stonington, Conn., owned by Regan Morse, whose inventory was wrecked by soot after the furnace chimney became blocked one night last month. Morse has set up shop in the entranceway of her nearby home and is debating whether to reopen.
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Residents and officials in Castro Valley, Calif., celebrated after Alameda County received a $13.9 million grant from the state to help build a new 41,200-sq.-ft. library that will include computers with Wi-Fi Internet access, a multipurpose center, a café, a bookstore and outdoor patio, the Contra Costa Times reported.
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The San Diego City Beat laments that San Diego came in No. 39 out of 69 cities in the study of America's Most Literate Cities, won by Seattle (Shelf Awareness, November 30). Dennis Wills, owner of La Jolla's DG Wills bookstore, told the paper: "It's hard for intellectual entities to survive here. This is a city that has trouble maintaining a symphony orchestra."
By contrast, one resident said, "You get on a bus in Portland and seven outta 10 passengers are reading--from Kafka to graphic novels to Dick Francis thrillers."
The article also noted the decline in public library funding both by the state of California and the city. One of the effects: the city's 35 branch libraries have cut back a total of 200 hours a week.
But there was one sign of hope. On Monday a teenager stopped by DG Wills. "Clutching a three-ring binder and with intentionally ratty blonde hair and black eyeliner, she asked Wills where she might find some Sylvia Plath. 'First time here?' he asked, guiding her to the poetry section. 'Yeah,' she said looking around with a broad smile at the somewhat haphazard array of books. 'Wish my house looked like this,' she said."
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With daily prize drawings, hot cider and cookies, this weekend Northern Light Christian Bookstore, Houghton, Mich., celebrates its second move in 20 years, to the Razorback Centre, according to the Daily Mining Gazette.
Founded in Hayward and moved to Willits in 1987 by Steve and Susan Grimes, the Book Juggler houses more than 70,000 volumes, roughly 75% of which are used. The rest are new health, yoga and music books. In used books, the store's strongest categories are genre and literary fiction, history, children's and health. Kanne and Harper plan to maintain the current inventory and strengthen the home/garden, arts and biography/memoir sections.
Kanne added that Willits, a town of 10,000, has a large percentage of bibliophiles. "Willits has supported both the Book Juggler and Leaves of Grass Books, a great new bookstore, for more than 20 years. We are both proud to help carry on the bookselling tradition."
---
The Day tells the sad tale of the Book Mart, Stonington, Conn., owned by Regan Morse, whose inventory was wrecked by soot after the furnace chimney became blocked one night last month. Morse has set up shop in the entranceway of her nearby home and is debating whether to reopen.
---
Residents and officials in Castro Valley, Calif., celebrated after Alameda County received a $13.9 million grant from the state to help build a new 41,200-sq.-ft. library that will include computers with Wi-Fi Internet access, a multipurpose center, a café, a bookstore and outdoor patio, the Contra Costa Times reported.
---
The San Diego City Beat laments that San Diego came in No. 39 out of 69 cities in the study of America's Most Literate Cities, won by Seattle (Shelf Awareness, November 30). Dennis Wills, owner of La Jolla's DG Wills bookstore, told the paper: "It's hard for intellectual entities to survive here. This is a city that has trouble maintaining a symphony orchestra."
By contrast, one resident said, "You get on a bus in Portland and seven outta 10 passengers are reading--from Kafka to graphic novels to Dick Francis thrillers."
The article also noted the decline in public library funding both by the state of California and the city. One of the effects: the city's 35 branch libraries have cut back a total of 200 hours a week.
But there was one sign of hope. On Monday a teenager stopped by DG Wills. "Clutching a three-ring binder and with intentionally ratty blonde hair and black eyeliner, she asked Wills where she might find some Sylvia Plath. 'First time here?' he asked, guiding her to the poetry section. 'Yeah,' she said looking around with a broad smile at the somewhat haphazard array of books. 'Wish my house looked like this,' she said."
---
With daily prize drawings, hot cider and cookies, this weekend Northern Light Christian Bookstore, Houghton, Mich., celebrates its second move in 20 years, to the Razorback Centre, according to the Daily Mining Gazette.