The
Willits News has more about the Book Juggler (
Shelf Awareness,
December 8), the Willits, Calif., store bought by Greta Kanne and Chris
Harper.
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In August 2007, Barnes & Noble plans to open a store in Highland
Village, Texas, near Dallas and Fort Worth. The store will be located
in the Shops at Highland Village at Highway 407 (Justin Street), FM
2499 and Chinn Chapel.
In January, when the lease runs out, B&N plans to close its store
in the Triangle Square mall in Costa Mesa, Calif., according to the
Daily Pilot. It will be the third major retail tenant to leave the mall in the past year.
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Last week Borders signed a lease for a 21,000-sq.-ft. location in
Queens, N.Y., its first store in that borough of New York City, the
New York Sun reported.
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The 2,600-volume Edith Wharton library is to "return" to the Mount, the
writer's estate in Lenox, Mass., according to today's
New York Times.
The estate bought the collection from British bookseller George Ramsden
for $2.6 million using an unusual financing scheme. Wharton fans are
encouraged to "adopt" tomes for as little as $1,000 and as much as $1
million each.
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The Mystery Writers of America's Kids Love a Mystery program has
created a Joan Lowery Nixon Award to honor the late writer and founder
of Kids Love a Mystery. Students will be encouraged to write and submit
mystery short stories; the winners in two age categories receive $150
each. To clear up any mysteries about the award, go to the
MWA Web site.
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Here's a different kind of short story contest story. In its spirit, we quote directly from the
Salt Lake Tribune's account. (Jayson Blair, pay
attention.)
"Who says plagiarism is always a bad thing?
"The Salt Lake City Library, Community Writing Center and Random House
are teaming up to encourage patrons to write short stories using
passages taken from work already published.
"The title of the venture, Purloined Passages, is apt: Every phrase in
the stories will be stolen from a book on Random House's list of the
100 Best Novels. That's the point. 'No sentence may include your own
words,' the rules state.
"The library got the idea from two Utah reporters, Brooke Adams, who writes for
The Salt Lake Tribune, and Elaine Jarvik at the
Deseret Morning News.
They created their own story a couple of years ago using nothing but
borrowed phrases from the best-books list, the way musicians sample
music. The result, 'The Rearrangement,' was published in
91st Meridian, an online journal of University of Iowa International Writing Program dedicated to experimental writing. (Read their story at
http://www.sltrib.com.)
" 'We immediately said yes' to the idea, said Hikmet Loe, a manager at
the library's downtown Main Branch. 'It's wacky, it involves books--it
involves the 100 best books, which we thought was great.' "
For the rest of "our" story, go to the
Salt Lake Tribune site.