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| An Eventful Summer at Schwartz
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What do Green Bay Packers star LeRoy Butler, musical innovator and legend Les Paul, and author Salman Rushdie have in common? They're all paying visits to Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops with special events this summer!
Les Paul at Downer Ave.
Les Paul stops by our Downer Ave. bookshop on Friday, June 20. Due to a schedule conflict, the time has been changed to 4 p.m. Les Paul will be able to sign a limited number of The Early Years of the Les Paul Legacy. This event is first come-first serve, so make sure to arrive on time. Les Paul will be making appearances at other events throughout the weekend. Here's more information! Find out more!
LeRoy Butler Leaps in to Schwartz in Brookfield
Meet Green Bay Packers great LeRoy Butler at our Schwartz Signature Signing event on Saturday, June 21, 2 p.m. at our Brookfield shop. He will be on hand to sign copies of the latest edition of Green Bay Packers: The Complete Illustrated History, which has been updated with new 2007 season information and a tribute to Brett Favre. Butler, who provided the book's foreword, earned a Super Bowl ring during his time with the Packers and is credited with inventing the Lambeau Leap!
A ticket is required to get your book signed. When you purchase your copy of Green Bay Packers: The Complete Illustrated History (Updated Edition) from any Schwartz Bookshop or online, you will receive your signing line ticket. Please note that your ticket does not hold a specific place in the signing line, and that some signing restrictions may apply.
An Evening with Salman Rushdie Wednesday, July 9, 7 p.m. Shorewood · (Tickets are required for this event. See below for details).
Join us at Schwartz in Shorewood for an evening with Salman Rushdie, critically acclaimed, award-winning author of The Enchantress of Florence. His latest is the story of a woman attempting to command her own destiny in a man's world, and of two cities, unknown to each other, at the height of their powers. Niccoló Machiavelli takes a starring role in Florence during the High Renaissance, while in the hedonistic Mughal capital, the brilliant Akbar the Great wrestles with questions of belief, desire, and the treachery of his sons. A tall, blonde European traveler arrives at the Mughal court with a tale of a mysterious woman, a great beauty believed to posses powers of enchantment and sorcery, and her impossible journey to the far off city of Florence that begins to obsess the imperial capital.
Don't miss out on this very special event-get your tickets today!
Your admission ticket is included with your copy of Salman Rushdie's The Enchantress of Florence only when you purchase your copy from Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops or online. One ticket will grant admission for up to two (2) people. Arrive early-seating is limited. Due to this special event our Shorewood location will close to the general public at 6 p.m.
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New Releases
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A
selection of this week's new releases from our friends at Shelf
Awareness:
The Broken Window: A Lincoln Rhyme Novel by Jeffery Deaver
follows the investigation of a serial killer using identity theft techniques
to frame others. Deaver will be reading at our Brookfield
shop on Tuesday, June 24.
Sail
by James Patterson and Howard Roughan follows a dysfunctional
family on a sailing trip gone horribly wrong. - Schwartz
Bestseller - 30% off
The
Monster of Florence by Douglas Preston and Mario Spezi
chronicles the search for an infamous Italian murderer
New in paperback:
On
Chesil Beach by Ian McEwan
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Schwartz News Roundup
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On Wednesday, June 4, British author Jim Crace was scheduled to read at our Downer Ave. bookshop. Usually, the story of how an author gets to a reading isn't remarkable. Fly in to the city, meet your handler (if you're lucky enough to get one), and drive to the venue. But, Jim Crace's journey to his reading was anything but the usual trip to a bookshop. Downer Ave. bookseller Bayard Godsave recounts how one determined author went beyond the call of duty to get to his reading.
Get In By Bayard Godsave
The dense mist that had settled on Milwaukee was like something out of one of Jim Crace's books, where lost worlds tend to materialize slowly from the pages with the poetic quiet of grey summer afternoons. The store had just gotten a call from Jim's publicist at Vintage Books: There was trouble with his plane, and he'd be taking a later flight. But not to worry, she promised us; he'd make it there on time.
Well, I thought, this is all very dramatic. But the real drama was unfolding elsewhere.
Above our heads the British author sat in his seat, patiently waiting as once again the voice of the captain came over the 727's PA system. This time, there were no more assurances that they would be landing "just as soon as this fog lifts." This time he told them that he had bad news, that the plane could no longer circle the skies above Milwaukee, awaiting a break in the weather. They would have to turn around and return to Minneapolis. There was grumbling from the other passengers, but Jim, though disappointed, sat quietly. "I'm British," he would say later, "and we'll sit through anything politely."
Milwaukee was the last stop on what had been a three-week tour promoting the trade-paper release of his latest novel The Pesthouse, and his appearance at Schwartz was to be, in all likelihood, the last place he would read from that book. Ever. A pity it would be if he missed that.
As he thought about this, the captain's voice came over the PA once more. The plane was running low on fuel, and would have to land in Madison. "But," the captain said, "this is only a refueling stop. We're not letting anyone off the plane."
Once on the ground, there was a genuine revolt. Angry passengers-men and women who lived in Madison, and only wanted to be allowed home-got up from their seats and insisted they be let off the plane. The crew resisted for a while, but finally they had to relent, and Jim Crace slipped in with the stream of Americans making their exodus from the plane.
"But how am I to get to Milwaukee?" he would later say. "There was a bus, something called a Badger Bus? But it wouldn't get me into Milwaukee until seven-thirty, and that wouldn't do. So I decided to do as I would have done when I was a young man. I decided to hitch a ride."
He stood on the side of the road, just outside the airport, put out his thumb, and waited. And it wasn't long before a car stopped, one of his fellow passengers, stranded, like Jim, in Madison. He already had two sailors riding with him. "Where you going?" the man asked.
"Milwaukee," Jim said, in his British accent.
"Get in."
Jim's reading that night (which was on time and as scheduled) was amazing. As he spoke about the genesis of his latest novel, he spoke of the importance of letting the story take its own directions. "Narrative has been around for as long as human beings have, it's learned a few things," he said. "Narrative is wise." And I thought of all he'd been through to get here. It was as if the story he'd told, the story of his trip, had always been waiting to happen, and it was by trusting in that story, and letting unfold as it would, that Jim was able to get here safely, and on time.
Jim Crace is the author of the Schwartz Bookseller favorite The Pesthouse, now available in paperback.
Daniel Goldin-Live!
Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops' General Manager Daniel Goldin takes the stage this coming Tuesday, June 17 as part of Milwaukee's first ever Pecha Kucha Night, hosted by our sister company 800-CEO-Read at the newly remodeled Hi-Hat Garage. Pecha Kucha-Japanese for the sound of conversation-is a new kind of presentation in which presenters share their ideas in 20 slides for 20 seconds per slide. Daniel has been working hard putting the finishing touches on his presentation, Dead Department Stores, and if the photos he shared with us were any indication, it's going to be quite the talk.
Other presenters at Pecha Kucha night are: Corey Canfield Erica Conway Tom Crawford Peter Exley Faythe Levine Aaron Schleicher Jolynn Woeher Pecha Kucha night begins at 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, June 17. Tickets are $10 at the door. Find out more.
Bartolotta's Chef Wins James Beard Award Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops congratulates Adam Siegel, Bartolotta's Lake Park Bistro executive chef, on winning the James Beard Award for Best Chef: Midwest. We have had the pleasure of working with him during our Chef Lunch events, which bring world-class authors to Milwaukee for a talk and lunch inspired by the author's work prepared by Adam Siegel at one of The Bartolotta Restaurants venues.
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| Live at Schwartz: Calendar of Events
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Here
is a list of the authors coming soon to the Schwartz Bookshops. For a complete list of upcoming author appearances visit
our events page.
Alan Furst The Spies of Warsaw
Thursday, June 12 ·
7:00 p.m. reading ·
Shorewood
The bestselling author of The Foreign Correspondent offers a new spy novel set in World War II-era France and Poland.Twenty-one spies are at war on the espionage-filled battlefront that was Warsaw, 1937. Colonel Jean-Francois Mercier is drawn into a world of betrayal and intrigue in the city's drawing rooms and back alleys. At the same time, he's drawn into a love affair with a lawyer for the League of Nations.
VITAL Source Short Fiction Contest Winners Reading
Thursday, June 12 ·
7:00 p.m. reading ·
Downer Ave.
Join the winning authors of VITAL's annual short fiction contest for a special reading. First place winner Craig Reinbold and second place winner Ken Brosky will be joined by honorable mention winners Justin Burke, Jason Hart and Ken Olson. There will even by a guest reading by author Carole Barrowman premiering excerpts from her just-completed novel. Enjoy complimentary appetizers by Times Square Pizza and Bistro and register to win Super Passes to both screenings of the 48 Hour Film Project June 25 at the Oriental Theater. Sponsored by VITAL Source Magazine and Schwartz.
John Gilman representing Love, Loss and Longing
Friday, June 13 ·
7:00 p.m. program ·
Shorewood
Love, Loss and Longing, published by the Latin America Working Group and Washington Office on Latin America is a photo exhibit highlighting the affect of the travel ban on Cuban Americans. John Gilman, a representative of LAWG, along with Geoff Thale, program director for the group, will join us to discuss the book and the travel ban.
Cathy Sultan Tragedy in South Lebanon
Monday, June 16 ·
7:00 p.m. ·
Shorewood
Catherine Sultan combines compelling history and vivid personal interviews to relate the lives of the oft-ignored civilians of southern Lebanon and northern Israel during the July war of 2006. Their stories are intertwined with Sultan's take on the media treatment of the war, and her urgent call for government officials on all sides to act with foresight, compassion and responsibility.
David Sirota The Uprising
Tuesday, June 17 ·
7:00 p.m. talk ·
Downer Ave.
Political organizer and syndicated columnist David Sirota traveled the country for a year witnessing firsthand the growing unrest caused by the takeover of government by big money. He reports on this political discontent found on both ends of the political spectrum as wages stagnate, health care costs rise, and personal debt skyrockets, and asks, "Will a popular movement emerge from all this rage?"
Rebecca Stott Ghostwalk
Tuesday, June 17 ·
7:00 p.m. reading ·
Brookfield
If you like your novels with a healthy dose of history, you won't want to miss our event with Rebecca Stott. Her debut novel is at once a ghost story, mystery and love story that explores the unexplainable connections between friends, lovers and family. In 2002, a Cambridge student studying Sir Isaac Newton is found dead. Is her death linked to the mysterious deaths of three of Newton's fellow students in 1667?
Sandra Gulland Mistress of the Sun
Wednesday, June 18 ·
7:00 p.m. reading ·
Mequon
Sandra Gulland's novel is set against the magnificence of the seventeenth-century court of the Sun King, France's King Louis XIV, where Louise de la Vallierie reigns unrivaled as the king's mistress. Too poor to join a convent,she joined the court as a maid-of-honor as a young woman. The king was captivated by her, but now, despite having borne his children and being his confidant, intrigue threatens her position at court and in his heart. Gulland is also the author of The Many Lives and Secret Sorrows of Josephine B., about Josephine Bonaparte.
Stephen Hren The Carbon-Free Home
Wednesday, June 18 ·
7:00 p.m. talk ·
Downer Ave.
You probably know that energy used in your home produces more global-warming pollution than your car, but what can you do about it? Find out how you can turn your home into an environmental asset through gradual changes anyone can make using renewable resources, retrofitting items in your home, and more from Stephen Hren.
David Wroblewski The Story of Edgar Sawtelle
Thursday, June 19 ·
7:00 p.m. reading ·
Mequon
Born mute and speaking only in sign, Edgar Sawtelle leads an idyllic life with his family on their farm in northern Wisconsin where they breed dogs. But his peaceful life is disrupted when his father dies and an uncle appears at the farm to take his place. Wroblewski explores language, love and loyalty in this modern, epic retelling of Hamlet. We're proud to announce that Wroblewski's book was selected as the top pick for July by IndieBound.
Johan Bruyneel We Might as Well Win
Thursday, June 19 ·
7:00 p.m. talk ·
Downer Ave.
Go on the tour and inside the mind of the winningest team director in cycling history. In 1998 the former pro-cyclist looked a struggling rider and cancer survivor in the eye and said, "if we're going to ride the tour, we might as well win." In that phrase a dynasty was born. With Bruyneel as director, Lance Armstrong won a record seven straight Tour de France victories.

Doris Green Explore Wisconsin Rivers
Mary Lou Santovec Wisconsin Gardens and Landscapes
Thursday, June 19 ·
7:00 p.m. talk ·
Shorewood
Make the most of your outdoor time this summer! Gain a deeper understanding of the history and geography of Wisconsin's rivers and discover many ways to enjoy the water and shoreline from Doris Green. Mary Lou Santovec will introduce you to the gorgeous public gardens, landscapes, nature preserves and nurseries through out the state you can visit this season.
Karen Abbott Sin in the Second City
Friday , June 20 ·
7:00 p.m. reading ·
Brookfield
Step into the perfumed parlors of the Everleigh Club, the most famous brothel in American history and the catalyst for a culture war that rocked the nation. Operated by two aristocratic sisters, the club welcomed actors, senators and foreign dignitaries into their stately double mansion. But their foes hurled lurid accusations at the club and its girls. Karen Abbott provides a vivid snapshot of the clash between our nation's hedonistic impulses and puritanical roots. Paperback
Les Paul The Early Years of the Les Paul Legacy
Friday, June 20 ·
: 4 p.m.
Join the legendary Les Paul for a journey through the musical giant's career. Learn about the "Log" and "clunker" guitars, the various Goldtops, and of couse the '50s "Sunburst," and find out more about Paul's partnership with Gibson to make the world's most cherished electric guitar.
See lead info.
N. M. Kelby Murder at the Bad Girl's Bar & Grill
Saturday, June 21 ·
2:00 p.m. reading ·
Mequon
Kick your summer reading fun into high gear! Take some "surf's up" magic realism, a dead body, a little Buddhist philosophy, a Barry Manilow impersonator, and Danni Keene, the unflappable goddess of horror films, set it all in a retirement community in Laguna Beach and you've got a mystery nobody wants to solve. Except for Brian Wilson.
LeRoy Butler Green Bay Packers: The Complete Illustrated History (updated edition)
Saturday, June 21 ·
2:00 p.m. signing ·
Brookfield
Meet Green Bay Packers great LeRoy Butler. He'll be on hand to sign copies of the newly updated edition of Green Bay Packers: The Complete Illustrated History which has been updated with new 2007 season information and a tribute to Brett Favre. Butler, who provided the book's foreword, earned a Super Bowl ring during his time with the Packers and is credited with inventing the Lambeau Leap!
This event is a Schwartz Signature Signing. When you purchase your copy of Green Bay Packers: The Complete Illustrated History (updated edition) from any Schwartz Bookshop, you'll receive a ticket for the signing line.
Jeremy Scahill Blackwater
Monday, June 23 ·
7:00 p.m. talk ·
Downer Ave.
Blackwater USA has been in the news a lot since Jeremy Scahill visited us last year to discuss his in-depth expose on the secretive company based in the wilderness of North Carolina. He'll help you decipher the scandal and provide new information about the fastest growing private army on the planet. His George Polk Award-winning book, now available in paperback, has been updated with more information about Blackwater.
Jeffrey Deaver The Broken Window
Tuesday, June 24 ·
7:00 p.m. reading ·
Brookfield
Lincoln Rhyme is back in Jeffrey Deaver's latest thriller. Rhyme and his partner/paramour, Amelia Sachs, face their toughest perp yet-the mysterious "522" who commits viscous crimes and frames innocent men. Knowledge is power in a case where the killer collects data as efficiently as he collects victims. Deaver has reunited the unlikely couple in this timely novel in which the hunters become the hunted.
Kaya McLaren Church of the Dog
Tuesday, June 24 ·
7:00 p.m. reading ·
Mequon
Deep in Oregon farm country, Ethel and Earl McRae are looking down the barrel of their fiftieth wedding anniversary without the joy that should accompany the milestone. Instead they remain stuck in the past, clinging to tragedy. Enter Mara O'Shaunessey who appears on their ranch with the power to mend fences and show them the enchantment of their everyday lives in this redemptive debut novel.
Jared Bernstein Crunch
Wednesday, June 25 ·
7:00 p.m. talk ·
Shorewood
Is Social Security really going bust? What is a "living wage?" What does the Federal Reserve Bank do, and why do I feel so squeezed even when some pundits say the economy is doing fine? Find out the answers to these and many other questions posed by real working people like you from economist Jared Bernstein.
Jennifer Haigh The Condition
Monday, June 30 ·
7:00 p.m. reading ·
Shorewood
The McKotch family's deepest fears, hopes and hostilities collide within the walls of their rambling retreat on Cape Cod in Jennifer Haigh's latest novel. Long divorced, Frank and Paulette hide a mountain of grievances from their three adult children who are busy with crises of their own. As summer approaches, events in their lives force them to confront themselves, their choices, and opportunities for reconciliation and love that may still await. Haigh is also the author of Mrs. Kimble.
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| Schwartz
Select: Fiction |
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Staff Pick
The
Book of Getting Even
Benjamin Taylor
"Gabriel Geismar, a rabbi's son, escapes his family and falls
in love with everything about the Hunderts, a family completely different
from his own. Of course, the grass is not always greener, and Gabriel
comes to know the Hunderts secrets and bear their sorrows. As funny
as it is sad, The Book of Getting Even is bold, brilliant and evocative.
One of my favorite books of the year so far!"
-Dave Mallmann, Brookfield
$23.95
Netherland
Joseph O'Neill
In a New York City made phantasmagorical by the events of 9/11, Hans-a
banker originally from the Netherlands-finds himself marooned
among the strange occupants of the Chelsea Hotel after his English wife
and son return to London. Alone and un-tethered, feeling lost in the
country he had come to regard as home, Hans stumbles upon the vibrant
New York subculture of cricket, allowing him to revisit his lost childhood.
$23.95
The
Garden of Last Days
Andre Dubus III
From the author of the New York Times bestseller and Oprah's
Book Club selection House of Sand and Fog comes a new big-hearted,
painful, page-turning novel. Set in the seamy underside of American
life at the moment before the world changed, The Garden of Last
Days follows the 9/11 hijackers as they prepare for their suicide
mission in a Florida strip club. Schwartz Buyer Jason Kennedy called
it "A suspenseful literary thriller...another great dark look
into the souls of people."
$24.95
The
Boat
Nam Le
In his debut collection of stories, Nam Le takes you from the slums
of Columbia to the streets of Tehran, to New York City, Iowa City, a
fishing village in Australia and a floundering vessel in the China Sea.
Through characters like a young writer urged to mine his father's
experiences in Vietnam and an aging painter who mourns his body's
decline, Le explores the ties that bind families, place and human emotion.
$22.95
Spook
Country
William Gibson
The bestselling author of Neuromancer takes you to Spook Country-the
place where we have all landed, few by choice; a place we are all learning
to live in. Hollis Henry is a journalist on investigative assignment
for a magazine called Node, which doesn't actually exist
yet. Bobby Chombo is a producer working on cutting edge art installations.
In his day job, Bobby is a troubleshooter for military navigation equipment.
He refuses to sleep in the same place twice and he meets no one. Hollis
Henry has been told to find him.
Paperback $15.00
The
Other
David Guterson
The author of Snow Falling on Cedars returns with a compelling
novel about two friends united by their fierce intensity and love of
the outdoors. When one of the two asks for help to disappear completely,
the other is drawn into a web of secrets, deceit and tragedy that will
finally break open with a life-altering revelation.
$24.95

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Select: Nonfiction |
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London
Rising
The Men Who Made Modern London
Leo Hollis
Like a phoenix from the ashes of the Great Fire of 1666, London was
reborn to become the greatest metropolis of the age. Among the catalysts
for the rebirth were five extraordinary men: John Locke, John Evelyn,
Robert Hooke, Nicholas Barbon and Christopher Wren. The city as we know
it today is in great part the result of advances in literature, planning,
science, and social issues forged by these men. Leo Hollis paints a
vibrant portrait of the city and the men whose impact on London is unmatched.
$25.95
Legacy
of Ashes
The History of the CIA
Tim Weiner
"This riveting, fact-drenched page-turner... will disgust, appall,
amaze, stun and enthrall you with its naming of names, quoting of quotes,
revealing of plots and ploys and serving up of yarns that involve coups,
drug lords, psychopaths, fascists, juntas, murderers and militias, all
in the name of peace, stability, the Pax Americana and... democracy."-The
Providence Journal
Paperback
$16.95
A
Freewheelin' Time
Greenwich Village in the Sixties
Suze Rotolo
A Freewheelin' Time is a moving account of the fertile
years just before the circus of the 1960s was in full swing with Bob
Dylan as the anointed ringmaster. Suze Rotolo, the woman on Bob Dylan's
arm on the cover of The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, chronicles
the backstory of Greenwich Village in the early days, when Dylan was
honing his skills and she was in the ring with him.
$22.95
The
Film Club
David Gilmour
Award-winning author David Gilmour made an unconventional deal with
his son Jesse: He could drop out of school, not work, not pay rent-but
he must watch three movies a week of his father's choosing. Week
by week, side by side, father and son watched everything from True
Romance to Rosemary's Baby to Showgirls.
The movies got them talking-about girls, music, heartbreak, drugs,
money and friendship-helping the chaotic teenager evolve into
a self-assured young adult.
$21.99
Empire
of Blue Water
Captain Morgan's Great Pirate Army, the Epic Battle for the Americas,
and the Catastrophe That Ended the Outlaws' Bloody Reign
Stephan Talty
The passion and violence of the age of exploration and empire come to
vivid life in this story of the legendary pirate who took on the greatest
military power on earth with a ragtag bunch of renegades and brought it
to its knees.
Paperback
$14.95
The
Power Makers
Steam, Electricity, and the Men who Invented Modern America
Maury Klein
From the author of Rainbow's End: The Crash of 1929 comes
the dramatic story of the "power revolution" that turned
America from an agrarian society into a technological superpower, and
the dynamic, fiercely competitive inventors and entrepreneurs who made
it happen. Maury Klein recreates their stunning triumphs and frequent
failures, and their unceasing and ferocious battles in the marketplace.
$29.95
Transparency
Creating a Culture of Candor
Warren Bennis, Daniel Goleman, James O'Toole
In this timely book, the authors-a powerhouse trio in the field
of leadership-look at what conspires against "a culture of
candor" in organizations to create disastrous results, and suggest
ways that leaders can achieve healthy and honest openness.
$22.95
Washington
The Making of the American Capital
Fergus M. Bordewich
How did we come to call Washington D.C.-a place one contemporary
observer called a mere swamp "producing nothing except myriads
of toads and frogs (of enormous size)," a district that was strategically
indefensible-our nation's capital? In Washington,
Fergus M. Bordewich, author of Bound for Canaan, turns his
eye to the backroom deal-making and shifting alliances between our Founding
Fathers and in so doing pulls back the curtain on the lives of the slaves
who actually built the city.
$27.95
The
Best Game Ever
Giants vs. Colts, 1958, and the Birth of the Modern NFL
Mark Bowden
The championship game at Yankee Stadium between the Baltimore Colts and
New York Giants is considered by many one of the greatest ever played.
The only championship or Super Bowl game to ever go into sudden death
overtime, this is the game that kick-started Americas'
love affair with football. Mark Bowden (Black Hawk Down) tells
the remarkable story of this historic sports moment.
$23.00
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| Schwartz
Select: Children's Books |
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Staff
Pick
Diamond
Willow
Helen Frost
"Diamond Willow is not only the name of a tree species, but also
a courageous, vulnerable young girl living in the Alaskan wilderness
where she struggles to discover herself with the help of a surprising
group of animals who carry the spirits of her ancestors. Every so often
a book comes along that takes your breath away and you want to share
it with everyone. Just open the cover of this unassuming treasure and
you will begin to understand."
-Kathy Carrigan, Brookfield
For Middle Readers
$16.00
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Great Books at Bargain Prices
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This is a sampling of the terrific deals we have on good books. Stop in to
any of our shops to pick up any of these titles or browse our bargain section.
The
Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears
Dinaw Mengestu
Publisher $14.00
SCHWARTZ: $7.99
Forgetfulness
Ward Just
Publisher $13.95
SCHWARTZ: $5.99
The
Fairy Tales
Jan Piekowski
Publisher $19.99
SCHWARTZ: $7.99
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Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops
Milwaukee's Very Own Independent Bookshop Since 1927
Downer Ave., 2559 N. Downer Ave., 414-332-1181, ondowner@schwartzbooks.com
Brookfield, 17145 W. Bluemound Rd., 262-797-6140, brookfield@schwartzbooks.com
Mequon, 10976 N. Port Washington Rd., 262-241-6220, mequon@schwartzbooks.com
Shorewood, 4093 N. Oakland Ave., 414-963-3111, shorewood@schwartzbooks.com
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