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Grass Roots Books and Music
— 227 SW 2nd Street, Corvallis OR 97339 — 541-754-7668 |
April 4, 2013 |
Contents |
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Happy National Poetry Month!
We are celebrating poetry all month long at Grass Roots. We have our first poetry reading of the month this Saturday with Tim Whitsel and Sarah Burant. If you'd like a daily dose of poetry but don't want anything else clogging up your email, you can catch our Poem-A-Day on our Facebook page. Make sure to LIKE us and you can see what's going on in the bookstore every day. If you're a poet yourself, don't forget to sign up for our Second Annual Community Poetry Night on April 30. It's an open mic event, but everyone is welcome to sit back and enjoy the variety of talent without reading. Please register to read prior to the event at the store.
See you in the bookstore!
Pamela. |
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Newest Books |
Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal
Mary Roach
“Roach (Stiff) once again goes boldly into the fields of strange science. In the case of her newest, some may hesitate to follow–it's about the human digestive system, and it's as gross as one might expect. But it's also enthralling. From mouth to gut to butt, Roach is unflinching as she charts every crevice and quirk of the alimentary canal–a voyage she cheerily likens to ‘a cruise along the Rhine. . .’ Adventurous kids and doctors alike will appreciate this fascinating and sometimes ghastly tour of the gastrointestinal system.” –Publishers Weekly Starred Review
Hardcover, $26.95
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company; ISBN: 9780393081572 |
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Life After Life
Kate Atkinson
“Atkinson delivers a wildly inventive novel about Ursula Todd, born in 1910 and doomed to die and be reborn over and over again. She drowns, falls off a roof, and is beaten to death by an abusive husband but is always reborn back into the same loving family, sometimes with the knowledge that allows her to escape past poor decisions, sometimes not. . . Alternately mournful and celebratory, deeply empathic and scathingly funny, Atkinson shows what it is like to face the horrors of war and yet still find the determination to go on. . . . From her deeply human characters to her comical dialogue to her meticulous plotting, Atkinson is working at the very top of her game.” –Booklist Starred Review
Hardcover, $27.99
Publisher: Reagan Arthur Books; ISBN: 9780316176484 |
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Mom & Me & Mom
Maya Angelou
Maya Angelou shares the deepest personal story of her life: her relationship with her mother. When Maya was three years old, her mother sent her and her brother to live with their grandmother in Stamps, AR; they were sent back to live with their mother in California when Maya was 13. The subsequent feelings of abandonment stayed with Angelou for years, but their reunion, a decade later, began a story that has never before been told. Dramatizing her years reconciling with the mother she preferred to simply call "Lady," Maya reveals here the profound moments that shifted the balance of love and respect between them.
Hardcover, $22.00
Publisher: Random House; ISBN: 9781400066117 |
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Oleander Girl
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
Orphaned at birth, Korobi grows up in the loving shelter of her grandparents in Kolkata, India. As she matures, she dreams of one day having the love she believes her parents shared, and it seems her wish has come true when she becomes engaged to the charming and rich Rajat. Shortly after their engagement, Korobi’s grandfather dies suddenly, and the truth of her paternity emerges, sending her on a quest across the world to find her father. Her dramatic, often startling journey will ultimately thrust her into the most difficult decision of her life.
Hardcover, $24.00
Publisher: Simon & Schuster; ISBN: 9781451695656 |
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The True Secret of Writing: Connecting Life with Language
Natalie Goldberg
The author of Writing Down the Bones reveals new guidance for the practice of writing, knowledge gleaned from a lifetime of teaching and Zen practice. The True Secret is for everyone, and allows you to discover something real about your life, to mine the rich awareness in your mind, and to ground and empower yourself. Goldberg guides you through your own personal or group retreat, illuminating the steps of sitting in silent open mind, walking anchored to the earth, and writing without criticism. Inspiration is shared through stories of her own work, breakthroughs and insights from her students, and homages to the work of other great teachers.
Hardcover, $24.00
Publisher: Atria Books; ISBN: 9781451641240 |
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New in Paperback |
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Some Assembly Required: A Journal of My Son's First Son
Anne Lamott and Sam Lamott
Nearly twenty years after chronicling the first year of her son Sam’s birth in Operating Instructions, Anne Lamott learns that her 19-year-old son is going to be a father himself. Lamott began a journal to follow the first year of her grandson’s life, and the changes it brings to the small family as they adjust to their new roles. Sam must juggle the demands of fatherhood and college, his girlfriend Amy has her own opinions about how to raise their son, and Anne faces the complex feelings that Jax fosters in her. Over the course of the year, the rhythms of life, death, family, and friends unfold in surprising and joyful ways.
Paperback, $16.00
Publisher: Riverhead Books; ISBN: 9781594486678 |
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Where'd You Go, Bernadette
Maria Semple
Bernadette Fox is a genius architect living the life of a recluse in Seattle following a professional disaster with the neighbors in Los Angeles. Her genius husband works at Microsoft and their genius teen-aged daughter, Bee, goes to private school, and Bernadette is still having problems getting along with the neighbors. After some unfortunate events, her erratic behavior convinces her husband that she should be sent to a mental health facility. Before the staged intervention and a family cruise to Antarctica (a reward for Bee’s perfect report card), Bernadette disappears, compelling Bee to compile email messages, official documents, secret correspondence to find her.
Paperback, $14.99
Publisher: Back Bay Books; ISBN: 9780316204262 |
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Thinking, Fast and Slow
Daniel Kahneman
“Nobel-winning psychologist Kahneman posits a brain governed by two clashing decision-making processes. The largely unconscious System 1, he contends, makes intuitive snap judgments based on emotion, memory, and hard-wired rules of thumb; the painfully conscious System 2 laboriously checks the facts and does the math, but is so ‘lazy’ and distractible that it usually defers to System 1. Kahneman uses this scheme to frame a scintillating discussion of his findings in cognitive psychology and behavioral economics, and of the ingenious experiments that tease out the irrational, self-contradictory logics that underlie our choices.” –Publishers Weekly Starred Review
Paperback, $16.00
Publisher: Farrar Straus Giroux; ISBN: 9780374533557 |
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One Glorious Ambition: The Compassionate Crusade of Dorothea Dix, a Novel
Jane Kirkpatrick
Yearning to fulfill her God-given purpose, Dorothea finds she has a gift for teaching and writing. Her pupils become a kind of family, hearts to nurture, but long bouts of illness end her teaching and Dorothea is adrift again. It's an unexpected visit to a prison housing the mentally ill that ignites an unending fire in Dorothea's heart—and sets her on a journey that will take her across the nation, into the halls of the Capitol, befriending presidents and lawmakers, always fighting to relieve the suffering of what Scripture deems, "the least of these."
Paperback, $14.99
Publisher: Waterbrook Press; ISBN: 9781400074310 |
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What Money Can't Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets
Michael J. Sandel
Michael J. Sandel takes on one of the biggest ethical questions of our time: Is there something wrong with a world in which everything is for sale? If so, how can we prevent market values from reaching into spheres of life where they don't belong? What are the moral limits of markets? In recent decades, market values have crowded out nonmarket norms in almost every aspect of life, even family life and personal relations. Without quite realizing it, Sandel argues, we have drifted from "having" a market economy to "being" a market society. Is this where we want to be?
Paperback, $15.00
Publisher: Farrar Straus Giroux; ISBN: 9780374533656 |
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God's Hotel: A Doctor, a Hospital, and a Pilgrimage to the Heart of Medicine
Victoria Sweet
Dr. Victoria Sweet came to San Francisco’s Laguna Honda for a part-time job while she worked on her PhD. in history of medicine. Not just a hospital, Lagunda Honda is the last almshouse in the country, caring for the poor and chronically disabled.
“As she witnessed a remarkable spectrum of resilience and defeat in Laguna Honda's open wards, Sweet came to understand that it was the hospital's inspirational patients, caring staff and slow, healing pace that made it unlike any other. Part professional memoir, part meditation on the nature of medicine and part argument for a dramatic reframing of health care, God's Hotel is the story of Sweet's 20-year tenure at the hospital.” –Shelf Awareness
Paperback, $16.00
Publisher: Riverhead Books; ISBN: 9781594486548 |
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Featured Books for Young Readers |
Little Acorn Grows Up
Edward Gibbs
Ages 2 to 4
A little yellow acorn falls to the ground, and lies patient and still. It’s not long before its forest friends stop by to ask what it will be. From a small white mouse promised a future home, to a brown boar promised bark to scratch its back, each colorful animal discovers that great things come in small packages. The tiny nut grows slowly, becoming a big tree that shelters its many friends.
Board Book, $8.99
Publisher: LB Kids; ISBN: 9780316127080 |
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How to Bicycle to the Moon to Plant Sunflowers: A Simple But Brilliant Plan in 24 Easy Steps
Mordicai Gerstein
Ages 4 to 8
“In this unusual picture book, a boy shares his inventive plan for reaching the moon, planting sunflower seeds, and returning to a hero's welcome back on Earth. What with homework, soccer, violin, and all the other stuff on his schedule, he has never made the trip. Still, he happily passes along the practical details of his plan. Preparations include collecting and connecting all your neighbors' old garden hoses into one 238,900-mile length, building an enormous slingshot that will shoot one end of the hose to the moon (don't forget the anchor), learning to bicycle along the taut hose, and requesting a small spacesuit from NASA, among other important details.” –Booklist Starred Review
Hardcover, $16.99
Publisher: Roaring Brook Press; ISBN: 9781596435124 |
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Write This Book: A Do-It-Yourself Mystery
Pseudonymous Bosch
Ages 8 to 12
The author of this book is missing! He has abandoned this book, and it remains unwritten. He has big, grown-up reasons for disappearing, and he is relying on his readers to write the book for him. You must WRITE THIS BOOK! Don’t worry, you’ll have help: the author has left a fragmentary plotline for you to finish with choices to circle and blank lines to fill in. Interactive puzzles, activities, games, and choose-your-own-adventure scenarios lead the reader (and aspiring young authors) through the steps of writing their own book.
Hardcover, $16.99
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers; ISBN: 9780316207812 |
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Music |

Various Artists
The Music Is You:
A Tribute to John Denver
Genre: Pop/Folk
While John Denver is best known for his early "country boy" songs, his long career saw him release hundreds of songs unheard by most. This compilation draws from familiar and less popular Denver tunes, featuring contributions from Emmylou Harris, Dave Matthews, Old Crow Medicine Show, and more. ($13.95) |

Hiss Golden Messenger
Haw
Genre: Pop/Folk
Hiss Golden Messenger features the music of North Carolina's M.C. Taylor. This second release features 70's country-leaning songs “about family, faith, and an ill-prophesied future." ($13.95) |

John Nilsen
Wild Rose
Genre: New Age
John Nilsen is a longtime pianist and guitarist from Portland, making lyrical instrumental music. His new album finds him collaborating with fellow Portland musicians from across the lines of genre. ($14.95) |

Hem
Departure and Farewell
Genre: Pop/Folk
This Brooklyn indie folk act received generous critical praise for their early albums, but hasn't released a record since 2006. Departure combines stately, beautifully rendered folk hymns with what the NY Times calls "the kind of film music that evokes prairie sunsets." ($13.95) |
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Events |
Saturday, April 6 at 2 p.m.
Grass Roots Books & Music
227 SW 2nd Street, Corvallis |
Poetry Reading:
Tim Whitsel & Sarah Burant
We Say Ourselves and Verge
Kick off National Poetry Month at Grass Roots with a reading from two Eugene-area poets. Tim Whitsel and Sarah Burant both published their first collections last year. Stop by to hear these fresh voices.
Tim Whitsel grew up in northeastern Indiana, but came west as soon as he could. For six years Tim directed (or co-directed) Windfall, a monthly reading series at the Eugene Public Library. He lives on a 100-year floodplain northeast of Springfield, Oregon. We Say Ourselves is his first collection.
Sara Burant's favorite house-sitting clients are fellow poets because she can read from their ample libraries while taking care of their quirky pets. Her poems have appeared in Poetry East, Cloudbank, Prairie Schooner, and other journals. She makes her home in Eugene. Verge is her first collection. |


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Tuesday, April 16 at 7 p.m.
Grass Roots Books & Music
227 SW 2nd Street, Corvallis |
Poetry Reading:
Karen Holmberg
Axis Mundi: Poems
Corvallis poet Karen Holmberg will read from her second book of poems, Axis Mundi, winner of the John Ciardi Prize.
“Axis Mundi is a book made of elliptical fire and solid architectures. In these Linneaus-like lyric meditations, the adamantine grasp and the letting of the physical world form the balancing act of this spinning descent and ascension. We fall into the gaze of animals and insects, into mirrors, into this poet’s grounded aerial hunger and grief, teaching us what we know. Like the sweetbriar rose, whose name means both ‘wounds to heal’ and ‘poetry’, these poems are spun from both joy and dread. The result is sheer eloquence, both measured and wild - and a new poet’s voice that is unforgettable and utterly thrilling to encounter.” —Carol Muske-Dukes |
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Saturday, April 20 at 2 p.m.
Grass Roots Books & Music
227 SW 2nd Street, Corvallis |
Poetry Reading
Stephanie Lenox & Donna Henderson
Congress of Strange People and The Eddy Fence
Two local poets published by Airlie Press join us for an afternoon reading in the Grass Roots loft.
Stephanie Lenox’s inventive debut collection Congress of Strange People entices readers into a “federation of freaks” with voice-driven poems that sing a collective ode to our common strangeness. Employing humor, mystery, and a bold yet generous gaze, this book keeps company with a snake handler and conspiracy theorist, record-holders from The Guinness Book, Miss Manners, human cannonballs, Nancy Drew, and other characters from a family of outcasts.
Donna Henderson’s collection The Eddy Fence was an Oregon Book Award Finalist in 2010. It traces the contours of the “eddy fence” where love and loss meet. In poems that confront a mother’s illness, a forest’s destruction, and the struggles to seed new life, she discovers a difficult beauty and passage to healing. Here we encounter a restless intelligence in dialogue with itself, seeking to enter the world more entirely through deeper and deeper seeing. |


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Thursday, April 25 at 7 p.m.
Grass Roots Books & Music
227 SW 2nd Street, Corvallis |
Cliff Kirkpatrick
Oregon State University Baseball: Building a Legacy
In the postseasons of 2005, 2006 and 2007, the Oregon State Beavers baseball team achieved a seemingly impossible dream and forever changed the culture of Northwest sports. After nearly a century of dismissal as a wet-weather team, unable to compete with the southern baseball belt on the national stage, a run of three College World Series appearances and back-to-back titles earned the Beavers national respect. Inspired by his own coverage of the dramatic seasons, Corvallis Gazette-Times sportswriter Cliff Kirkpatrick recounts the program's rise to prominence and lasting legacy.
Cliff Kirkpatrick has covered the athletics programs at Oregon State University for the Corvallis Gazette-Times since July 2004. Most of his work focuses on the football team, but includes a variety of sports. Kirkpatrick has received multiple writing awards for his football and baseball coverage of Oregon State. His game story about the baseball team's victory over Michigan in the 2005 Super Regional to reach the College World Series won best sports writing from the Oregon Newspaper Publishing Association. |
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Upcoming Events
We have many more events coming up in the next few months! For a complete list of all of our upcoming events, please visit our website. |
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Community Events |
Community Events
Darkside Cinema: Movies showing April 5 to 11, showtimes daily, Darkside Cinema, Corvallis. Visit their website for showtimes.
- Stoker –R: After India's father dies in an auto accident, her Uncle Charlie, who she never knew existed, comes to live with her and her emotionally unstable mother. Soon after his arrival, she comes to suspect this mysterious, charming man has ulterior motives, but instead of feeling outrage or horror, this friendless girl becomes increasingly infatuated with him.
- Quartet –PG-13: At a home for retired musicians, the annual concert to celebrate Verdi's birthday is disrupted by the arrival of Jean, an eternal diva and the former wife of one of the residents.
- The Gatekeepers –PG-13: Charged with overseeing Israel's war on terror-both Palestinian and Jewish- the head of the Shin Bet, Israel's secret service is present at the crossroad of every decision made. For the first time ever six former heads of the agency agreed to share their insights and reflect publicly on their actions and decisions.
- On the Road –R: Young writer Sal Paradise has his life shaken by the arrival of free-spirited Dean Moriarty and his girl, Marylou. As they travel across the country, they encounter a mix of people who each impact their journey indelibly.
Literary Events: Visit our Community Calendar for details on these events and others in the area.
- OSU Visiting Writers Series presents Mike Rich: Thursday, April 4, 7:30 p.m., LaSells Stewart Center Construction & Engineering Hall, OSU, Corvallis.
- Random Review: Felicia Uhden reviews Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World that Can’t Stop Talking by Susan Cain: Wednesday, April 10, 12 p.m., Corvallis-Benton County Public Library. Sponsored by Friends of the Corvallis-Benton County Public Library.
- OSU MFA Reading Series, featuring Yaakov Schwartz, Nazifa Islam, and Rachel Ratner: Thursday, April 11, 7:30 p.m., New Morning Bakery, Corvallis.
Opportunities:
- Summer in Words Conference: Whether you're a writer just starting out, a writer in search of answers, a writer who needs to get more words on the page, or a writer who wants to hang with other writers, you can find inspiration, answers and camaraderie at Summer in Words Writing Conference. Three days of events, talks, and workshops taught by a stellar cast of authors and writing instructors will help you learn more about story and craft and invite you to move forward. This year's focus is Deep as the Ocean and you can network, share your work, and receive invaluable instruction in a beautiful setting. Your words are worth it! June 20-23, Hallmark Inn & Resort, Cannon Beach, OR. For more information and to register, visit the Conference website.
- Terroir Creative Writing Festival: A day of workshops, lectures and readings brings readers and writers of fiction, poetry and creative nonfiction together in McMinnville, April 27, 2013. Early-registration discount available through April 17. Registration forms can be found at the Terroir Festival website.
- Summer Fishtrap: The 26th annual Summer Fishtrap Gathering of Writers at Wallowa Lake runs July 8-14, 2013. For more details on workshops at Summer Fishtrap and to register please visit fishtrap.org.
- Call for Submissions: Calling Authors and Artists to Submit to the Summer 2013 Issue of VoiceCatcher’s Journal. VoiceCatcher: a journal of women’s voices & visions opens for submissions for its Summer 2013 issue on March 15, closing April 30, 2013. Please find our guidelines — and hints —on our journal's submission page (www.voicecatcherjournal.org) .
- 2013 Lois Cranston Memorial Poetry Prize: March 1-May 31, 2013, postmarked. Please submit up to three unpublished poems (six pages maximum). Simultaneous submissions are discouraged. The CALYX editorial collective reads all manuscripts first, then selects 10-20 finalists to send to the final judge. See the CALYX submissions page for more information.
- The Trillium Project: The Spring Creek Project would like to invite you to submit a proposal for the Trillium Project at the Cabin at Shotpouch Creek. . First preference will be given to proposals submitted by April 6, 2013. You can find more information about the Spring Creek Project and the Cabin on their website.
- Fooling Around with Words: A fun literary tradition continues. . . Writing should be fun! Fooling Around with Words was created to encourage writers of all levels to engage in the kind of playfulness that leads to some unexpected and rewarding results. Pre-register at www.linnbenton.edu. Fee $29, CRN# 46532. Saturday, April 13, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., LBCC Benton Center, 757 NW Polk Avenue, Corvallis.
- Call for Submissions, Campus Creature Census: The Spring Creek Project for Nature, Ideas, and the Written Word invites students, faculty, staff, and community members to participate in the Campus Creature Census at OSU. Prose, Field Guide Entries, Poetry, and Art submissions are all welcome. Register for the Census by April 15; submit your entry by May 1. Click here for complete details and guidelines.
- Call for Submissions: For the summer 2013 issue of Oregon Humanities magazine, we want ideas, arguments, theories, and stories about "skin," as in: The one you're in. You have two chances to contribute to this discussion. Shorter responses (400 words) for our Posts section are due May 13. Visit their website to read the full call Posts submissions.
- William Stafford Writing Contest: Teachers can mail submissions of their students’ work to Ooligan Press through April 2013. Selected student entries will be published in a book titled We Belong In History. The anthology will be released in January 2014 to help launch the yearlong celebration of William Stafford’s birth. Please visit the Contest website for additional information.
- Inklings, an open critique group, is seeking new members. The group meets on 1st & 3rd Sundays from 11 am to 1 pm in the upstairs meeting room at Market of Choice on 9th Street and Circle Boulevard in Corvallis. Please contact Dinaz Rogers at drogersor@msn.com or 541-967-1911 if you have any questions.
Ticket Sales: Grass Roots sells tickets for local music events. Check our Community Calendar for upcoming events that we have available.
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News |
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World Book Night Update
We didn’t forget about you! The World Book Night (WBN) coordinators are working around the clock to organize book drop-offs and contact lists for more than 6,000 cities and towns across the U.S. Once we have all we need, we will send out notifications so you know when to pick-up your FREE books; as well as information about Book Giver events held at Grass Roots.
One such event, the Book Giver Reception, will be a casual event held on Saturday, April 20 from 4 to 5:30 p.m. You can drop-in and meet other Book Givers and pick-up your giver box. After you hand-out your books during WBN on April 23, we hope to have you all back at Grass Roots for another event where you can discuss your WBN experience.
More details about both of these events are coming soon! |
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Store News
Grass Roots Bestsellers: March was a huge month of events for Grass Roots Books, featuring local authors and off-site conferences. This is reflected in our bestseller lists. Except where I edited them. Take a look at what's popular among your fellow readers and listeners:
eBook Specials: Fill up your eReader with great deals from some of our favorite publishers. Visit the eBook Specials page on our website for all of the details. |
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This Week's Puzzle |
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Reading Group Selection |
Tuesday, May 7, 6:30 to 8 p.m.
The Marriage Plot
Jeffrey Eugenides
Pamela hosts the discussion for The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides. It was named a Best Book of the Year by The New York Times Book Review, NPR, and Publishers Weekly.
Madeleine Hanna is a dutiful English major at Brown in the early 1980s, writing her thesis on Jane Austen and George Eliot, purveyors of the marriage plot that lies at the heart of the greatest English novels. While taking a course on semiotics—a more modern take on language—she meets and falls in love with the charismatic and manic depressive Leonard. At the same time, an old friend of hers declares himself her destined mate for life, forming a love triangle with a marriage plot of its own. |
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Publisher: Picador USA
ISBN: 9781250014764
Paperback
Regular price: $16.00
On sale for $13.60 until May 5.
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On Our Nightstands |
Charneé
Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal
Mary Roach
I would read a-ny-thing by Mary Roach. (A book about the curious science of paint drying – absolutely, I know it will be great!) Like all of Mary’s books, Gulp is full of impeccable research and remarkable discoveries woven together by curiosity, humor, intrigue, and the occasional “oh my goodness, did I just read that”! You won’t forget this adventure with Mary down the alimentary canal, from the science of eating yourself to death to the glamorous world of flatulence research. A small part of you might find this book strange, even gross, but every part of you will find it fascinating and impossible to put down!
Hardcover, $26.95
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company; ISBN: 9780393081572 |
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Tami
Reinventing the Chicken COOP: 14 Original Designs with Step-By-Step Building Instructions
Matthew Wolpe and Kevin McElroy
Springtime is here and so are the chicks. If you’ve been considering adding chickens to your household and are looking for some creative housing ideas, or your current chicken house lacks pizzazz, this book is for you. There are both big and small house plans. It’ll give you ideas on how to use existing yard features and even add-ons for your current coop like a water catchment system.
Paperback, $19.95
Publisher: Storey Publishing; ISBN: 9781603429801 |
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Pamela
Ol' Mama Squirrel
David Ezra Stein
Ages 3 to 6
Whatever you do, do NOT mess with Ol’ Mama Squirrel. She will give you what-for like nobody’s business! If I believed in such things, I would say that squirrels are my spirit animal; they’re feisty and springy and charming and fierce. Really fierce. This picture book proves that with wonderful illustrations, lots of action, and a VERY protective Ol’ Mama Squirrel. It is also a wonderful reflection of the devotion of mothers to their young. This book is just the right blend of funny and sweet.
Hardcover, $16.99
Publisher: Nancy Paulsen Books; ISBN: 9780399256721 |
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Grass Roots Online — Contact Us |
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