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ShelfTalker: A Children's Bookseller's Blog   



Posted by Josie Leavitt on November 25, 2009
Huge Black Friday Sale! For the first time in thirteen years, that's what our ads say this week. We've never had a Black Friday sale before, but we thought we'd ride the Buy Local wave and see if we can't get folks to buy books closer to home.

We are blessed with an event space upstairs, The Loft, and that'll be our real discount area. Overstock of which we have a little (okay, a lot) will be on sale, as will coffee table books, hurts and great books that are out of print. The main store will see 20-25% off retail.

Organizing a sale this large is actually a lot of work. The Loft currently has 72 folding chairs set up, so those need to get put away, by someone who isn't me. While I don't play tennis, I've developed a wicked case of tennis elbow from shelving books for more than a decade. Consequently, I find myself unable to fold up chairs without serious e...Read More

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Posted by Elizabeth Bluemle on November 24, 2009

As holiday traditions go, almost nothing is cozier than gathering together and sharing stories, including cherished books. It's a time of candlelight, spiced air, chubby little hands pushing on grown-up knees as children lean in to see the pictures in a favorite story.

At the bookstore, we have several customers who come in every year and ask for "this year's Christmas book," meaning, the one they will want to add to the family's treasured collection. So far this year, Lauren Thompson and Jon Muth's The Christmas Magic has been that book. It's a beautiful marriage of art and text, showing a simple Christmas p...Read More

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Posted by Josie Leavitt on November 23, 2009

Author events on Saturdays are always fun. This past Saturday we had not one, but two events - we were lucky enough to have two great author/illustrators.

Anna Dewdney was our first event, at 11 a.m.  We had a roomful of toddlers who were there to hear any of the Llama Llama stories. Anna was a charming reader who did admirably with the noise of some kids, who made it a challenge to hear, let alone read, and she didn't miss a beat. (Check out this little guy, on the left who thought the lamp was really cool.) Rather than take questions after each story, Anna smartly chose to take questio...Read More

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Posted by Alison Morris on November 20, 2009

In a word, NO. At least, not if you trust the opinions of the kids John Oliver read aloud to in a hilarious clip featured Wednesday on "The Daily Show" with Jon Stewart. Watch it and weep (with laughter, that is) as these youngsters announce several things they would RATHER do than have to listen to Mr. Oliver read any more pages of Going Rogue which, as it turns out, is no Chicka Chicka Boom Boom.

Thanks to my friend Tim Scarlett for the link! The read-aloud section begins about three minutes into this clip.

...Read More

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Posted by Josie Leavitt on November 19, 2009

The holiday season is upon us. While this means increased sales and traffic, it also means seasonal displays must be created. I have to confess that if it were up to me, we'd have the same displays we had in 1996 when we opened. Thankfully, I'm blessed with staff who are not only good at displays, but they actually like them.


Over the years I've learned a few things about displays. Good displays are eye-catching, but also make people stop and actually look the books in the display. The holidays give you a great chance to make things look appealing. Two staffers spent part of the weekend putting gorgeous sliver and gold bows on gift books. The effect of this is two-fold. First, books that are already visually arresting now are even more so, and second, by ha...Read More

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Posted by Josie Leavitt on November 18, 2009

As the holidays get closer, the number of special orders we take rises exponentially. I thought I'd take a moment and trace how a special order goes from your list to our store.


1. Customers come in with a title, usually somewhat wrong, that they are looking for and whoever answers the phone at the store, helps them find it. I should say that is the hardest part of the special order process. Deciphering a title is a real skill. See the blog post When Titles Go Bad to understand the challenges we face.


2. The title gets placed on our latest purchase order (this is the form we use to order from). We rotate our orders with the three distributors we work with. Baker & Taylor and Ingram each have noon order deadlines. Bookazine has a three p.m. deadline. O...Read More

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Posted by Elizabeth Bluemle on November 17, 2009

Esther Hautzig wrote one of the most beautiful, unique contributions to WWII children's literature—The Endless Steppe. It was a story based on her own childhood, banished with her family from Poland to Siberia because her father was denounced as a capitalist. When she passed away earlier this month, one of my bookselling colleagues, Rondi Brower from Blackwood & Brouwer Booksellers in Kinderhook, N.Y., shared a personal tribute to Ms. Hautzig, and I've asked if we might share it with ShelfTalker readers.

Because ShelfTalker is a booksellers' forum, we like to share the platform with guest columnists when...Read More

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Posted by Alison Morris on November 16, 2009

I didn't expect to share my recent flight home from Nebraska with any book illustrators other than my husband, but by chance three of them were sharing the friendly skies with me -- at least in a manner of speaking. As I slid the November 2009 issue of United's Hemispheres magazine out of the seat pocket in front of me, I found myself looking at a clever, colorful illustration that could only be the work of the incredibly talented John Hendrix, whose illustrations for Deborah Hopkinson's Abe Lincoln Crosses a Creek: A Tall, Thin Tale (Introducing His Forgotten Frontier Friend) helped land it on my ...Read More

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Posted by Alison Morris on November 13, 2009

What on earth are you going can you give your reader friends who need something OTHER than books? Etsy to the rescue! Once again I've pulled together an assortment of book-related suggestions for you.

A short Etsy tutorial for those of you not yet familiar with the website: If the item you've clicked on is "SOLD OUT" by the time you get to it, fear not! Click on the "store" link beneath the seller's profile (on the right-hand side of the screen) to get to their main store page. You may find another (newer) listing for that same item elsewhere in their shop, and/or info. on how you can contact the seller to ask about an item's availability.

Don't see anything below...Read More

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Posted by Josie Leavitt on November 12, 2009

It's time to start selling books hand over fist! The holidays are descending on us far sooner than we think. Forget that it was 55 degrees in Vermont today, sooner or later there will be snow on the ground and folks will come in with lists. Lists of people who need presents. It's our job as booksellers to make sure no one on any list goes without a great book, or two (or three) this holiday season. Just how we do that is the fun of being a bookseller. I love the challenge of the holidays. I try to open the store early, by 8:30 if I can, to get the parents after they drop the kids off, and I go all day. Holiday shoppers are like a captive audience of folks needing recommendations. It's fun, it's challenging and I wouldn't have it any other way.

Being a great handseller is about listening and sharing. You listen to what the customer says they want, or who they're lo...Read More

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Posted by Elizabeth Bluemle on November 11, 2009

Here's the updated list of starred reviews for 2009 children's books. For book covers and more information, I've created the 2009 Stars Library on LibraryThing.com.

This month saw two books join the 5-star list: Frances Hardinge's fantasy, THE LOST CONSPIRACY (Harper), and Elizabeth Partridge's MARCHING FOR FREEDOM: WALK TOGETHER, CHILDREN, AND DON'T YOU GROW WEARY (Viking). Two more books hopped up to the 4-star level: BAD NEWS FOR OUTLAWS: THE REMARKABLE LIFE OF BASS REEVES, DEPUTY U.S. MARSHAL by Vaunda Micheaux Nelson; illus. by R. Gregory Christie (Carolrhoda), and JOHN BROWN: HIS FIGHT FOR FREEDOM by John Hendrix (Abrams).  Several books joined the 1-, 2-, and 3-star list...Read More

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Posted by Alison Morris on November 10, 2009

Let's launch a children's book illustration career right here, today, on this very blog, shall we? The other day, while preparing a post to help you with your holiday shopping, I stumbled across the work of an immensely talented young woman who has a shop on Etsy. Her name? Brigette Barrager.

Because she is reportedly tired of hearing how much her illustrations resemble some of the work by the late great Mary Blair, I will instead point out the fact that Brigette's illustrations feel fresh, hip, and playful. I love her use of color, and ...Read More

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