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When Titles Go BadMay 6, 2009I've been selling books for 13 years. And in those years I've helped hundreds, maybe thousands, of people find the books they're looking for. Sometimes they know what they want, but more often than not they just know they heard about it on NPR and really have no idea what the title is. But they think they do. They cling to their ideas, often repeating the same phrase over and over again, hoping that on the tenth hearing of it, suddenly, I'll understand what they're talking about. So, bring me your mangled, your botched, your half-heard titles while taking the kids to soccer and I'll do my best to decipher your code and together we'll eventually get you Girl with a Pearl Earring, not "Dutch girl turned to the side." Posted by Josie Leavitt on May 6, 2009 | Comments (61)
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Anne commented: "It had a blue cover and was in your window last year."
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Margaret commented: A high school student at our library once asked me for "Morton D. Arthur." After a wild moment when I asked myself if Chester A. Arthur had a secret twin, I realized that she was looking for Thomas Malory. (<i>Le Morte d'Arthur.</i>)
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Carol Ann commented: We've had our share of good ones too. My favorites: Bless Me Ultimatum and the Courage of the Red Badger
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Jessica commented: I can attest to that blue cover thing - I did actually help a friend back in high school in the 60s find In Wildness is the Preservation of the World based on just that.
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Tint commented: "It's new, i think it has a green cover and it's written by a man."
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Ellen Richmond commented: Years ago, I had a woman ask for a book about electricity and it's by someone kinda famous. She wanted Arthur Hailey's Overload.
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad ELIZABETH DULEMBA commented: lol!!!
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Suzanna commented: Favorites:
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Parker Peevyhouse commented: These are too funny! Morton D. Arthur!!
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Kathleen commented: The Dying Enema, by Philip Roth. The jokes just write themselves ...
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Aaron Curtis commented: I had a customer ask me for "books that open." She went on to clarify, "You know, you open them and there are words and pictures." She was looking for pop-up books. <br>
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Inderjit Deogun commented: These stories are absolutely priceless!
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad hoorayforbooks commented: We had "Onion in the Closet" in lieu of "Indian in the Cupboard." Also, a request for "a children's book about European trains" turned out to be Thomas the Tank Engine!
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Kona Stories commented: "The astonishing journey of Candelar" turned out to be "The amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay". I also managed to figure out that "This book about a guy who's going to get married and gets thrown in prison" was "The Count of Monte Cristo".
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Fran Manushkin commented: My favorite is someone asking for the picture book, NEUROSIS FOR HARRY
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Kat B commented: I once worked in a bookstore in downtown San Diego. We got a lot of foreign tourists, and our requests varied greatly. The best was when one French man tried with very little English to ask for the book about 'Big fish.' Jaws.
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad shelftalker elizabeth commented: Kat, you need to use single quote marks. For some reason, the blog tool cuts off the text after regular quotes. Just had another funny request: Science fiction writer, used to be popular, died recently. Her new memoir is 'a single word, not a compound word.' I loved the specificity with the vagueness! (To be fair, the customer did come up with the author: Octavia Butler.) And may I add an unrelated complaint? In between writing the last few sentences and now, a customer asked for the books by Dr. Zeuss. Zeuss, as in, you know, the Greek god. Not Seuss, the world-famous author. Something about that makes me absolutely bonkers. Is it the inattention to detail that bugs me? Do I feel that, once again, children's books are only barely noticed by some adults? Is it that people have had seventy years to get it right? Aargh! Ah, I feel better. Thank you for the opportunity to vent to you, presumably like-minded readers.
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Rdr commented: Well, Seuss is a God in the children's book world...
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad librarian commented: The one I checked out last year. Don't you remember?
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad weird commented: A book with photographs of real dinosaurs
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Mary Ann Rodman commented: As a former high school librarian, I was once asked for 'that book by that dead poet guy who won the Tulip Surprise.' And the answer, in the form of a question, Jeopardy style 'Do you have Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years by Carl Sandburg, which won the Pulitzer Prize?'
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad laura commented: My favorite -- 'One St. Todie' turned out to be '1st to Die' by Patterson.
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad shelftalker elizabeth commented: I also love, 'It was in your window last summer, don't you remember?' Which is akin to, 'Is my book in?' from someone at the grocery store, and when you ask for the title (because you got in 25 special orders that day), they say impatiently, 'I don't remember. Don't you know it?' But they do mean well. I'm sure I do equally bone-headed things in other venues, well-intentioned but absurd.
May 6, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Rowena commented: Someone once asked me for 'Shalom, Shalom'-
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Trixie commented: Back when Bridges of Madison County was flying off shelves we used to get all kinds of mangled variations of the title. One that stands out in my mind was 'Bridge over Sumatra.' I walked over to the stack and handed her Madison County and she said 'THAT'S IT!'
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Vicki commented: I worked at a university bookstore 20 years ago. The best was, 'I'm looking for a book, it's a red cover, hardback, for a sociology class.' I spent 15 minutes hunting through all the sociology shelves with them, only to find out that it was from a class 2 years prior, with a guest lecturer who was no longer there, and there was NO WAY any of his required reading was being carried in the store currently. They just shrugged, said 'Cool,' and walked out. No acknowledgement of the time I had taken, or thanks. That's when you want to throttle a customer!
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Alana Abbott commented: I really enjoy it when patrons come up with clues based on what they've heard of a book. It's like unraveling a mystery! Color of jacket is not helpful, of course, but not too long ago I helped a woman who came up with several really good keywords and we tracked down the book she was looking for. (It was even on the shelf!) When the patrons are understanding and encouraging -- and then pleased as punch when we can solve it -- that's one of my favorite parts of the day.
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Jazz commented: One of my co-workers was helping a woman who wanted a book for her grandson.
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Mallory commented: "The Beast Book, the one where they kill all the animals." AKA Aliki's Medieval Feast
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Joel commented: 1 - Do you have a sign language dictionary in audio?
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad bookmanjb commented: Oh, where to begin... In my 33 years of bookselling, I think my favorite was an NYU student who wanted 'Shakespeare' by Hamlet. When I gently suggested it was the other way around, she retorted: What is this, a test? Then there was the woman standing at the Classic Literature section, looking disappointed. I asked if I could help her. 'No, you don't have what I want.' What was she looking for? 'Danielle Steel books.' But, I ventured, her books are romances. 'Oh yes, but they're classics!'
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad "Orange Mike" Lowrey commented: Somebody once asked my wife/colleague for <i>The Gutenberg Bible</i> by Stephen King; never did figure out what they were really looking for.
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad inksnatcher commented: How about the one where this guy in Paris dies for the other guy and then the couple leaves in a carriage . . . Tale of Two Cities.
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Michael Gray commented: This is not as prominent a book, but still funny: My mom wanted to know if I had read a Francine Rivers book titled, "And the Shofar Blew". Instead of pronouncing it properly she asked, "Michael have you read that new book called 'The Chauffeur Blows?'"
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Marla commented: Orange Mike--The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver maybe? ;)
May 7, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Misrule commented:
May 8, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Janny commented: Oh, these are wonderful! Makes me feel so much better that I'm NOT the only one who gets into a bookstore thinking I know what I'm looking for...only to have my brain turn to warm oatmeal.
May 8, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad shelftalker elizabeth commented: I have to say, jacket color actually does help people find books much of the time. And wow, is it more effective to say to a customer (if I'm busy and can't get to the bookcase myself), 'purple spine on the third shelf down' instead of 'third shelf, alphabetically by author.' It seems that only booksellers, librarians, teachers, and English majors are patient enough to scan the alphabet. Or maybe it's a middle-aged vision thing, those small author names on spines being harder to read than color.... What are those studies about how we sort information? Size, then color, then letters?
May 8, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Nancy J commented: One of my favorites was a phone call from a college student who said she needed 'a copy of 'Wuthering Heights' by Jane Eyre. Would you like me to spell that for you?' I had to put her on hold for a minute. I guess universities aren't what they used to be.
May 9, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Nancy Keane commented: I had a young girl insisting she wanted to read the book about the big hurricane in Georgia. The book everyone has read. Even her mother. Turns out it was Gone with the Wind. Go figure.
May 10, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad heather commented:
May 11, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Randi Rivers commented: I once had a customer ask me for a book that had been displayed in the window a while back. When I asked for a title, author, subject, anything, he said--The book was square. Oh, yes, that book! On the flip side, during the height of summer reading, I had a very harried looking woman ask me if I'd ever heard of a book called Treasure Island. Easiest sale of the day.
May 11, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad bonnie commented:
May 11, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Josie Leavitt commented: Just this weekend I had a woman come and ask, "I saw this book in the staff picks, next to Enright's The Gathering." Hmm, I'm thinking what it could be when she adds,"Oh, it was last year. and it was in my local store in Colorado." Well, let me get right on that. She left inexplicably disappointed.
May 12, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad bookmanjb commented: There is a particular species of customer who simply won't tell you the title and/or the author. One must extract it with Sophoclean questioning. Following is the dialog I had with the best specimen of this type I've come across, who happened to be a middle-aged woman:
May 12, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad bookmanjb commented: Sorry about the above post. I forgot that the formatting would be lost. Hope it's decipherable
May 12, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad lexi fue commented: i've had my fare share of hilarious book buying customers but i think my favorite is when they come up to my desk, which is right under a huge lit up sign displaying the words 'customer service', and they ask me "is this coustomer service?". this happened a few weeks ago and on this occasion instead of answering i simply pointed up, referring to the sign, only to hav the customer say "oh the second floor?"
May 13, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Avid's Krissy commented:
June 17, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Mysterio commented: My favorite one was when someone asked for, 'Harry Potter and the Bleeding King.' It was Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.
June 20, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Archaism commented: Sometimes, mistaken titles seem to take on a life of their own and spread like a disease. I've had an amazingly large number of people ask for 'Crystal Palace' about that tv woman. Turns out they all wanted 'The Glass Castle' by Walls.
June 23, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad teenlibrarian commented: We had a good one today. A 7 or 8 year old boy wanted a "fortune" book with envelopes, where you take out the letter. Luckily, another 7 year old happened along who knew instantly that he was talking about Wizardology.
July 20, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Dinah Shields commented: A lady, well on in years, comes in to my store and wants a book. It was, yes, blue. It had a bunny on the cover. She had it when she was a little girl. She's sure I can find it for her. In time for Christmas. Did I mention this happened on December? I'm sorry, but I completely hate Christmas. Picture it: Dec.23 or 24, a desperate-for-material journalist grabs a long out-of-print from his back shelf, touts it that day as the greatest book ever, his listener comes in to my store that day and tells me I'm a bad bookseller because I don't have it. Feh.
July 23, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Joanne Fritz commented: I've been laughing aloud reading all of the above posts. So true. Recently I had a request from an older woman who wanted a picture book for her grandson. 'You know, it's the children's version of that book about the seeds.' Ha. Turns out she wanted Listen to the Wind by Greg Mortenson. (Seeds??)
July 26, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Archaism commented: I had a young lady ask me for the "Old Farmer Omnimax" today. If such a thing doesn't already exist, it should.
September 1, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Diane K. commented: While working in the Harvard Coop in Cambridge, Mass., a man asked for a book on shock attacks. I had no idea what he was talking about but thought I'd give it a try, and proceeded to search "shock attacks" in BookMaster. Disgusted, he angrily said "shock, shock, it swims in the ocean" while moving his hand like a fish. I think he thought I was making fun of him, when of course I was just new to the Boston accent!
September 13, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Josie Leavitt commented: I have to add a comment from a customer that came during an extremely busy Saturday morning. "What's that book with illustrations?"
September 23, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Tiffany commented: Not a stumper, but a little boy asked for the Tale of Des-per-x, just cute how he said it.
September 26, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Anon commented: Just had someone do the classic, if I repeat the information, over and over again, maybe you'll get it. "It's by a guy named William. He's name is William. He might go by Bill. Oh, he has the same last name as an actor. But his name is William."
October 10, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Josie Leavitt commented: Okay, here's one for the ages. A customer is here and asking for a book called the Food Diet. I go to the health section, no, I'm told it's not a health book. Finally, after many minutes of struggle she hits on the title: The Hunger Games. Wow
October 20, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad Erin D. commented: The other day, I had a lovely one where a girl comes up to me and asks for a science fiction book called 'Gamer's End'. ... Close, but noooot quite.
October 26, 2009
In response to: When Titles Go Bad paul in davis, ca commented: The most common customer gaffs at the bookstore where I work usually involve the pronounciation of last names, mostly dead philosopers and poets. des-kar-tees (Descartes), nit-ski (Nietzsche), so-krates (Socrates), virgil (Virgil-I believe is pronounced ver-heel), cant (Kant), fow-cowlt (Foucault).
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