Category: Newsletter

Seeking Teens for YA Reader Advisory Board

Read new books before they come out. Help us get the best new YA books. Become a Youth Advisor. We are looking for teens in grades 6th through 12th to read pre-publication books and provide brief reviews.

Youth Advisors may also be eligible for special discounts, priority seating at events and more!

Email booksandbooks@tskw for more information of click here to fill out an online application.

 

Gift registry services

For baby showers, kids’ birthdays, adult birthdays or any gift giving occasion

Encourage your child’s love of reading by having him or her pick out a pile of new books. We’ll make a list, then point party guests and family members in our direction and they’ll know exactly what the birthday kid would like.

You can also register yourself for any occasion (cookbooks for a new home, travel books for a honeymoon, that series you want to collect for your own birthday).

And if you’re the gift-giver and you don’t know what the recipient might like give us a call and we’ll help you find the right thing (gift cards and gift receipts make present buying happiness guaranteed).

For baby showers, we’ll take the guess work out of the equation. Tell us what you’d like to spend and author Judy Blume will pull together the assortment of must-have baby books that she gives to friends and family to welcome new little ones.

Email booksandbooks@tskw.org for more information or stop by the store to get started.

Farewell, Snowbirds. Fear not.

Oh snowbirds, we know you’re away for the summer. There’s no shame in that; even Conchs need a break from the rock. But Books & Books @ The Studios has your back. When you’re not in Key West, we’re here to serve your reading needs.

Our web site BooksandBooksKW.com provides news of what’s happening with weekly updates on new books, and links to our offsite resources. Just click “Can’t Get to the Shop,” where you’ll find a link to our full service online bookstore supplying hardcover and paperback books, as well as links to our new Ebook service from Kobo and our audiobook service from Libro.fm.

The online store is not limited to the 5,000 titles in stock of the store, but includes an inventory of over nine million books, almost everything that’s in print. We’ll ship anything to you without charge, and without sales tax (unless you’re in Florida or New York).

Our digital ebook and audiobook services are equally comprehensive, drawing on the resources of the online seller Kobo for ebooks and Libro.fm for audiobooks. You’ll be pleased to know that the prices charged for either kind of digital book is usually the same as that charged by the giant online bookstores (no names mentioned). And we offer the same instant download. The content of the digital books (and the reading voice in the case of audiobooks) is the same. The big difference is that Books & Books @ The Studios shares in the revenue. So if you shop locally when you’re in town, why not do it when you’re away?

A few tips:
Ebooks – Buy your books via the link at shop.booksandbookskw.com and set up an account. You’ll want to download the Kobo reader app to access them on your Apple or Android phones, pads or tablets. Once installed, you can access all the books purchased with your Books & Books account, read them save them, etc. (Reading Kobo books on a traditional Kindle or Nook can be tricky. If that’s important to you, drop a note to george@tskw.org. and he’ll help you figure out a solution.)

Audiobooks – Visit Libro.fm to sign up and create an account. Pick Books & Books @ The Studios as your home store. Get the Libro.fm app to listen to the books on your phone, pad or tablet. You can buy individual books or get a monthly subscription for $14.99 which will entitle you to a book of any price each month. Unlike some other audiobook subscription programs, your monthly entitlements from Libro never expire.

A note from Judy Blume

Hi Bookfriends,

What a busy season it’s been at Books & Books @ The Studios. Busy is good!  We thank all of you for that.  For those who don’t know, our manager Mia left for Maine with her longtime boyfriend on May 1, to start a new chapter in her life.  She was raised in Maine and her parents and sister live there.  We all wish her well. Emily, who co-managed the store with Mia, is taking over as Manager.  Most of you know her, and know she will be great as our fearless leader.  Robin continues as Associate Manager and Social Media Director.  Where would we be without these two?

We’re thrilled that Lori (many of you know her from her ten years at the Tropic Cinema) has joined our staff.  Come in and talk with her.  She’s a great reader and knows books in all genres.  Camila continues as a bookseller and Gianelle is on board as our first Inventory Specialist. (Lori and Gianelle are profiled in this newsletter.) Now we can truly welcome our UPS guys when those boxes of new books come in. George and I will still be guiding our “baby” and you’ll find us on the job three days a week.

Robin is already planning an exciting event for next Fall.  But first, we’ll soon be hosting a book fair for kids of all ages (time to think about summer reading fun!)  Speaking of summer reading, I’m looking forward to our next Virtual Book Club pick.  Robin will tell you all about it. I think we received more new books this week than ever, making it both easy and hard — so many new books, so little time.

Next time you’re in the store, check out our new commemorative sign in tribute to David Kaufelt.

Stay tuned and Happy Spring to all.

 

Meet our new booksellers – Lori & Gia

Lori Reid & Gianelle Rodriguez, bookstore staff

Lori Reid (left) & Gianelle Rodriguez

We are delighted to welcome two new staff members: Lori Reid & Gianelle Rodriguez.

Lori joins us as a Bookseller after retiring from the Tropic Cinema, where she worked for 12 years, serving as manager for 9. A popular and well-known community leader, Lori needs no introduction for most Key West locals.

“This is my second dream job,” she says of the bookstore. But on the question of movies vs. books, she’ll be the first to tell you: The book is always better.

I asked Lori and Gia for their favorite books, new and old. Lori picked Tayari Jones’ An American Marriage and A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle. Despite its tragic storyline, Lori loved An American Marriage. It’s about loss, she says, all kinds of loss, but especially the loss of illusions. “It’s about redefining yourself as you move into a future you never expected,” Lori says. “I love a good story, I want to laugh and cry and be moved.”

Lori reads widely and she credits A Wrinkle in Time with starting that journey. Come in and chat with her and see where your reading travels take you next.

Gia, who has taken on a mission critical role as our first Inventory Specialist, managing the daily deluge of UPS boxes, is a newcomer to our island, but a long-time Floridian. Her husband is active duty Navy and Gia is delighted that their second posting has landed them in a locale with lots of beautiful sunshine, easy access to the water and a vibrant outdoor culture.

Her favorite book pick is Toni Morrison’s Beloved, which she recommends for its message about growth and endurance, and its strong writing. On the lighter side, she’s a devoted Harry Potter fan, reading all 7 of the original books every summer. She enjoys watching the characters grow and take on challenges. “I think the books illustrate the importance of character and how to treat people,” Gia says.

What she’s most likely to be reading about on a daily basis is personal growth, what we call the mind, body, spirit section in the store. “I’m passionate about collecting and sharing information,” she says, “so this job is really a happy coincidence.”

~Robin Wood, Associate Manager & Social Media Director

 

 

 

 

A few questions with Marlena author Julie Buntin

Author Julie Buntin

Julie Buntin (photo credit: Nina Subin)

We had the pleasure of reading MARLENA as our most recent virtual book club pick and the extra-special treat of meeting author Julie Buntin in person when she and husband Gabe Habash, author of Stephen Florida, came to Key West in March.

For everyone who didn’t get a chance to join the store event, we asked Julie a few questions that we hope will pique your interest in reading MARLENA.

Q: We know from the beginning of the book that Marlena will die, in fact has been dead for years, but there is such a sense of urgency and suspense that as a reader, I almost thought I could change things – like yelling at the screen during a horror movie – but Marlena dies and Cat survives, though profoundly affected by the both the loss and its unexplained nature. Do you consider the end of the novel hopeful?

Julie: I love this question – thank you for asking it, and I’m glad to hear that was your reaction. I wanted the reader to feel a little like that, as Cat does; this sense that maybe, somehow, the ending might be different. MARLENA is a book largely about grief and addiction, and it has two self-destructive women at its heart – I always knew I was writing a sad book, but even though it’s not overtly joyful or anything like that, I do think of the ending as hopeful. I see it as Cat taking ownership of this story – the act of telling it, facing it, is her way of moving on. That seems really hopeful to me.

 

Q: The book ends with some mysteries still unsolved. As the writer, how much of the character’s thoughts and knowledge do you know, but not present to the reader? For example, did you write knowing what Marlena’s final thoughts were?

Julie: Another great question. I don’t know what Marlena’s final thoughts were, though I do have an idea about what *really* happened to her, so to speak. But I didn’t want to solve the mystery, to explain her death for the reader – ultimately, this is Cat’s story, and the fact that no matter how she interrogates her memories, there’s still something about this loss that she will never understand seemed really essential to me in writing truthfully about how we experience grief. There are always elements of the story that remain unknown, that are lost with the person who is gone.

Q: When you were in Key West in March, you told us that the novel underwent a substantial revision after it had been acquired. Can you tell us about your revision process and what you had in mind as you shaped the published version?

Julie: Yes, I did a total overhaul. The draft that I sold to my publisher was a much longer book, more teenage stuff, and didn’t have as much from Cat’s adult perspective, though it was still told in her voice. After my editor gave me back her initial notes, she asked pages and pages of questions. As I reviewed her questions, I kept getting stuck on this other, larger question. Why is Cat telling this story now, so many years after Marlena’s death? That particular question was not the one my editor asked, but I felt if I could answer it (and my original draft definitely did not), then I could answer all of my editor’s more specific questions at the same time. I needed to give the story a motivating impulse, and in trying to figure out what that was, I had to look at who Cat had become as an adult. I found the answer to “why now?” both in Cat’s relationship to alcohol, and the surprise appearance of Sal.

Q: As you were writing and editing Marlena, what did your work as an editor give to the process and what did it take away from your work as a writer?

Julie: No one has ever asked me this before, and I am happy to answer, because I think editing other people’s work taught me how to revise my own. In my professional life, I think deeply about plot, about language/style, about how to help my writers understand their own blind spots while maintaining their voice and vision. I started working on book length editorial projects at exactly the same time I was revising MARLENA. I tried to apply the same editorial rigor that I bring to the office to my own work. Suddenly I could see that I needed a trigger for the story. MARLENA’s no thriller, and I never intended it to be, but I did want to develop a gradual kind of suspense – working as an editor, which often involves marking the beats of a story, trying to help the writer get the pacing right, taught me how to do that in my work. The downfall is that it makes writing harder. It’s harder for me to disappear into the act of making something, because the critical brain is always turned on.

Q: What was the most surprising part of having your novel published and going out on tour? What advice would you give other writers, about writing, getting published, continuing to write, etc.?

Julie: Meeting people who have read my book! It’s been out for a year, and I still cannot believe that it’s a real book, that people have spent time with it, that it’s on bookshelves. That will never stop being a dream and an honor. My only writing advice is to write, and not to be afraid of what you have to say – to let go of what other people think. As for getting published, I’ve worked in independent publishing for six years, and I still feel like I have very little practical advice – be yourself, I suppose, which is a little like my writing advice? As an editor, I’m always looking for something distinct, a character I’ve never read before, some idiosyncrasy to the way a writer puts their sentences together.

Q: We’re all hoping you’ll write another novel for us to devour. Can you say anything about your current writing projects?

Julie: I am taking notes for a nonfiction project about money, which is all I’ll really say about that. I am also in the early early stages of a novel that’s set at a boarding school, and follows a teacher, as well as a couple of students.

Q: What are you reading right now that you’d recommend?

I recently discovered the English novelist Anita Brookner, who is famous for HOTEL DU LAC, which I liked, but not as much as I LOVED some her other novels – BRIEF LIVES (fierce, mean, funny, whip-smart) and A MISALLIANCE (sneaky, so crisply written you don’t notice until it’s too late that it’s devastating). Next on my list is OFTEN I AM HAPPY, by Jens Christian Grøndahl.

~Robin Wood, Associate Manager

Our Virtual Book Club Pick – Cork Dork

Do you know what they mean when they call a wine grippy or musky? Have you’ve ever been curious about why and how some wines get fancy descriptions and what they mean to the experience of drinking your favorite wine? Or wonder what it would be like to uproot your life and try a whole new professional endeavor? Join us as we read Cork Dork.

Journalist Bianca Bosker sets how to find out what sommeliers know that we don’t — and whether or not it matters. A standing staff pick in the store, Cork Dork is an intriguing look into something that most of us know a little about, but have no idea of the topic’s full range.

Join us as we learn a little more about a fun subject and give ourselves an excuse to try a new wine vintage or two.

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How the B&BKW Virtual Book Club works

The Books & Books @ The Studios virtual book club is an opportunity for us to share reading experiences, even if we’re not all together in the same place. Read the book (you can get it online here. Use coupon code BC20 for the 20% book club discount through the end of May.)

And share your reactions on social media. Make a comment, share a picture, ask a question. Don’t forget to include the hashtag: #bbkwbookclub on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Follow us on social media and look for the #bbkwbookclub hashtag. Every week, we’ll post new book club content.

 

Thank you, volunteers

Volunteer party pictures
Volunteer party pictures

Pictures from our April volunteer party, capping off high season and saying good-bye to our winter volunteers.

One of the benefits of our nonprofit structure is that it allows us to recruit a wide variety of volunteers who share their time and talents with us. We rely on our volunteers year-round, but especially during the busy winter tourist season.

Volunteers supplement our bookseller’s work, aiding in both retail and back office activities. This extraordinarily well-read group also give us a much wider sense of what’s worth reading, sharing insights and recommendations.

We are always looking for new volunteers, so if you’re interested, chat with us about it next time you’re in.

A Note from Judy Blume

Hi Bookfriends,

You know me – I get really excited when I read a first novel that grabs me on the first page and won’t let go. That’s the way it was with Gabe Habash’s Stephen Florida and with our new virtual book club pick Marlena, by Julie Buntin. One of the best parts of running a bookstore is being surrounded by books and authors you may not have heard about yet and knowing that you can share these amazing books with readers before word gets out. Imagine my surprise and delight when I found out that Gabe and Julie are a couple!  We all agreed, we had to get them to Books & Books @ The Studios.

These novels could not be more different yet, in each, the writing sings and the characters are unforgettable. Each deals in its own way with obsession – in Marlena, a friendship – in Stephen Florida, college wrestling.  But the take is so original you feel you’ve never read this story before.

For more on Marlena, read store manager Mia Clement’s review.

If you’re in Key West, join us at 6pm on March 13, when we’ll be hosting Gabe and Julie in conversation (and you can get your books signed.) It makes a huge difference to our visiting writers, their publishers, and to us, when we bring in a good audience. You’ve been great so far.

And while we’re on the subject of events: Save Wednesday, March 21 for a special event with Tayari Jones (author of the #1 bestseller, An American Marriage) in conversation with her publisher Elisabeth Scharlatt. (Spoiler alert – they met in Key West.)

If you’re not in town, read Marlena along with us via our virtual book club and share your pictures, thoughts and questions. We love seeing where you’re reading and hearing what you think.

Once again, thanks for your support.

 

B&BKW Book Club pick: Marlena

Mia reads Marlena while on a recent vacation in wintry Maine.

More than just a coming of age story, Marlena is a heavy-hitter, confronting life struggles that many of us can relate to – fitting in, alcoholism, divorce, drug abuse and most importantly, living with the choices we make as we grow older. Set in northern Michigan, 15 year-old Cat is drawn to Marlena, who is everything introverted Cat is not, and who Cat would like to become: rebellious, beautiful and loads of fun.

For the first time in her life, Cat is experimenting with alcohol, drugs and boys. Just as abruptly as Marlena comes into Cat’s life, she is taken away. Cat spends the next 10 years trying to figure out the “why’s” and “how’s,” and if there was anything she could have done differently.

This is one of the most memorable novels I have read, a story with the universal appeal of the challenges of growing up, living with regret and moving on. It is not to be missed!

~ Mia Clement, store manager

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How the B&BKW Virtual Book Club works

The Books & Books @ The Studios virtual book club is an opportunity for us to share reading experiences, even if we’re not all together in the same place. Read the book (you can get it online here.)

And share your reactions on social media. Make a comment, share a picture, ask a question. Don’t forget to include the hashtag: #bbkwbookclub on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Follow us on social media and look for the #bbkwbookclub hashtag. Every week, we’ll post new book club content.