Tag: indie bookstores

Mixed Doubles: Spencer Wise, author of THE EMPEROR OF SHOES

Spencer Wise photo by Molly Hamill

The New York Times Book Review calls Spencer Wise’s THE EMPEROR OF SHOES “Evocative,” going on to write, “THE EMPEROR OF SHOES underscores the extent to which the promise of economic opportunity still moves people across great distances on our planet…[A novel] of our times.”

Spencer will be giving a joint book talk with author Bethany Ball, Thursday, January 17th at 6:00 p.m. at B’Nai Zion Synagogue, 750 United St. in Key West. This event is free and open to the public. Please join us for what is sure to be an insightful and engaging conversation.

Leading up to this fun double-bill, I had the opportunity to ask both Spencer and Bethany a few questions.

Q. How did you come to be touring together?

A. Bethany and I have the same agent, Duvall Osteen, out of the Aragi literary agency in NYC. We have similar personalities (funny, but totally neurotic) and we also wrote our debut novels about Jewish people in the diaspora (Israel for her, China for me). Also she’s awesome and funny. And we both love tennis and we’re way too competitive despite not being that good in the grand scheme of tennis things. I think it was our agent who introduced us—Bethany was kind and generous enough to blurb my book, which was a big honor. We did a reading in NYC together, then Miami, now Key West, and Montreal is coming up. So we’ve been very lucky in that regard.

This event is interesting because the one-and-only Judy Blume is a huge fan of Bethany’s novel and invited her down to read. So a lot of stars aligned for this event and we’re so excited about it. We’ve been talking about it for months.

Having a touring buddy is the best! There is always someone to kvetch with instead of having to torture your partner/spouse over the phone. I’ve probably done 40 cities at this point on a six-month book tour and every event has been an absolute honor, but it’s a little more fun when I get to share the stage with a great writer like Bethany.

Q. Sell me Bethany’s book, WHAT TO DO ABOUT THE SOLOMONS.

A. Bethany’s book is fantastic. Stylistically it’s innovative. Somehow, she balances all these disparate plot lines and makes them all come together at the end. It’s a real tight-rope act she pulls off. The book is about the decline of the kibbutz system in Israel, a fading patriarch, and a family scattered across the globe in the diaspora. It’s full of sympathetic characters who are real and flawed. And it’s loaded with a dark, wry humor. It’s about what it means to be Jewish in 21st century and how one forms identity. And I’d say both our books are about a similar paradox—a strong desire to be with your family and the horrifying realization that you can’t get away from them.

Q. What was the genesis of your own book?

A. My family are shoemakers going back 5 generations to a shtetl in Russia. I wanted to explore that legacy, but also explore what happened to all these American textile and footwear factories when they closed in the late-60s and were outsourced overseas. My dad has been making shoes for the past 30 years in China. In 2014, I went and lived in a shoe factory in South China to research this novel. I was able to interview migrant workers in the factories and see the complex social and political realities they’re facing. So this is a very personal book. It’s totally fiction (when I go off on a reading my father always says, “Have fun and tell them it’s fiction for God’s sake”). The story itself is about a young man who goes to China to take over his family shoe business from his father, but he falls in love with a Chinese worker who may or may not be using him to start a workers’ revolution.

Q. What are you reading and recommending?

A. Well, I’ve got a mountain of books on my bedside table I’m looking forward to, but I’m also a college professor—I teach creative writing at Augusta University—so right now I’m feverishly reading all the books and stories I’ve assigned for the new semester. Some I’ve read before, others are new. I’ve got The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan and Maus by Art Spiegelman in there, two classics, both profound and warm, and I love teaching all the history behind them.

On my nightstand—a new collection called Hong Kong Noir that I’m enjoying a ton. There’s a great story by Carmen Suen. Very excited for a debut coming out this February called Bangkok Wakes to Rain by Pitchaya Sudbanthad. It’s going to be a biggie. I also have a few secret gems—a terrific upcoming book by Jing-Jing Lee called How We Disappeared and a coming-of-age memoir by John Glynn titled Out East that’s going to be amazing. Folks are in for a treat. Keep your eye out for all three authors in 2019.

Q. What are you working on now, if you don’t mind saying?

The next novel! I don’t talk too much about the project though until it’s done because it might change and suddenly it’s all about a feral cat colony on Mars (which it isn’t…yet) and everyone is disappointed.

~Robin Wood, Associate Manager

Caitlin Kunkel, co-author of NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS

Saturday, January 19, at 6pm, a discussion and book signing with comedy writer Caitlin Kunkel, co-author of NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS. Kunkel will appear in-conversation with local comedian and journalist Gwen Filosa.

Equal parts explosive, witty and empowering, NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS, is the expansion of a satirical piece on McSweeney’s that became a viral sensation, attracting nearly a million page views. Caitlin Kunkel, along with her co-writers Brooke Preston, Fiona Taylor, and Carrie Wittmer, have rewritten common romance and adult genre tropes into hilarious, hot feminist fantasies.

Kunkel, Preston, Taylor, and Wittmer have assembled a smart, timely, and relatable book that balances our need to laugh through the pain with an earnest invocation for change. In NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS, the authors have written dozens of brand-new satirical, spicy vignettes, chock-full of tongue-in-cheek (yet safer for work than the title implies) smut about women in pop culture, literature, dating, and modern parenting.

Indies First Giveaway Benefits Local Boys & Girls Club

As part of the #IndiesGiveBack campaign, Indies First is giving away nearly 20,000 special-edition copies of Ghost by Jason Reynolds to young readers. Books & Books @ The Studios gave copies of Ghost to The Boys and Girls Club of the Keys Area, Inc. Across the country, 490 independent bookstores participated in the giveaway campaign, sponsored by the American Booksellers Association, American Express and Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing.

Reynolds is a New York Times bestselling author, as well as a recipient of the Newbery, Printz and National Book Awards, among many others. Ghost, the first book in a four-book series about a middle school track team, was a National Book Award finalist for Young People’s Literature. Reynolds, who is serving his second term as Indies First spokesperson, officially launched the  at Miami Book Fair on November 15.

Saturday, November 24, also known as Small Business Saturday, marked the sixth annual celebration of Indies First. Indies First, a collaboration among publishers, retailers, and authors, is an annual campaign launched by the American Booksellers Association to celebrate independent bookstores. Small Business Saturday, founded by American Express in 2010 is dedicated to supporting local businesses that make communities special, as well as helping local economies thrive.

This special edition of Ghost includes a personal letter from Reynolds to his readers. Read it on the American Booksellers Association website at https://bit.ly/2Bv3dSb.

 

Meet Andrew Simonet, TSKW Artist in Residence, author of Wilder

Andrew Simonet, author of debut young adult novel Wilder and current Artist-in-Residence at The Studios of Key West will give a talk Tuesday, December 11, at 6 pm at the store. The presentation “13 Thoughts on Writing and Fighting,” is geared towards teens and adults and will include excerpts from Wilder, stories from Andrew’s life, and reflections on masculinity and violence.

Andrew draws from a wide range of professional and artistic experiences from his work as a writer, choreographer, teacher, documentarian and artist advocate. We recently sat down to talk about writing process and the importance of artists having the skills, knowledge and community to build sustainable lives.

One of Andrew’s projects, Artists U, is a collaborative professional development workshop for and by artists designed to equip them with the tools for the business side of managing an artistic life, including financial and strategic planning. Andrew has written a book called Making Your Life as an Artist and, as part of his Studios residency, is teaching a workshop called “Building a Sustainable Life as an Artist.”

He has had a multifaceted career, running a dance company, teaching high school, building Artists U, and now publishing a YA novel. I asked him how all the pieces fit together and how he ended up following this particular path.

“I started dancing when I was 19 and it changed my life,” Andrew says. He’d always participated in theater and sports. “For me, dance has the physical movement and energy of sports combined with the creativity and artistic expression of theater.”

About 14 years ago, as Andrew was serving as choreographer for his dance company, Headlong Dance Theater, the desire to write “just showed up.” Writing, he says, is very different from the collaborative, social process of dance, but creatively the process felt seamless.

Since leaving the dance company to focus on fiction writing, Andrew has participated in a number of residencies, enjoying the opportunity to meet different artists and experience different communities. He thought spending time in Key West would have the added benefit of helping him flesh out the setting he planned for a follow-up to Wilder, but things didn’t work out quite as expected.

Though he completed the sequel, it didn’t get picked up by his publisher. That’s one of the things you have to know and accept about publishing, he says, “there are a lot of gatekeepers.” Knowing how to deal with rejection and move on to the next project is one of those key skills in building a sustainable life as an artist. “There is value in doing the work. [That project] made me a better writer,” Andrew says.

~ Robin Wood, Associate Manager

A Q&A with Rosalind Brackenbury, author of The Lost Love Letters of Henri Fournier

If you’ve been keeping up with novelist, poet and short story writer, Rosalind Brackenbury, you might know that she was literary editor at Key West newspaper Solares Hill, and you might know she was Key West’s second Poet Laureate (2014-15), but you probably don’t know that her first job locally was as a deck hand on the Schooner Wolf.

She’s didn’t talk much about her deck hand days, when she and Jessica Argyle, author of No Name Key, got together Dec. 18 2018 to discuss Roz’s new novel The Lost Love Letters of Henri Fournier. But she did answer a few questions for us, including talking about the real-life letters that inspired her new book.

Q: What was the genesis of The Lost Love Letters of Henri Fournier?

A: The Lost Love Letters had its genesis in my finding in a rural used book store in France, a copy of Fournier’s embryo second novel as put together by some Italian academics in a sort of proof-style format.

I’d always loved Le Grand Meaulnes (The Lost Domain) and this got me excited – I hadn’t known he was writing another when he went to war. Reading about him brought me to Pauline Benda, his lover from 1912-1914.  A French writer friend sent me in Key West an enormous package of books and photo-copied letters and excerpts of writing by and about Pauline. I read, translated, starting thinking about a novel.

It was far the most difficult one I’ve ever written.

The second “layer” – Seb interviewing the old Pauline – came next, as yes, I am fascinated by old age these days! Then a reader in London suggested a third ‘layer’ with Seb in the present. He was a woman at first, but then I wanted the challenge of a male protagonist. And so on, for years…

What fascinates me about juxtaposing history and contemporary stories is the idea that we do all face very similar challenges in life, when it comes down to it – but deal with them in different ways, because of the times we live in. I’m hooked on writing about war and its aftermath, having been born in the middle of one – but this time it’s World War I. I’m a historian by training but a novelist by choice – a sort of hybrid, I suppose.

Q: What are you working on now?

A: I’ve just finished a lot of edits on a novel coming out next July, called Without Her. Also edits of a poetry collection Invisible Horses, due out in May. So – looking forward to writing rather than editing!

Q: Where are you when not in Key West?

A: I spent most of the summer months in France and/or England and Scotland. Paris, because it’s great for writing and I’ve always loved it. England, Scotland, because my family and old friends are there. I love Key West for winter weather – yes, becoming a snowbird – and so many friends, and our house here in Old Town that my husband has worked endlessly on, and the ocean – and it’s now my “home port.”

Q: How did you end up in Key West?

A: I went to a poetry reading on Caroline Street 25 years ago, met a man – the rest is history.

~ Robin Wood, Associate Manager

December Newsletter

Photo credit: American Booksellers Association

Wishing our customers, donors, volunteers, neighbors & friends, a joyful holiday season and happy 2019!

 

Thank you for your support and patronage this year. It has been our pleasure to talk books, curate events, enable artistic endeavors and create a delightful bookstore.

As you are thinking about presents for those near and dear, shop with us. We have 2019 calendars galore, as well as puzzles, novelty gifts, bookish swag, beautiful coffee-table books and all the books that everyone is talking about this year. And we are happy to wrap.

Join us for our December events, including Andrew Simonet, author of young adult novel Wilder on Dec. 11 at 6 pm; Key West local author Rosalind Brackenbury, in conversation with Jessica Argyle about Roz’s new novel The Lost Love Letters of Henri Fourier on Dec. 18 at 6 pm — and new, Signing Saturdays, drop by on Saturdays between 11 am and 1 pm for opportunity to meet an author and pick up a freshly signed book. This month features Lindsay Nauen on Dec. 8 and John Simon on Dec. 15.

And when you get down to the wire this holiday season, we’ll be here for you. Note our extended hours (10 am – 8 pm) Friday, Dec. 21 to Monday, Dec. 24. We’re going to take Christmas off for a long winter’s nap.

Get all this month’s news in the newsletter, and bookmark our calendar page for updated information about all of the store’s upcoming events. Join our email list and we’ll keep you in the know.

Rosalind Brackenbury, author of The Lost Love Letters of Henri Fournier

Tuesday, December 18, at 6pm, Rosalind Brackenbury in conversation with Jessica Argyle about The Lost Love Letters of Henri Fournier, Brackenbury’s most recent novel.

Intimately epic, The Lost Love Letters of Henri Fournier spans generations to explore every beautiful mystery of falling in love, being in love, and losing a love – and, most important, daring to love again and discovering just how resilient the human heart can be.

Seb Fowler has arrived in Paris to research his literary idol, Henri Fournier. It begins with an interview granted by a woman whose affair with the celebrated writer trails back to World War I. The enchanting Pauline is fragile, but her memories are alive – those of an illicit passion, of the chances she took and never regretted, and of the twists of fate that defined her unforgettable love story.

Through Pauline’s love letters, her secrets, and a lost Fournier manuscript, Seb will come to learn so much more – about Pauline, Henri, and himself. For Seb, every moment of Pauline’s past proves to be more inspiring than he could have imagined. She’s given him the courage to grab hold of whatever life offers, to cherish each risk, and to pursue love in his life.

Rosalind Brackenbury was born in London, England, grew up in the UK and has lived in Scotland and France.  She has lived in Key West for 25 years with her husband, Allen Meece.

She has been writing all her life and has published novels and collections of poetry, as well as award-winning short stories.  She was literary editor at Solares Hill for ten years and Creative Writing Fellow at the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg VA, in 2006 and 2012.  In Key West, she runs yearly poetry and prose workshops at The Studios of Key West and she has been featured both as panelist and moderator at the Key West Literary Seminar.  She was Key West’s second Poet Laureate in 2014-15.

Her latest poetry collection Invisible Horses is due out from Hanging Loose Press, NY, in May 2019.  Her new novel, Without Her is to be published by Delphinium Books in July 2019.

Gunna Dickson, author of The Catalonia Adventures of Angus and Edmond

December 5 at 6 pm, a book launch party and book signing for The Catalonia Adventures of Angus and Edmond. Meet the book’s author, Gunna Dickson, and its artists/illustrators. Author proceeds from the launch sales will be donated to Anne McKee Artists Fund in memory of Key West artist and gallery owner Jon McIntosh.

Artists Judi Bradford, Barb Feinberg, Suellen Crowley Weaver, Karen Beauprie, Lenny Addorisio, Sherry Sweet Tewell, Pam Hobbs and Elizabeth Chamberlain, will join author Gunna Dickson for this special book release party.

In The Catalonia Adventures of Angus and Edmond, Angus and Edmond, the well-traveled, fashion-conscious and multi-lingual adopted Angora mix littermates are back from their Italian adventure and busy working on a new one. On a friend’s invitation, they return to Key West to help in the post-hurricane cleanup effort. Then, to celebrate their success, the brothers take a trip to Barcelona in Spain, where they arrive on the day the Catalonia region votes for independence and join the celebrations in the central square.

New York City‐based writer, editor and translator Gunna Dickson was inspired by her adopted cats to write these travelogues for animal lovers. She collaborated on three previous adventures with Key West commercial and fine artist Jon McIntosh, whose work – from design to illustration, comic strips to children’s books – received many awards.

This family-friendly event is free and open to the public.

Rosalind Brackenbury, author of The Lost Love Letters of Henri Fournier

Tuesday, December 18, at 6pm, Rosalind Brackenbury in conversation with Jessica Argyle about The Lost Love Letters of Henri Fournier, Brackenbury’s most recent novel. She will sign books following the author talk.

Intimately epic, The Lost Love Letters of Henri Fournier spans generations to explore every beautiful mystery of falling in love, being in love, and losing a love – and, most important, daring to love again and discovering just how resilient the human heart can be.

Seb Fowler has arrived in Paris to research his literary idol, Henri Fournier. It begins with an interview granted by a woman whose affair with the celebrated writer trails back to World War I. The enchanting Pauline is fragile, but her memories are alive – those of an illicit passion, of the chances she took and never regretted, and of the twists of fate that defined her unforgettable love story.

Through Pauline’s love letters, her secrets, and a lost Fournier manuscript, Seb will come to learn so much more – about Pauline, Henri, and himself. For Seb, every moment of Pauline’s past proves to be more inspiring than he could have imagined. She’s given him the courage to grab hold of whatever life offers, to cherish each risk, and to pursue love in his life.

Rosalind Brackenbury was born in London, England, grew up in the UK and has lived in Scotland and France.  She has lived in Key West for 25 years with her husband, Allen Meece.

She has been writing all her life and has published novels and collections of poetry, as well as award-winning short stories.  She was literary editor at Solares Hill for ten years and Creative Writing Fellow at the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg VA, in 2006 and 2012.  In Key West, she runs yearly poetry and prose workshops at The Studios of Key West and she has been featured both as panelist and moderator at the Key West Literary Seminar.  She was Key West’s second Poet Laureate in 2014-15.

Her latest poetry collection Invisible Horses is due out from Hanging Loose Press, NY, in May 2019.  Her new novel, Without Her is to be published by Delphinium Books in July 2019.

November Newsletter

As Thanksgiving approaches, we hope you will all have a few peaceful moments to reflect upon all that you are grateful for before jumping into the frenzy of the holiday season. We are thankful for all of you, our customers, social media fans, donors, volunteers and friends. We would not be the thriving indie bookstore we are without all of you.

Our exciting November events include Dylan Thuras, co-author of The Atlas Obscura Explorer’s Guide for the World’s Most Adventurous Kid providing a thrilling multimedia presentation and book signing Thursday, November 15, at 6pm, and, in collaboration with the Key West Film Festival, Saturday, November 17, at 3pm, a book launch party and book signing with Alicia Malone, author of The Female Gaze, a new book about women filmmakers.

Have a wonderful Thanksgiving and join us the following Saturday for Small Business Saturday. We’ll open early at 9am and have some fun surprises.

Get this month’s news in the newsletter, and bookmark our calendar page for updated information about all of the store’s upcoming events. Join our email list and we’ll keep you in the know.