Bulletin board at holiday time |
Immediate
Future
If David and I had
university positions, teaching art and philosophy, we would surely have earned
sabbatical by now, the academic world’s recognition of the fact that those
engaged in teaching need occasional time away for their own research and
creative projects. Working in retail as we do, i.e., selling books and
paintings, can be as intense as teaching (we’ve both taught, so we do know both
worlds); this winter, therefore, David and I are giving ourselves sabbatical.
Our businesses will be closed from the first of January to the end of April.
We’ll be recharging our spirits and focusing on our own work, coming back in
the spring energized and with renewed enthusiasm for our Northport world.
The Year Past
The other day, after David
gave me a little pep talk (something I needed during a slow holiday shopping
season), reminding me of all the loyal Dog Ears Books customers who turn out
for my author events and buy books when they come, I looked back at the roster
for the past year. Our bookstore events really were remarkably successful – and
a lot of fun!
Ken Scott |
The event year began early in
the season, in May 2014, with photographer Ken Scott and the best-selling book
of the year – I’m sure this was true throughout the county, as well as in
Northport – The Ice Caves of Leelanau.
Wow! The 100 copies in my first order were all promised before Ken’s appearance
date! Then the printer was late with the books, and half my customers (I love
‘em!) sweetly offered to wait a week for theirs! The ice caves themselves had
been the phenomenon of the preceding winter; the book was a phenomenon that
came on in spring and kept going strong through December.
Thirteen poets! |
The next month, June, was
almost more excitement than this bookseller could absorb. Thirteen (yes, 13)
poets came to Northport from all over the state of Michigan to read their work
from the beautiful new book, Poetry in Michigan, Michigan in Poetry. Poets in attendance were Angela Williams, Mary Ann
Samyn, Joy Gaines-Friedler, David James, Dennis Hinrichsen, Patricia Clark,
Linda Nemec-Foster, Keith Taylor, Anne-Marie Oomen, Alison Swan, D.R. James,
Teresa Scollon, and Bill Olsen. (Audience in attendance was so numerous that the crowd spilled out into the
artist David Grath’s studio and out onto the sidewalk.) Samyn, Oomen, and
Scollon had previously read work at Dog Ears Books, but the rest were here for
the first time; Olsen is one of the two editors of the collection. Along with
celebrating poetry in Michigan, we were also celebrating (unbelievably, to me)
the 21st anniversary of my bookstore, first opened down the street
in 1993. What an evening! I saw stars for weeks afterward....
In July I took a breather
from bookstore events but let myself get strong-armed into doing a 5-minute
reading on live radio, when the “Roundup Radio Show” came to the Northport
Community Arts Center auditorium. Bill Dunjen’s invitation was completely
spur-of-the-moment, and my first impulse was to decline, but I rallied, found a
passage from Ellen Airgood’s South of Superior, did a few quick run-throughs, and the little gig
went very well. People I never see in my bookstore were stopping me at the post
office and in the grocery store days later to congratulate me on that one brief
performance. Visibility. Presence. Taking the bull by the horns. An indie
bookseller can’t let a chance like that get away. I was also happy to promote
Ellen’s book, which I love, love, love! (I’ve read it four times.)
Another literary item on my
July calendar was a gathering of fiction-writing friends, all women, who came
to my old farmhouse for an al fresco luncheon that stretched to dinnertime.
Each writer read from current work-in-progress and reported on publishing
status – which sounds (and is) quite serious, but we also drank several bottles
of wine and laughed a whole lot.
Mary Beth Pope is no stranger
to Northport, having worked one summer selling donuts at Barb’s Bakery, but
she’s moved on since then, teaching English at Emmanuel College in Boston,
where she received tenure this past year. Mary Beth took time out from work on
her novel-in-progress to read for our bookstore audience from her short
story collection, Divining Venus.
It was, I’m pleased to report, yet another standing-room-only crowd. Mary Beth
had a good time, too. That’s the way we like it – happy writers and happy
customers.
Excitement continued in
September. Besides the second Leelanau UnCaged street fair in Northport, Dog
Ears Books hosted a book launch party for Newbery-winning author Lynne Rae
Perkins and her latest book, Nuts to You. Lynne Rae is a deservedly popular guest author, so I ordered a
healthy number of books in advance of her appearance, a number she and I both
thought would be sufficient. Advance sales, however, made serious inroads into
my stock, so I placed a second order – then a third – and then we still sold out of books on September 19! Later holiday
sales of Nuts to You were not hurt
at all when the press found out that the Obama family bought a copy on their
annual indie bookstore shopping expedition.
Me with Lynne Rae Perkins |
I had really thought
September would close out the 2014 bookstore event year. One event each for the
months of May, June, August and September felt like a manageable schedule, much
better than some years past when I’d tried to have three events in a two-week
time period. A good year, I thought. Then I heard from Traverse City writer
Jerry Dennis about a new venture he and artist Glenn Wolff had underway. With
Jerry’s wife, Gail Dennis, as creative director, the three were launching their
own independent publishing company, Big Maple Press, and the first two books
being issued were new paperback “Indie Bookstore Editions” of It’s Raining Frogs and Fishes and A Bird in the Waterfall (with a third “wonders-of-nature” title coming in
2015). Jerry Dennis and Glenn Wolff at Dog Ears Books? Of course! Any time
they want to come! And so we had
another book party in early December.
Jerry Dennis on left |
Glenn Wolff on right |
John Mitchell |
John Mitchell’s best-selling Grand
Traverse: The Civil War Era has been
around since 2011, but when John offered to come in for a couple of hours two
days before Christmas and sign books for customers, I was not about to turn him
down. There are still people in our own township who have not yet read the
book, and a couple of them came for signed copies. I think the woman who made a
325-mile round trip, though, may have been the most excited about the
opportunity. She had called the previous week to ask my hours for Christmas
week and mentioned John’s book. When I told her that he would be at the
bookstore in person, her resolve to make the journey strengthened. It was her
first visit to Northport, but something tells me it won’t be her last.
My own special treat was
conversation with John about his most recent research trip to Cuba and Trinidad
for his next book. We even had time before customers arrived for a quick tour
through his fascinating travel photographs, as I never turn down a chance for
vicarious travel, either.
The Year to Come
Dog Ears Books will be 22
years old this coming year and while my main focus as 2014 winds down is on winter
sabbatical, I’ve also been working with authors to put together the 2015
bookstore event schedule. Already the summer calendar looks full! Here’s how
it’s shaping up --
In June we’ll have Holly Wren
Spaulding, a Hopwood award-winning poet, reading from and signing her new
collection of poems and offering a hands-on workshop in short poetic forms. In
July we’ll host Loreen Niewenhuis, with her third Great Lakes adventure book,
A 1,000-Mile Great Lakes Island Adventure. World War II is the theme for August, with Barbara Stark-Nemon and
her novel, Even in Darkness, and
Luisa Lang Owen, whose memoir is entitled Casualty of War: A Childhood
Remembered.
We hope to schedule a visit
from our dear friend and author Ellen Airgood from the Upper Peninsula early in
the summer. Her new YA novel, The Education of Ivy Blake, a sequel to Prairie Evers, is due for release in June, so she’ll be putting
tour dates together before then. We also hope to meet author David Greenwald
(finally!) and introduce him to Northport. The third title in Greenwald’s
“Jenny-Dog and the Son of Light” trilogy (first two titles were Frozen Moon and Cody)
will appear in 2015. And of course there’s that third, as-yet-untitled “wonders-of-nature”
book of essays by Jerry Dennis, with beautiful illustrations by Glenn Wolff.
Jerry and Glenn will be in Northport again, for sure.
It looks great, doesn’t it?
I’m so excited about all these writers and their books! I look forward to
welcoming the authors (and artist!) to Northport, again or for the first time,
and to welcoming my customer friends to meet these special guests. Into another
year, together we will celebrate printed words and images linking minds across
distance and time.
May your new year be happy and healthy, peaceful and prosperous,
and may it always be filled with the magic of books.