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Showing posts with label FOL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FOL. Show all posts

Thursday, July 11, 2024

Diving Into July

A different day: June image

Without a literal dive, I submerged myself in the silky waters of Lake Michigan for the second time this summer when I took Sunday off to go to the beach with my two younger sisters visiting from Illinois. There was a haze in the air and families clustered in temporary vacation-day encampments on the beach where Bohemian Road (C.R. 669) ends at Good Harbor. Despite all the people, however, there was enough space between groups that the beach didn’t feel crowded. No one was loud, the few dogs with their families were well behaved, and the whole vibe of the day was happy and peaceful. 

 

After time in the water, I stretched out on a beach towel between my sisters, the three of us chatting idly on and off, sometimes entirely quiet. I had left both my dog and my phone at home. So peaceful! 


Beyond the crowds, from my sister's phone...

Every once in a while my mind wanted to zip back to work or ahead to check the calendar, and each time I took a deep breath and told myself, Don’t move. Be here now. I didn’t even have a book with me on the beach (although one of those big umbrellas would make reading on the beach feasible, if someone had more than a couple hours of summer vacation). Later I realized that Sunday's beach interlude was probably the most relaxed I’ve been since Christmas Day 2021 in Dos Cabezas with the Artist and our dog, eating and napping and watching movies all day, just the three of us….

 

With possible rain in Monday's forecast and a morning that began with heavily overcast skies, I decided not to take a second day off. My sisters voiced no objections. They always enjoy exploring in my bookstore, as well as going farther afield in Northport (the Pennington Collection is one of their favorite shopping stops), and this year they had lunch at Around the Corner, bringing me a quinoa burger that I was still enjoying, bite by tasty bite, at noon on Wednesday.


Until we meet again!

It was too bad my sisters had to start back to Illinois Tuesday morning, because that evening was the first of four Tuesday evenings in July at the Willowbrook featuring Michigan authors, a series put together by the Leelanau Township Friends of the Library and named for its initiator, the late Suzanne Rose Kraynak. For this first 2024 event, a presentation in memory of Nancy Giles, I was not only selling books for author Don Lystra but also interviewing him about writing in general and about his new novel, Searching for Van Gogh. We enjoyed our onstage conversation, and the audience seemed to enjoy it, also. I must say I love having other people do all the setup, so different from events in my bookstore, and everyone does a beautiful job at the Willowbrook.

 


These days at my bookstore on Waukazoo Street, I’m gradually digging out from under the latest tsunami of used books to land in my shop and trying not to think about the thousands yet to be moved before summer’s end. It’s only July, after all, so right now my focus is on books already in Northport -- although many terrific new books are coming out, too, these days -- every week, it seems -- and I am eagerly awaiting delivery of more copies of Jim Olson's People of the Dune, so popular I had to back-order when my supply ran out.


Used cookbook section is FULL!

And, surprise! Classic Isaac Asimov paperbacks --

Fiction, poetry,

and books for your outdoor adventures.


At home, with all the rain we’ve had, grass is ready to be mowed again, gardens need weeding and edging, and always there are those pesky, invading autumn olives to be checked and rooted out. Sunny and I will restart our agility sessions with Coach Mike on Monday. I’ve had a couple of new editing jobs, too, so life is busy. It's a good thing that summer days are long.


These raspberries don't pick themselves, either!

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Bookishness in the Village of Northport



Social Ethicist To Speak at Trinity Congregational

It’s been there in the right-hand column for a few days, so maybe you’ve already noticed that Gary Dorrien is coming to town as this year’s Belko Peace Lecturer. Cornel West has called Dorrien “the preeminent social ethicist in American today.” Dorrien has authored 14 books and over 250 articles in ethics, social theory, philosophy, politics, history, and religion, and I’m more than tickled to tell you also that, while he grew up in Michigan’s Thumb region, he was born in the U.P. Yep, he’s a Yooper!

Dr. Dorrien taught for over 20 years at Kalamazoo College and is now an ordained Episcopal priest and the Reinhold Neibuhr professor of social ethics at Union Theological Seminary, as well as Professor of Religion at Columbia University. His talk on Saturday evening, June 2, will be on Social Ethics and the Economy. The presentation will begin at 7 p.m. Dorrien will speak a second time at the regular Sunday morning worship service, which begins at 11 a.m. 

Both presentations are free and open to the public, and there will be opportunities following both talks for questions and comments.

Friends of Library Summer Series

The Friends of the Leelanau Township Library, or Leelanau Township FOL, established in 1962, celebrates their 50th birthday this year, and the lineup for the Susanne Rose-Kraynik Summer Author Series is impressive: July 10, Stephanie Mills; July 17, Mario Batali, July 24, Teresa Scollon, July 31, Jim Ribby. All programs begin at 7:30 p.m.. They are free and open to the public, with donations appreciated.


Leelanau Twp. FOL will also host a strawberry brunch preceding the annual meeting on Saturday, June 9. The buffet brunch is scheduled for 11 a.m. at the township fire hall. Come and celebrate 50 years of a great organization. Reservations for the brunch should be made by Tuesday, June 5. Call the library at 231-386-5131. Cost to members is $12; nonmembers $15. f you aren't yet a member, please join! 

Michigan Poet Comes Home from New England

 Fleda Brown, long-time Michigan summer resident and recent Poet Laureate of Vermont, now retired to Traverse City and a frequent guest on Interlochen Public Radio, will be this summer's inaugural guest author at Dog Ears Books in Northport. She will read from her book of memoir essays, Driving with Dvorak, and, I hope, some of her poetry, also. I'll be telling you more about Fleda as we get closer to her appearance on June 22, but mark your calendar today.


Please have a happy and safe holiday weekend! See you again next week here at Books in Northport!