The Weekly Wrap: April 26-May 2

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The Weekly Wrap: April 26-May 2

New Bookstores

Independent Bookstore Day: Bookshop.org founder on how small retailers are taking on Amazon.” This Fast Company notes that since 2020, the number of members in the American Booksellers Association has grown from1,900 to 3,200.

I think there is something to this. Two nearby communities that have never had bookstores in my memory will have three bookstores by this summer. Escape Into Fiction opened in Powell, Ohio last fall. This summer two bookstores open just down the street from each other in downtown Worthington. Celestielle is scheduled to open May 22 and focuses on fantasy and romance. Then in July, The Whispering Page is scheduled to open, stocking new books of all genres and hosting used book swaps. Their Instagram page also advertises a cafe and bar.

Will they survive? That’s anyone’s guess. But it excites me that there are entrepreneurs who see this a good time to make a go of it. Increasingly, there is a conviction that the big online behemoth is not invincible. Bookshop.org has provided an online alternative to that behemoth that supports Indie stores, and, according to the Fast Company article, have already channeled $47 million to Indie stores.

What delights me about these stores they help to turn the town centers of these communities into more interesting places. And they are filling empty storefronts. They hark back to the time when we’d walk downtown rather than pile into a car to go to the mall. There is a movement of people are going analog and craving interaction with real people.

To me, all this seems a good thing.

Five Articles Worth Reading

Sometimes my “five articles” cluster around a theme. This week, they were just a potpourri of things that caught my attention.

Plough is one of my favorite sources of good writing. This week they posted “When Kierkegaard Got Cancelled.” It’s a fascinating study of how Kierkegaard responded to the attacks and cancelling he encountered.

I was disappointed several years when my one chance to see Bob Seger in concert was lost when he had health issues. He was one of my rock legends, representing the gritty rock of middle America. “The Lost Idealism of Heartland Rock” reviews “Won’t Back Down by Erin Osmon, which traces the progressive strain in artists like Seger, Tom Petty, and John Mellencamp.

Both the change from local businesses to big shopping centers and many of our rock songs assumed the ubiquitous presence of the automobile. “Life After Cars?” reviews a book by the same name that explores what a post-automobile landscape might be like.

His novel Lázár, has been on the German best seller lists for 29 weeks. It’s been compared to Thomas Mann’s Buddenbrooks. And he is 22 years old. “A Very Old-Fashioned Novel Has Made a Star Out of a Very Young Writer” features the life and work of Nelio Biedermann.

Finally, one of the most prolific American diarists of the nineteenth century was George Templeton Strong. For example, he wrote four million words between 1835 and 1875. His diaries capture what life in New York was like during the Civil War. “Inside a Four-Million-Word Diary of 1860s New York” profiles Strong as well as offers resources if you want to read more of him.

Quote of the Week

In recent years I’ve become something of an advocate for poetry, even daring to read some on my Facebook page. Yusef Komunyakaa, who was born on April 29, 1947, captures something of the essence of the work of poets:

“Poets are seen as the caretakers of language, so working with words no matter what the form is what we do.”

You can read more about his life at the Poetry Foundation.

Miscellaneous Musings

After thirteen years, I made a small tweak to the tagline on my web page, which was “Thoughts about books, reading, and life.” It now reads “Thoughts from a human on books, reading, and life.” Because it is increasingly common to get reviews from AI (which I think sometimes uses reviews I write!). I felt it time to affirm that the reviews on this page are 100 percent human written, based on the reading of whole books by a 100 percent human. Whether that’s better than AI, I’ll leave up to you.

I am an Inklings fan. But Leslie Baynes Interpretation and Imagination reveals that Lewis made scholarly mistakes like the rest of us. He trusted his memory too much when citing others and sometimes misread those he was critiquing. It seems that particularly when he engaged biblical criticism, he was prone to errors stemming from his lack of expertise and background in the field.

Reading Louis Markos’ From Aristotle to Christ challenged me that I had never read Aristotle. He recommended a basic edition, which should be arriving in a few days. Just another example of how reading one book leads to others!

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: Kelly and Zach Weinersmith, A City on Mars

Tuesday: Steven Garber, Hints of Hope

Wednesday: Betony Coons, The Unwinding Path

Thursday: Louis Markos, From Aristotle to Christ

Friday: Jane Austen, Emma

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap  for April 26-May 2.

Find past editions of The Weekly Wrap under The Weekly Wrap heading on this page.

The Weekly Wrap: January 11-17

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The Weekly Wrap: January 11-17

Adjusting to the New

I wrote awhile back about our impressive new Barnes & Noble store that replaced the old standby located nearby. However, I didn’t mention that it just didn’t feel like–well, home. I have to confess that there have been times when I just felt bewildered. Not only that, there were several times I walked out without any books.

That old store just felt so familiar. I knew where everything was and was accustomed to the way they displayed books. Basically, the store was laid out with rows of shelves with a center aisle with a help desk. There was a separate area for children’s books. The new store seems a bit more like a maze of sections.

We ended up there the other day when a scheduling mix-up gave us a couple hours to kill. And for the first time, it began to feel a bit more like home. For one thing, it was the slowest day in terms of business I’d seen. There was time to linger and read the shelves without feeling you were in someone’s way. I explored some new sections to see what they had. And my wife and I enjoyed a lovely time at the cafe, something we always enjoyed at the old store.

I’m wondering if I’m the only one who has experienced the feeling of displacement when a new bookstore replaces an old favorite. One expects everything to be novel at a new store one is exploring. But when the new store becomes one of your “defaults,” I think that is different. But I’m always reminded that every store was new to us at one time. And I’m glad that there is a new store, and not simply an empty reminder of what was once there.

Five Articles Worth Reading

This week, three of the articles feature reviews I thought interesting.

First, imagine Moby Dick with a female narrator. Xiaolu Guo has done just that with Call Me Ishmaelle. William Giraldi reviews this audacious attempt in “A Retelling of ‘Moby-Dick,’ With a Young Woman at Its Center.”

Second, imagine a novel based on the online life of a family and its real-life repercussions. In “The Unhappy Literary Families of the Internet Age” Gideon Leek reviews Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash. Leek thinks the novel need a few wolves.

The third review is of a book on my “to read” pile, The Last Supper: Art, Faith, Sex, and Controversy in the 1980s by Paul Elie. My friend Byron Borger, at Hearts and Minds Bookstore recommended this book, an analysis of the crypto-religious modern art of the 1980’s. I won’t get around to reading it for a while, so I thought I’d pass along Stephen Westich’s review: “Jesus in the Junk Shop.”

On a different note, Ted Gioia contends we are witnessing the rise of a new Romanticism. He defends that idea in this article which offers “25 Propositions about the New Romanticism.”

Finally, did you know that Wikipedia just turned 25? In “Happy Birthday, Wikipedia: We need you now more than ever,” Troy Farah argues why, amid the advent of AI and Elon Musk’s “Grokipedia,” an attempt to replace Wikipedia, Wikipedia is a uniquely valuable resource.

Quote of the Week

Essayist and novelist Susan Sontag was born January 16, 1933. She explains why I have never liked taking photographs at events:

“The camera makes everyone a tourist in other people’s reality, and eventually in one’s own.”

Wonder what the implications of this insight are for our Instagram age.

Miscellaneous Musings

Another of Byron’s recommendation is Beth Macy’s Paper Girl, a memoir of growing up in Urbana, Ohio, an hour west of me. In her opening pages she introduces us to a tenth grade dropout and to a high school grad, a young trans male weighing suicide when his plans for welding training fell through because his car blew a head gasket. She asks how her community has changed so much since the 1980’s. Riveting so far.

Oh, and I forgot to mention that I walked out of Barnes & Noble with 1929 and Gemini. The latter book reminded me of my love for the Gemini program back in the 1960. I even built a model of the Gemini capsule that I had in my room. As for 1929, I approach this one with some trepidation because I sense the author will argue that it can happen again.

After a lull over the holidays, five more books for review have arrived this week at my doorstep. Not only that, at least a couple more are due to arrive today. Well, I’m more than ready in the reading department for the next snowstorm or cold stretch to come our way!

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: Michael B. Shepherd, How Did They Read the Prophets

Tuesday: Gregory Boyd with M. Scott Boren, God Looks Like Jesus

Wednesday: Justin Whitmel Early, The Common Rule Youth Edition

Thursday: Daniel K. Williams, The Search for a Rational Faith

Friday: Siddhartha Mukherjee, The Emperor of All Maladies

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap  for January 11-17.

Find past editions of The Weekly Wrap under The Weekly Wrap heading on this page.