Notes: Fake Steve; Bookseller Reminiscences

Yesterday's New York Times uncovered the man behind the Fake Steve blog, who pretended to be Apple's CEO and, as the Times put it, aimed "to lampoon Mr. Jobs and his reputation as a difficult and egotistical leader, as well as to skewer other high-tech companies, tech journalists, venture capitalists, open-source software fanatics and Silicon Valley's overall aura of excess." Some might say that's too easy, but Fake Steve has been so popular that he snagged a contract with Da Capo Press, which in October is publishing his novel Options: The Secret Life of Steve Jobs, a Parody ($22.95, 9780306815843/0306815842), one of the publisher's fall lead titles.

In real life, Fake Steve is Daniel Lyons, a senior editor at Forbes magazine who writes and edits technology articles.

Concerning his invention of Fake Steve last year, Lyons told the Times, "I thought, wouldn't it be funny if a C.E.O. kept a blog that really told you what he thought? That was the gist of it."

He added that he tried to give up the blog twice, "but started again after being deluged by fans e-mailing to ask why Fake Steve had disappeared."

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On the occasion of his 90th birthday tomorrow, George Browning, former longtime bookseller at Capitol Book & News, the Montgomery, Ala., bookstore owned by Cheryl and Thomas Upchurch, tells the Montgomery Advertiser about his days as a POW in World War II. Bizarrely when he was interrogated by a German officer after being captured when his B-17 crashed in the Netherlands, the officer stopped his questioning and asked, "Haven't we met before?"

The answer to that interrogatory was ja. It turned out that the two had been at a frat party following a Virginia Military Institute-University of South Carolina football game in 1936. Browning had been a student at USC; the German was studying at VMI.

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Frances Steloff, "a raggedy little girl" who peddled flowers at fancy hotels in her native Saratoga Springs, N.Y., eventually became the prescient businesswoman who, in 1920 and with only $100, started Manhattan's legendary--and recently closed--Gotham Book Mart (then called Gotham Book and Art).

The Glens Falls Post Star reminisced about the woman who "befriended and supported some of the most celebrated figures of the twentieth century--Martha Graham, Anais Nin, Henry Miller, and many more. As owner of the Gotham Book Mart in New York City, hailed by one book reviewer as being as important to the culture as the Museum of Modern Art, she became a minor celebrity in her own right."

Despite her notoriety and having left Saratoga at age 12, Steloff "kept strong ties to the city throughout her life," the Post Star continued. "In 1968, the year after Skidmore College awarded her an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters, Steloff endowed an annual lecture series and poetry prize there. She later donated a collection of rare books, many first editions inscribed to her by the authors. In December 1987, on her 100th birthday, then-mayor of Saratoga Springs Ellsworth Jones gave her the key to the city. When she died at 101, she was buried at the Shaara T'fille cemetery on Weibel Avenue, in a tree-shaded plot she had chosen a month earlier. With $100 and a few books." 

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The Oak Ridge Bookshop and Café has opened in Oak Ridge, N.C. The Stokesdale News reported that owner Minaxi Patel "has been very pleased with the reception the bookstore has received in the community. . . . Minaxi said she started the bookstore because there was no close-by bookstore for her children to get books." The nearest bookshop is a Barnes & Noble in Greensboro.  


 

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