Notes: A Bookseller's Education; Celebrating Jane Yolen

The About New York column in Saturday's New York Times told the story of bookseller Kurt Thometz, who bought a brownstone in Harlem from a rare book dealer--a man who liked him so much he gave him a second mortgage--and now lives there with his wife and son and runs Jumel Terrace Books. The store specializes in local history and African and African-American literature and is "open by invitation, appointment, or serendipity," as the sign in the window elegantly says.

Thometz came to New York from Minnesota in 1972. Instead of going to college, "I went to Book Row," he said, arguably getting a better education than he might have otherwise. He worked at the Strand, University Place Bookstore and the Madison Avenue Bookshop, then was the private librarian to Brooke Astor, Diana Vreeland, Leonard Lauder, Felix Rohatyn and some members of the Newhouse family, among others. 

---

In an unusual event, the Winterthur Museum and Country Estate--the decorative arts museum on the du Pont estate in Wilmington, Del.--is celebrating children's author Jane Yolen's body of work in an exhibition that opens September 15 and runs until mid-July 2008. More than 50 of Yolen's nearly 300 books will be highlighted, including Owl Moon, which won the Caldecott Medal 20 years ago, and each month the museum will recommend and highlight one of Yolen's titles. Events in conjunction with the exhibition, called K Is for Kids, will have literacy as a theme and include oral storytelling, theater presentations and performances, workshops for teachers and librarians and information about the history of children's books and reading. Yolen will serve as honorary ambassador for the exhibition. The museum will host Yolen for a weekend of events April 18-20, 2008.

The exhibit is the first of its kind put on by the Winterthur Museum and will include materials from the museum's collection.

---

The remainder book show held in Atlanta, Ga., over the weekend has a name: the Great American Bargain Book Show, or GABBS, Bargain Book News reported. Larry May, who owns the show with his wife, Valerie, and also puts on the Spring Book Show, in Atlanta, too, said that the show's slogan will be "GABBS: talk it up!"

The winner of the show-naming contest was Shayne Hix of Bluegrass Books in Bowling Green, Ky. He won an all-expenses-paid trip for two to Atlanta.

GABBS is the former Onboard Show, which the Mays bought and moved to Atlanta from Nashville, Tenn.

--- 

In a continuing effort to diversify, bargain book company Daedalus Books & Music, Columbia, Md., recently added DVDs to its playlist, and now offers books, CDs and DVDs wholesale and retail, online, via catalogues and in two retail sites, the Baltimore Examiner reported.

"On its mailing list, the store maintains 600,000 subscribers while shipping out about 9 million catalogs a year," the Examiner wrote. "Conversely, about 30 percent of Daedalus’ total business is conducted on the wholesale side, a number that [v-p and co-founder Helaine] Harris expects to grow. Annually, the company sells about 5 million books, 7 million CDs and an increasing number of DVDs." Daedalus also has two retail outlets, one at its headquarters in Columbia and the other at Belvedere Square in Baltimore, both with about 10,000 square feet of space.

---

Here's one way to get your books into bookstores. 

Operating on the theory that surreptitiously planting 300 copies of a free book on the shelves of London bookshops is "almost the opposite of shoplifting," Steve Lowe, director of publisher Aquarium, told the Times that copies of The Idiocy of Idears by an unnamed author now rest "in the fiction, poetry, art, philosophy and travel sections of Waterstones, Borders, Foyles and Blackwells in Central London."

---

The Barnes & Noble at Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pa., is considering expanding as part of Drexel's master plan, the Triangle reported. The master plan aims, among other things, to add retail and food operations on campus, so that students will "finally be able to buy everything from groceries to art supplies, without having to take a hike to 40th Street or Center City."

 

Powered by: Xtenit