Haeg: Cut The Grass, Plant An ‘edible Estate’

To children of suburbia, the lawn is perhaps our first hands-on experience of nature.

It’s the green expanse we, as kids, tended, perhaps for a bit of extra allowance, by weeding or mowing. And yet, like so much landscaping, its form is hardly natural, being shaped by American , real estate imperatives, and herbicides.

To rethink this front-of-the-house space as the home of more life brushes up against surprisingly , and it’s the impetus for “Edible Estates,” the eco-activist project and book of architect and , who creates transformations of to crop-bearing front yards. With the subtitle, “Attack on the Front Lawn,” Haeg acknowledges just how revolutionary the idea strikes many American homeowners; there’s a place for everything, and the of the suburban landscape places manicured grass front and center.

The book reveals the reasons, many of them class-based and inherited from our British .

“The front lawn was born of vanity and decadence, under the assumption that was infinite,” Haeg writes in his introduction, pointing to how a vast patch of green highlights the majesty of the manor.

Both notions bring up current concerns about sustainability; we’re increasingly realizing that the earth indeed has its limits and that homes are part of a of finances, resources, and unspoken .

In the United States, the lawn’s ubiquity is about pride in the home, as well as in creating open, democratic (even when most outdoor suburban living takes place in the backyard).

An entertaining 1991 essay by is reprinted in the book, bringing his usual incisive social and ecological insights, as well as autobiographical gardening anecdotes, to a polemic against lawn mowing. He invokes neighborhood covenants and the puritanical sense of control exerted over trimmed , which is never allowed to flower and seed.

Lawns are nature purged of sex and death,” he writes. “No wonder Americans like them so much.”

Haeg’s project is an activist gesture, his gardens serving as advertisements for alternative land uses. He put out open calls for homeowners willing to relandscape; the book documents examples in Kansas, California, New Jersey and England, each supplemented with garden plans and notes from the participants.

Michael Foti writes a blog about his family’s in Lakewood (Los Angeles County).

“We never really paid much attention to the front of the house when the lawn was there,” Foti notes. Like most of the participants, he finds that public cultivation of fruits and vegetables fosters a sense of community: kids coming by to pick strawberries and neighbors volunteering to help out.

An essay by Foti’s daughter Cecilia, for her seventh-grade class, is included, and it attests to her passionate belief in the form: “The American lawn needs to be eradicated from our society, and fast!” She backs up her claim by citing environmental, social and health benefits.

The book is an interesting hybrid of elements. It’s part green political tract, part social history, and part how-to guide. There’s a resource section, printed on brown paper, that includes a regional planting guide, informational Web sites, an extensive bibliography and testimonials by makers of their own unofficial edible estates.

While there are plenty of photographs included, the one thing that doesn’t quite come across is a convincing garden aesthetic; not all of the front yards seem all that attractive, even if they have designated seating areas to sit and smell the tomatoes.

It’s an interesting irony since Haeg’s project is very much positioned in the art world; he’s included in the current Whitney Biennial in New York (with a project called Animal Estates, in which he installs habitats - a bald eagle nest, for example - for creatures that have lived in Manhattan, on the site of the art museum).

Haeg is perhaps the best known of these garden conceptualists, though you can take his ideas at face value: His work is ultimately about positive ways of adapting to our current environmental realities - by whatever means necessary.

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Monday, May 12th, 2008

Tom Thomson Mystery Reviewed

The black flies and mosquitoes were so thick he gave up on sketching and set out to go fishing alone one Sunday in Park.

Tom Thomson’s canoe was found floating upside down a few hours later Equipment Landscaping.

His bloated body surfaced in Canoe Lake the next week – shrouded in a mystery still not laid to rest more than 90 years later.

How did the famous Toronto painter die on July 8, 1917: was it by accident, Equipment Landscaping suicide or murder?

Who found his body?

Where are his remains buried?

These questions are explored in one of three new sections of Great Unsolved Mysteries in Canadian History, an educational website launched by the University of Victoria in 1997.

“It, for me, was just a compelling story,” said project research director Gregory Klages, a graduate student in the joint communication and culture program at York and Ryerson Universities.

“It had all the great makings of a great mystery: a suspicious death, accusations of murder, suicide, accidental death, a question about where Thomson’s body was buried.

“There just seemed to be so many questions.”

Visitors to the site  Equipment – called Death on a Painted Lake: the Tom Thomson Tragedy – are encouraged to tackle these questions themselves by combing through primary sources such as letters, journal entries and newspaper reports and draw their own conclusions about his life and death.

They will explore a young country grappling with its first great war and a landscape marred by the .

They will meet a cast of characters including his family, park residents turned murder suspects long after the fact, fellow artists like Group of Seven founder A.Y. Jackson and the various people – including journalist Roy MacGregor – who have investigated the story of his death.

“Growing up in a rural high school, we didn’t have the opportunity to go to museums, to go to art galleries, to handle these primary documents,” said Klages.

“Something like this site would have been tremendously useful.

“It’s to allow students, on the one hand, to get access to the primary documents, to learn how to handle them [by] themselves responsibly as historians, as critical thinkers, Equipment and also by handling these primary documents, to make some decisions for themselves about what might have happened,” he said, adding they will be learning about Canadian history and art as they go along.

The site also offers contemporary interpretations of the evidence, including a report by Chief Forensic Pathologist of Ontario Michael Pollanen.

Pollanen concluded the coroner at the time – who never examined the body – was wrong to agree with a doctor’s opinion that the cause of Thomson’s death was accidental drowning.

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Saturday, April 5th, 2008

This week’s best-sellers from Publishers Weekly

Here are the best-sellers for the week that ended Saturday, March 1, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide.

(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by Cahners Publishing Co., a division of Reed Elsevier, USA. (c) 2008 by Reed Elsevier, USA)March 10th Weekly Bestsellers list

HARDCOVER FICTION

1. The Appeal. John Grisham. Doubleday, $27.95

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 5

2. Remember Me? Sophie Kinsella. Dial, $25

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

3. 7th Heaven. James Patterson %26 Maxine Paetro. Little, Brown, $27.99

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 4

4. Strangers in Death. J.D. Robb. Putnam, $25.95

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 2

5. The Outlaw Demon Wails. Kim Harrison. Eos, $24.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

6. Honor Thyself. Danielle Steel. Delacorte, $27

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

7. Lady Killer. Lisa Scottoline. Harper, $25.95

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 2

8. Duma Key. Stephen King. Scribner, $28

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 6

9. Betrayal. John Lescroart. Dutton, $26.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

10. A Thousand Splendid Suns.
Khaled Hosseini. Riverhead, $25.95

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 41

11. World Without End. Ken Follett. Dutton, $35

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 21

12. The Killing Ground. Jack Higgins. Putnam, $25.95

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 3

13. Deep Dish. Mary Kay Andrews. Harper, $24.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

14. Stranger in Paradise. Robert B. Parker. Putnam, $25.95

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 4

15. People of the Book. Geraldine Brooks. Viking, $25.95

Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 9

HARDCOVER NONFICTION

1. Losing It. Valerie Bertinelli. Free Press, $26

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

2. The Secret. Rhonda Byrne. Atria/Beyond Words, $23.95

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 61

3. Beautiful Boy. David Sheff. Houghton Mifflin, $24

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

4. The Age of Miracles. Marianne Williamson. Hay House, $22.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

5. Liberal Fascism. Jonah Goldberg. Doubleday, $27.95

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 5

6. Women %26 Money. Suze Orman. Spiegel %26 Grau, $24.95

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 12

7. In Defense of Food. . Penguin Press, $21.95

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 9

8. Become a Better You. Joel Osteen.
Free Press, $25

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 20

9. The Third Jesus. Deepak Chopra. Harmony, $24

Last Week: 10; Weeks on List: 2

10. You: Staying Young. Michael F. Roizen, M.D., %26 Mehmet C. Oz, M.D. Free Press,$26

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 18

11. I Am America (and So Can You!). Stephen Colbert. Grand Central, $26.99

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 21

12. How Not to Look Old. Charla Krupp. Springboard Press, $25.99

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 8

13. An Inconvenient Book. Glenn Beck. Threshold Editions, $26

Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 15

14. Real Change. Newt Gingrich. Regnery, $27.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 6

15. Predictably Irrational. Dan Ariely. HarperCollins, $25.95

Last Week: 14; Weeks on List: 2

MASS MARKET

1. Revelation (Star Wars: Legacy of the Force). Karen Traviss. Del Rey, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

2. Predatory Game. Christine Feehan. Jove, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

3. Naughty Neighbor. Janet Evanovich. Harper, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

4. I Heard That Song Before. Mary Higgins Clark. Pocket, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

5. Vampire, Interrupted. Lynsay Sands. Avon, $6.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

6. The Innocent Man. John Grisham. Dell, $7.99

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 15

7. Obsession. Jonathan Kellerman. Ballantine, $9.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

8. Deep Storm. Lincoln Child. Anchor, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

9. Tom Clancy’s EndWar. David Michaels. Berkley, $9.99

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 4

10. To Bed a Beauty. Nicole Jordan. Ballantine, $6.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

11. The Faithful Spy. Alex Berenson. Jove, $9.99

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 5

12. Sisters. Danielle Steel. Pocket, $7.99

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 5

13. The 5th Horseman. James Patterson %26 Maxine Paetro. Vision, $9.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

14. The Alibi Man. Tami Hoag. Bantam, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

15. Let Sleeping Rogues Lie. Sabrina Jeffries. Pocket, $7.50

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 2

TRADE

1. A New Earth. Eckhart Tolle. Plume, $14

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 5

2. Eat, Pray, Love. Elizabeth Gilbert. Penguin, $15

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 57

3. The Audacity of Hope. Barack Obama. Three Rivers, $14.95

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 6

4. Three Cups of Tea. Greg Mortenson %26 David Oliver Relin. Penguin, $15

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 27

5. The Other Boleyn Girl. Philippa Gregory. Touchstone, $16

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 4

6. The Friday Night Knitting Club. Kate Jacobs. Berkley, $14

Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 8

7. Nineteen Minutes. Jodi Picoult. Washington Square Press, $15

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 4

8. Dreams from My Father. Barack Obama. Three Rivers Press, $14.95

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 24

9. The Pillars of the Earth. Ken Follett. NAL, $24.95

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 16

10. The Kite Runner. Khaled Hosseini. Riverhead, $14

Last Week: 10; Weeks on List: 177

11. Atonement. Ian McEwan. Anchor, $14.95

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 14

12. Water for Elephants. Sara Gruen. , $13. 95

Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 46

13. Skinny Bitch. Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin. Running Press, $13.95

Last Week: 14; Weeks on List: 31

14. The Power of Now. Eckhart Tolle. New World Library, $14

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 2

15. 90 Minutes in Heaven. Don Piper with Cecil Murphey. Revell, $12.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 42

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Saturday, March 8th, 2008

This week’s best-sellers from Publishers Weekly

Here are the best-sellers for the week that ended Saturday, Feb. 16, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide.

(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by Cahners Publishing Co., a division of Reed Elsevier, USA. (c) 2008 by Reed Elsevier, USA)

HARDCOVER FICTION

1. The Appeal. John Grisham. Doubleday, $27.95

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 3

2. 7th Heaven. James Patterson %26 Maxine Paetro. Little, Brown, $27.99

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 2

3. Duma Key. Stephen King. Scribner, $28

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 4

4. A Thousand Splendid Suns.
Khaled Hosseini. Riverhead, $25.95

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 39

5. World Without End. Ken Follett. Dutton, $35

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 19

6. Stranger in Paradise. Robert B. Parker. Putnam, $25.95

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 2

7. Plum Lucky. Janet Evanovich. St. Martin’s, $17.95

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 6

8. The Killing Ground. Jack Higgins. Putnam, $25.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

9. People of the Book. Geraldine Brooks. Viking, $25.95

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 7

10. The Senator’s Wife. Sue Miller. Knopf, $24.95

Last Week: 10; Weeks on List: 6

11. Sizzle and Burn. Jayne Ann Krentz. Putnam, $24.95

Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 3

12. The Ghost War. Alex Berenson. Putnam, $24.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

13. Charm! Kendall Hart. Hyperion, $21.95

Last Week: 13; Weeks on List: 2

14. Celebutantes. Amanda Goldberg %26 Ruthanna Khalighi Hopper. St. Martin’s, $23.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

15. Where the Heart Leads. Stephanie Laurens. Morrow, $24.95

Last Week:
11; Weeks on List: 2

HARDCOVER NONFICTION

1. The Secret. Rhonda Byrne. Atria/Beyond Words, $23.95

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 59

2. Women %26 Money. Suze Orman. Spiegel %26 Grau, $24.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 10

3. In Defense of Food. . Penguin Press, $21.95

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 7

4. You: Staying Young. Michael F. Roizen, M.D., %26 Mehmet C. Oz, M.D. Free Press,$26

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 16

5. Become a Better You. Joel Osteen.
Free Press, $25

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 18

6. Does This Clutter Make My Butt Look Fat? Peter Walsh. Free Press, $25

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 2

7. I Am America (and So Can You!). Stephen Colbert. Grand Central, $26.99

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 19

8. Reconciliation. Benazir Bhutto. Harper, $27.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

9. Real Change. Newt Gingrich. Regnery, $27.95

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 5

10. How Not to Look Old. Charla Krupp. Springboard Press, $25.99

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 6

11. An Inconvenient Book. Glenn Beck. Threshold Editions, $26

Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 13

12. The Dangerous Book for Boys. Conn %26 Hal Iggulden. Collins, $24.95

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 39

13. The Age of American Unreason. Susan Jacoby. Pantheon, $26

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

14. The Daring Book for Girls. Andrea J. Buchanan %26 Miriam Peskowitz. Collins,$24.95

Last Week: 15; Weeks on List: 16

15. Deceptively Delicious. Jessica Seinfeld. Collins, $24.95

Last Week: 10; Weeks on List: 19

MASS MARKET

1. The Faithful Spy. Alex Berenson. Jove, $9.99

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 3

2. Tom Clancy’s EndWar. David Michaels. Berkley, $9.99

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 2

3. Sisters. Danielle Steel. Pocket, $7.99

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 3

4. The Innocent Man. John Grisham. Dell, $7.99

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 13

5. Dream Chaser. Sherrilyn Kenyon. St. Martin’s, $7.99

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 2

6. Snowfall at Willow Lake. Susan Wiggs. Mira, $7.99

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 3

7. White Lies. Jayne Ann Krentz. Jove, $9.99

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 2

8. The Quest. Wilbur Smith. St. Martin’s, $9.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

9. Hard to Handle. Lori Foster. Berkley, $7.99

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 2

10. White Night. Jim Butcher. Roc, $7.99

Last Week: 14; Weeks on List: 2

11. The Pillars of the Earth. Ken Follett. Signet, $7.99

Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 12

12. Three in Death. J.D. Robb. Berkley, $7.99

Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 3

13. Atonement. Ian McEwan. Anchor, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 8

14. Whitethorn Woods. Maeve Binchy. Anchor, $7.99

Last Week: 13; Weeks on List: 3

15. Dawn’s Awakening. Lora Leigh. Berkley, $7.99

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 2

TRADE

1. A New Earth. Eckhart Tolle. Plume, $14

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 3

2. Eat, Pray, Love. Elizabeth Gilbert. Penguin, $15

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 55

3. Three Cups of Tea. Greg Mortenson %26 David Oliver Relin. Penguin, $15

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 25

4. The Audacity of Hope. Barack Obama. Three Rivers, $14.95

Last Week: 10; Weeks on List: 4

5. The Pillars of the Earth. Ken Follett. NAL, $24.95

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 14

6. Atonement. Ian McEwan. Anchor, $14.95

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 12

7. Nineteen Minutes. Jodi Picoult. Washington Square Press, $15

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 2

8. The Kite Runner. Khaled Hosseini. Riverhead, $14

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 175

9. Eat This, Not That. David Zinczenko with Matt Goulding. Rodale, $19.95

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 6

10. Skinny Bitch. Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin. Running Press, $13.95

Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 29

11. Dreams from My Father. Barack Obama. Three Rivers Press, $14.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 22

12. The Friday Night Knitting Club. Kate Jacobs. Berkley, $14

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 6

13. Water for Elephants. Sara Gruen. , $13. 95

Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 44

14. FairTax: The Truth. Neal Boortz and John Linder. Harper, $14.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

15. You Can Heal Your Life. Louise Hay. Hay House, $14.95

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 2

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Friday, February 22nd, 2008

This week’s best-sellers from Publishers Weekly

Here are the best-sellers for the week that ended Saturday, Feb. 9, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide.

(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by Cahners Publishing Co., a division of Reed Elsevier, USA. (c) 2008 by Reed Elsevier, USA)

Hardcover Bestsellers/

HARDCOVER FICTION

1. 7th Heaven. James Patterson %26 Maxine Paetro. Little, Brown, $27.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

2. The Appeal. John Grisham. Doubleday, $27.95

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 2

3. Duma Key. Stephen King. Scribner, $28

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 3

4. A Thousand Splendid Suns. Khaled Hosseini. Riverhead, $25.95

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 38

5. Stranger in Paradise. Robert B. Parker. Putnam, $25.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

6. Plum Lucky. Janet Evanovich. St. Martin’s, $17.95

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 5

7. People of the Book. Geraldine Brooks. Viking, $25.95

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 6

8. World Without End. Ken Follett. Dutton, $35

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 18

9. Sizzle and Burn. Jayne Ann Krentz. Putnam, $24.95

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 2

10. The Senator’s Wife. Sue Miller. Knopf, $24.95

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 5

11. Where the Heart Leads. Stephanie Laurens. Morrow, $24.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

12. Beverly Hills Dead. Stuart Woods. Putnam, $25.95

Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 4

13. Charm! Kendall Hart. Hyperion, $21.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

14. Firefly Lane. Kristin Hannah. St. Martin’s, $23.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

15. The Secret Between Us. Barbara Delinsky. Doubleday, $25.95

Last Week: 14; Weeks on List: 3

HARDCOVER NONFICTION

1. The Secret. Rhonda Byrne. Atria/Beyond Words, $23.95

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 58

2. You: Staying Young. Michael F. Roizen, M.D., %26 Mehmet C. Oz, M.D. Free Press,$26

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 15

3. In Defense of Food. . Penguin Press, $21.95

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 6

4. Become a Better You. Joel Osteen. Free Press, $25

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 17

5. How Not to Look Old. Charla Krupp. Springboard Press, $25.99

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 5

6. Does This Clutter Make My Butt Look Fat? Peter Walsh. Free Press, $25

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

7. Real Change. Newt Gingrich. Regnery, $27.95

Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 4

8. I Am America (and So Can You!). Stephen Colbert. Grand Central, $26.99

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 18

9. An Inconvenient Book. Glenn Beck. Threshold Editions, $26

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 12

10. Deceptively Delicious. Jessica Seinfeld. Collins, $24.95

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 18

11. The Dangerous Book for Boys. Conn %26 Hal Iggulden. Collins, $24.95

Last Week: 10; Weeks on List: 38

12. Jim Cramer’s Stay Mad for Life. James J. Cramer with Cliff Mason. Simon %26 Schuster, $26

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 8

13. The Food You Crave. Ellie Krieger. Taunton, $28

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 3

14. Hope’s Boy. Andrew Bridge. Hyperion, $22.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

15. The Daring Book for Girls. Andrea J. Buchanan %26 Miriam Peskowitz. Collins,$24.95

Last Week: 13; Weeks on List: 15

MASS MARKET

1. Dream Chaser. Sherrilyn Kenyon. St. Martin’s, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

2. Hard to Handle. Lori Foster. Berkley, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

3. Sisters. Danielle Steel. Pocket, $7.99

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 2

4. Dawn’s Awakening. Lora Leigh. Berkley, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

5. Snowfall at Willow Lake. Susan Wiggs. Mira, $7.99

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 2

6. Tom Clancy’s EndWar. David Michaels. Berkley, $9.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

7. The Innocent Man. John Grisham. Dell, $7.99

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 12

8. White Lies. Jayne Ann Krentz. Jove, $9.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

9. The Pillars of the Earth. Ken Follett. Signet, $7.99

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 11

10. Vampires Are Forever. Lynsay Sands. Avon, $6.99

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 2

11. The Faithful Spy. Alex Berenson. Jove, $9.99

Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 2

12. Three in Death. J.D. Robb. Berkley, $7.99

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 2

13. Whitethorn Woods. Maeve Binchy. Anchor, $7.99

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 2

14. White Night. Jim Butcher. Roc, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

15. Daddy’s Girl. Lisa Scottoline. Harper, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

TRADE

1. A New Earth. Eckhart Tolle. Plume, $14

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 2

2. Eat, Pray, Love. Elizabeth Gilbert. Penguin, $15

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 54

3. The Pillars of the Earth. Ken Follett. NAL, $24.95

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 13

4. Three Cups of Tea. Greg Mortenson %26 David Oliver Relin. Penguin, $15

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 24

5. Atonement. Ian McEwan. Anchor, $14.95

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 11

6. Eat This, Not That. David Zinczenko with Matt Goulding. Rodale, $19.95

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 5

7. 19 Minutes. Jodi Picoult. Washington Square Press, $15

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

8. The Kite Runner. Khaled Hosseini. Riverhead, $14

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 174

9. Skinny Bitch. Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin. Running Press, $13.95

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 28

10. The Audacity of Hope. Barack Obama. Three Rivers, $14.95

Last Week: 13; Weeks on List: 3

11. You Can Heal Your Life. Louise Hay. Hay House, $14.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

12. Water for Elephants. Sara Gruen. , $13. 95

Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 43

13. The Gift of Fear. Gavin De Becker. Dell, $15

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

14. The Power of Now. Eckhart Tolle. New World Library, $14

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

15. The 6th Target. James Patterson and Maxine Paetro Grand Central, $14.99

.Last Week: 15; Weeks on List: 5

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Sunday, February 17th, 2008

This week’s best sellers from Publishers Weekly

Here are the best sellers for the week ending Saturday, Feb. 2 compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide.

(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by Cahners Publishing Co., a division of Reed Elsevier, USA. (c) 2008 by Reed Elsevier, USA)

HARDCOVER FICTION

1. The Appeal. John Grisham. Doubleday, $27.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

2. Duma Key. Stephen King. Scribner, $28

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 2

3. Sizzle and Burn. Jayne Ann Krentz. Putnam, $24.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

4. Plum Lucky. Janet Evanovich. St. Martin’s, $17.95

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 4

5. A Thousand Splendid Suns. Khaled Hosseini. Riverhead, $25.95

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 37

6. People of the Book. Geraldine Brooks. Viking, $25.95

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 5

7. World Without End. Ken Follett. Dutton, $35

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 17

8. The Senator’s Wife. Sue Miller. Knopf, $24.95

Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 4

9. Beverly Hills Dead. Stuart Woods. Putnam, $25.95

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 3

10. The Shooters. W.E.B. Griffin. Putnam, $26.95

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 5

11. Double Cross. James Patterson. Little, Brown, $27.99

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 12

12. Sword Song. Bernard Cornwell. Harper, $25.95

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 2

13. Blasphemy. Douglas Preston. Forge, $25.95

Last Week: 10; Weeks on List: 4

14. The Secret Between Us. Barbara Delinsky. Doubleday, $25.95

Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 2

15. The Purrfect Murder. Rita Mae Brown. Bantam, $25

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

HARDCOVER NONFICTION

1. The Secret. Rhonda Byrne. Atria/Beyond Words, $23.95

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 57

2. In Defense of Food. . Penguin Press, $21.95

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 5

3. Become a Better You. Joel Osteen. Free Press, $25

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 16

4. You: Staying Young. Michael F. Roizen, M.D., %26 Mehmet C. Oz, M.D. Free Press, $26

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 14

5. How Not to Look Old. Charla Krupp. Springboard Press, $25.99

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 4

6. I Am America (and So Can You!). Stephen Colbert. Grand Central, $26.99

Last Week: 10; Weeks on List: 17

7. An Inconvenient Book. Glenn Beck. Threshold Editions, $26

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 11

8. Deceptively Delicious. Jessica Seinfeld. Collins, $24.95

Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 17

9. Liberal Fascism. Jonah Goldberg. Doubleday, $27.95

Last Week: 15; Weeks on List: 3

10. The Dangerous Book for Boys. Conn %26 Hal Iggulden. Collins, $24.95

Last Week: 13; Weeks on List: 37

11. Jim Cramer’s Stay Mad for Life. James J. Cramer with Cliff Mason. Simon %26 Schuster, $26

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 7

12. Real Change. Newt Gingrich. Regnery, $27.95

Last Week: 12; Weeks on List: 3

13. The Daring Book for Girls. Andrea J. Buchanan %26 Miriam Peskowitz. Collins, $24.95

Last Week: 14; Weeks on List: 14

14. Tom Cruise. Andrew Morton. St. Martin’s, $25.95

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 3

15. Temples on the Other Side. Sylvia Browne. Hay House, $25.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

MASS MARKET

1. Vampires Are Forever. Lynsay Sands. Avon, $6.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

2. The Pillars of the Earth. Ken Follett. Signet, $7.99

Last Week: 13; Weeks on List: 10

3. Treasures. Nora Roberts. Silhouette, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

4. Snowfall at Willow Lake. Susan Wiggs. Mira, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

5. The Innocent Man. John Grisham. Dell, $7.99

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 11

6. Atonement. Ian McEwan. Anchor, $7.99

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 7

7. Three in Death. J.D. Robb. Berkley, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

8. Sisters. Danielle Steel. Pocket, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

9. Plum Lovin’. Janet Evanovich. St. Martin’s, $6.99

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 4

10. The Gift of Fear. Gavin De Becker. Dell, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

11. Whitethorn Woods. Maeve Binchy. Anchor, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

12. The Faithful Spy. Alex Berenson. Jove, $9.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

13. The Watchman. Robert Crais. Pocket Star, $7.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

14. The Murder Game. Beverly Barton. Zebra, $6.99

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

15. The Shape Shifter. Tony Hillerman. Harper, $9.99

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 6

TRADE

1. A New Earth. Eckhart Tolle. Plume, $14

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 1

2. The Pillars of the Earth. Ken Follett. NAL, $24.95

Last Week: 8; Weeks on List: 12

3. Eat, Pray, Love. Elizabeth Gilbert. Penguin, $15

Last Week: 1; Weeks on List: 53

4. Atonement. Ian McEwan. Anchor, $14.95

Last Week: 2; Weeks on List: 10

5. Three Cups of Tea. Greg Mortenson %26 David Oliver Relin. Penguin, $15

Last Week: 3; Weeks on List: 23

6. Eat This, Not That. David Zinczenko with Matt Goulding. Rodale, $19.95

Last Week: 4; Weeks on List: 4

7. The Kite Runner. Khaled Hosseini. Riverhead, $14

Last Week: 5; Weeks on List: 173

8. Skinny Bitch. Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin. Running Press, $13.95

Last Week: 7; Weeks on List: 27

9. Water for Elephants. Sara Gruen. , $13. 95

Last Week: 6; Weeks on List: 42

10. The Friday Night Knitting Club. Kate Jacobs. Berkley, $14

Last Week: 11; Weeks on List: 5

11. The Other Boleyn Girl. Philippa Gregory. Touchstone, $16

Last Week: 14; Weeks on List: 2

12. Body Surfing. Anita Shreve. Back Bay, $14.99

Last Week: 13; Weeks on List: 2

13. The Audacity of Hope. Barack Obama. Three Rivers, $14.95

Last Week: -; Weeks on List: 2

14. Calorie King Calorie, Fat, %26 Carbo- hydrate Counter. Allen Borushek. Family Health,$7.99

Last Week: 9; Weeks on List: 4

15. The 6th Target. James Patterson and Maxine Paetro.4 Grand Central, $14.99

Last Week: 10; Weeks on List: 4

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Friday, February 8th, 2008

Nine destination bookstores worth putting on a tourists itinerary

NEW YORK — When is a bookstore worth a tourist’s time?

When it’s more than just a place to buy books.

A destination bookstore can make you feel like you’re part of the community, whether you’re grooving on the laid-back vibe at Powell’s in Portland, or tuning into the Beltway buzz at Washington’s Politics and Prose.

Some bookstores offer literary touchstones, like the wooden chairs signed by writers who’ve visited That Bookstore in Blytheville, an Arkansas institution frequented by native son John Grisham. City Lights in San Francisco, once a hangout for Beat writers like Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac, draws tourists from around the world.

“Each one of these stores has a unique, distinct personality and approach,” said Meg Smith, chief marketing officer for the American Booksellers Association, a trade group for independent bookstores. “You really do see a snapshot of the town and the region in these kinds of fulsome independent bookstores.”

And don’t overlook the shopping potential. Most independent bookstores take pride in showcasing regional literature. Quirky handwritten signs with staff recommendations may direct you to writers you’ve never heard of. The tote bags at the Strand bookstore in Manhattan, which come in more than 30 designs, were voted the No. 1 souvenir to bring home to Japan by New York readers of Nikkei, a Japanese financial newspaper.

Any list of destination bookstores is bound to leave off some favorites. But here are nine noteworthy bookstores around the country that are definitely worth a visit.

BOOKS %26amp; BOOKS: 265 Aragon Ave., Coral Gables, Fla., http://www.booksandbooks.com or 305-442-4408. Some bookstores are crammed with serpentine rows of dusty shelves aching with books - but that’s not what you’ll find at Books %26amp; Books, which has three locations in addition to its Coral Gables flagship. “Our Coral Gables store is built around a courtyard in a Mediterranean-style building and our South Beach store is in a gorgeous Art Deco building,” said owner Mitchell Kaplan. The store also has branches in an upscale mall in Bal Harbour and on Grand Cayman Island in the Caribbean. Books %26amp; Books hosts 70 author events a month, and the stores’ specialties include art, architecture and regional literature, including books about Cuba and Latin America. Both the Coral Gables and Miami Beach stores also have full-service restaurants.

CITY LIGHTS BOOKS: 261 Columbus Ave., San Francisco; http://www.citylights.com/ or 415-362-8193. This store, a city landmark, was co-founded in 1953 by poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti, who also started City Lights Publishers and was arrested on obscenity charges for publishing Ginsberg’s famous poem “Howl.” The store continues to serve as a center for counterculture activities and politics. Recommendations from its “Muckraking” section, for example, include titles like “The Fall of the House of Bush” and “What Orwell Didn’t Know.” Tourists also like to stop in at the bar next door, Vesuvio, to have a drink where Kerouac once bellied up.

ELLIOTT BAY BOOK CO.: 101 S. Main St., Seattle; http://www.elliottbaybook.com/ or 800-962-5311. Elliott Bay Book Co. is located in Seattle’s historic Pioneer Square district, once the city’s Skid Row but now known for nightclubs, galleries, sports arenas and architecture - including the 1867 red-brick building that houses Elliott Bay. Cedar shelves offer 150,000 new and used titles in rooms with exposed brick walls, and one or two readings are held every night. “It can be anyone from a first-time poet to Dave Sedaris returning for his 10th time,” said Elliott Bay spokeswoman Tracy Taylor. “We had him here when nobody knew who he was and there were 15 people in the audience. He sang the Oscar Mayer song.”

POLITICS AND PROSE: 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washington; http://www.politics-prose.com/ or 800-722-0790. Even people who’ve never been here feel like they know the place because many of its readings are broadcast on C-SPAN. “We have a lot of people who come here and the first thing they want to know is, ‘Where does the author stand?’” said co-owner Barbara Meade. “They want to have the whole setting they see on television explained to them.” January events include the authors of titles like “The Nuclear Jihadist” and “The Speculation Economy,” but don’t let the “Politics” in the store’s name fool you. Readers can find books here in any genre; the store’s children’s section is especially well-regarded.

POWELL’S CITY OF BOOKS: 1005 W. Burnside, Portland, Ore.; http://www.powells.com or 800-878-7323. The Gold Room, the Rose Room, the Purple Room - even with a color-coded map and signs, it’s easy to get lost in the labyrinths of Powell’s City of Books. And “it’s hard to walk out with less than 10 books,” said marketing coordinator Kim Sutton. She added that locals love to bring their out-of-town guests in: “They’ll say, ‘This is my bookstore,’ and show them around with a lot of pride and ownership.” Powell’s claims to be the world’s largest independent used and new bookstore; its other locations include three other general bookstores and two specialty stores (Technical and Home and Garden).

PRAIRIE LIGHTS: 15 S. Dubuque St., Iowa City, Iowa. http://www.prairielightsbooks.com or 800-295-2665. Thanks to the University of Iowa’s famed Writers’ Workshop, which has given Iowa City a vibrant literary scene, you never know who you’re going to see at a Prairie Lights event. Could be a Nobel laureate like J.M. Coetzee; writer promoting his new best-seller, “In Defense of Food,” or even a presidential candidate like John Edwards, who was in town for the caucuses. “Right place, right time,” said Jim Harris, the , when asked to explain how the store has attracted so many bigwigs over the years - from Raymond Carver to Toni Morrison to Junot Diaz. Store events also air on WSUI, a National Public Radio affiliate.

TATTERED COVER BOOK STORE: 1628 16th St., Denver; http://www.tatteredcover.com or 303-436-1070. Visitors to Denver often go to 16th Street, a mile-long outdoor mall through the heart of LoDo, historic Lower Denver. There, amid breweries and boutiques, near the arenas where Denver’s major league teams play and across from the train station, you’ll find the Tattered Cover. “We get a whole lot of tourists, along with people waiting for trains and fans hanging out until game time,” said spokeswoman Patty Miller. The store has two other locations, but the LoDo location is especially inviting, with cozy nooks, overstuffed chairs and a .

THAT BOOKSTORE IN BLYTHEVILLE: 316 W. Main, Blytheville, Ark.; http://www.tbib.com or 870-763-3333. It’s located in an out-of-the-way small town, but That Bookstore in Blytheville has become famous thanks to Grisham, who grew up nearby. “He comes here all the time, every time he has a book,” said Mary Gay Shipley, the store’s “manager, founder, owner and janitor.” While Grisham no longer greets the public during his visits, he does sign books, and his association with the store gave Shipley the clout to get other big names in - from Mary Higgins Clark and “Cold Mountain” author Charles to Bill and Hillary Clinton. The store is located on Interstate 55 between Memphis (an hour away) and St. Louis, so “we get a lot of customers traveling from the Midwest to Florida,” Shipley said.

THE STRAND: Corner of 12th Street and Broadway, near Union Square, Manhattan; http://www.strandbooks.com or 212-473-1452. Founded in 1927 by the Bass family, which still owns it, The Strand is a New York legend, offering “18 miles of books,” including used books for a buck, new best-sellers, rare books and collectibles in every price range, and an entire floor of art books. It’s as much a scene as it is a bookstore; customers range from Japanese tourists and East Village hipsters to New York University students and crusty intellectuals who quiz the staff on their literary knowledge. The “treasure hunt” is part of the allure, said Christina Foxley, director of store events. “Our stock is constantly changing. One hour we might have a book, one hour we don’t. You never know what you might find.”

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

Nine destination bookstores for the tourist’s itinerary

A destination bookstore can make you feel like you’re part of the community, whether you’re grooving on the laid-back vibe at Powell’s in Portland, or tuning into the Beltway buzz at Washington’s Politics and Prose.

Some bookstores offer literary touchstones, like the wooden chairs signed by writers who’ve visited That Bookstore in Blytheville, an Arkansas institution frequented by native son John Grisham. City Lights in San Francisco, once a hangout for Beat writers like Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac, draws tourists from around the world.

“Each one of these stores has a unique, distinct personality and approach,” said Meg Smith, chief marketing officer for the American Booksellers Association, a trade group for independent bookstores. “You really do see a snapshot of the town and the region in these kinds of fulsome independent bookstores.”

And don’t overlook the shopping potential. Most independent bookstores take pride in showcasing regional literature. Quirky handwritten signs with staff recommendations may direct you to writers you’ve never heard of. The tote bags at the Strand bookstore in Manhattan, which come in more than 30 designs, were voted the No. 1 souvenir to bring home to Japan by New York readers of Nikkei, a Japanese financial newspaper.

Any list of destination bookstores is bound to leave off some favorites. But here are nine noteworthy bookstores around the country that are definitely worth a visit.

BOOKS %26 BOOKS: 265 Aragon Ave., Coral Gables, Fla., www.booksandbooks.com or 305-442-4408. Some bookstores are crammed with serpentine rows of dusty shelves aching with books %26mdash; but that’s not what you’ll find at Books %26 Books, which has three locations in addition to its Coral Gables flagship. “Our Coral Gables store is built around a courtyard in a Mediterranean-style building and our South Beach store is in a gorgeous Art Deco building,” said owner Mitchell Kaplan. The store also has branches in an upscale mall in Bal Harbour and on Grand Cayman Island in the Caribbean. Books %26 Books hosts 70 author events a month, and the stores’ specialties include art, architecture and regional literature, including books about Cuba and Latin America. Both the Coral Gables and Miami Beach stores also have full-service restaurants.

CITY LIGHTS BOOKS: 261 Columbus Ave., San Francisco; www.citylights.com/ or 415-362-8193. This store, a city landmark, was co-founded in 1953 by poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti, who also started City Lights Publishers and was arrested on obscenity charges for publishing Ginsberg’s famous poem “Howl.” The store continues to serve as a center for counterculture activities and politics. Recommendations from its “Muckraking” section, for example, include titles like “The Fall of the House of Bush” and “What Orwell Didn’t Know.” Tourists also like to stop in at the bar next door, Vesuvio, to have a drink where Kerouac once bellied up.

ELLIOTT BAY BOOK CO.: 101 S. Main St., Seattle; www.elliottbaybook.com/ or 800-962-5311. Elliott Bay Book Co. is located in Seattle’s historic Pioneer Square district, once the city’s Skid Row but now known for nightclubs, galleries, sports arenas and architecture %26mdash; including the 1867 red-brick building that houses Elliott Bay. Cedar shelves offer 150,000 new and used titles in rooms with exposed brick walls, and one or two readings are held every night. “It can be anyone from a first-time poet to Dave Sedaris returning for his 10th time,” said Elliott Bay spokeswoman Tracy Taylor. “We had him here when nobody knew who he was and there were 15 people in the audience. He sang the Oscar Mayer song.”

POLITICS AND PROSE: 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washington; www.politics-prose.com/ or 800-722-0790. Even people who’ve never been here feel like they know the place because many of its readings are broadcast on C-SPAN. “We have a lot of people who come here and the first thing they want to know is, ‘Where does the author stand?’” said co-owner Barbara Meade. “They want to have the whole setting they see on television explained to them.” January events include the authors of titles like “The Nuclear Jihadist” and “The Speculation Economy,” but don’t let the “Politics” in the store’s name fool you. Readers can find books here in any genre; the store’s children’s section is especially well-regarded.

POWELL’S CITY OF BOOKS: 1005 W. Burnside, Portland, Ore.; www.powells.com or 800-878-7323. The Gold Room, the Rose Room, the Purple Room %26mdash; even with a color-coded map and signs, it’s easy to get lost in the labyrinths of Powell’s City of Books. And “it’s hard to walk out with less than 10 books,” said marketing coordinator Kim Sutton. She added that locals love to bring their out-of-town guests in: “They’ll say, ‘This is my bookstore,’ and show them around with a lot of pride and ownership.” Powell’s claims to be the world’s largest independent used and new bookstore; its other locations include three other general bookstores and two specialty stores (Technical and Home and Garden).

PRAIRIE LIGHTS: 15 S. Dubuque St., Iowa City, Iowa. www.prairielightsbooks.com or 800-295-2665. Thanks to the University of Iowa’s famed Writers’ Workshop, which has given Iowa City a vibrant literary scene, you never know who you’re going to see at a Prairie Lights event. Could be a Nobel laureate like J.M. Coetzee; writer promoting his new best-seller, “In Defense of Food,” or even a presidential candidate like John Edwards, who was in town for the caucuses. “Right place, right time,” said Jim Harris, the , when asked to explain how the store has attracted so many bigwigs over the years %26mdash; from Raymond Carver to Toni Morrison to Junot Diaz. Store events also air on WSUI, a National Public Radio affiliate.

TATTERED COVER BOOK STORE: 1628 16th St., Denver; www.tatteredcover.com or 303-436-1070. Visitors to Denver often go to 16th Street, a mile-long outdoor mall through the heart of LoDo, historic Lower Denver. There, amid breweries and boutiques, near the arenas where Denver’s major league teams play and across from the train station, you’ll find the Tattered Cover. “We get a whole lot of tourists, along with people waiting for trains and fans hanging out until game time,” said spokeswoman Patty Miller. The store has two other locations, but the LoDo location is especially inviting, with cozy nooks, overstuffed chairs and a .

THAT BOOKSTORE IN BLYTHEVILLE: 316 W. Main, Blytheville, Ark.; www.tbib.com or 870-763-3333. It’s located in an out-of-the-way small town, but That Bookstore in Blytheville has become famous thanks to Grisham, who grew up nearby. “He comes here all the time, every time he has a book,” said Mary Gay Shipley, the store’s “manager, founder, owner and janitor.” While Grisham no longer greets the public during his visits, he does sign books, and his association with the store gave Shipley the clout to get other big names in - from Mary Higgins Clark and “Cold Mountain” author Charles to Bill and Hillary Clinton. The store is located on Interstate 55 between Memphis (an hour away) and St. Louis, so “we get a lot of customers traveling from the Midwest to Florida,” Shipley said.

THE STRAND: Corner of 12th Street and Broadway, near Union Square, Manhattan; www.strandbooks.com or 212-473-1452. Founded in 1927 by the Bass family, which still owns it, The Strand is a New York legend, offering “18 miles of books,” including used books for a buck, new best-sellers, rare books and collectibles in every price range, and an entire floor of art books. It’s as much a scene as it is a bookstore; customers range from Japanese tourists and East Village hipsters to New York University students and crusty intellectuals who quiz the staff on their literary knowledge. The “treasure hunt” is part of the allure, said Christina Foxley, director of store events. “Our stock is constantly changing. One hour we might have a book, one hour we don’t. You never know what you might find.”

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Sunday, January 13th, 2008