First published in 1992, Daniel Pennac's The Right's of the Reader was retranslated into English and republished in 2008, with an introduction and illustrations by Quentin Blake. Passionate and funny, but never didactic, Pennac explores why we read, and most importantly, why we don't. His premise is summed up in his opening sentence... "You can't make someone read. Just as you can't make them fall in love or dream..."
While stopped at a traffic light yesterday, I noticed a puttering station wagon next to me with a little old lady
in a floppy gardening hat behind the wheel. I could just make out her profile as she peered out her windshield patiently
waiting for the light to change.
My obstructed view was not due to her petite stature or an advanced stage of osteoporosis, mind you, but rather from the climbing stacks of old newspapers, rotting stuffed animals, cardboard boxes, blankets, and foils in differing states of decomposition; overall, a stockpile that threatened to bust out the windows and swallow her whole.
If you are an author, published or not, there are two new Twitter hashtags that you'll likely want to follow: #waystoimpressbooksellers and #dearpublisher. The latter will probably be of passing interest to many book lovers as well, as will the often funny #bookstorebingo.
Following on from my earlier post, "Overheard in a Bookstore", here's a link to some more gems; this time collected by Shelf Awareness, including:
"I definitely don't want nonfiction. I like autobiographies and history."
"This is the only bookstore I've ever been in that didn't have a popcorn machine."
There have been mumblings in certain quarters recently suggesting that libraries are a waste of money in this day and age.
Pardon me, but I beg to differ; and this is why:
People say the strangest things! Here are a few real customer quotes overhead by British booksellers ....
With thanks to the folks at Independent Booksellers Week