Monday, January 19, 2009

events

Not one but two people have asked where the non-fiction section is.

I rang a sale where the change came out to $6.66

A crazy barefoot fat guy came in desperate for Terry Goodkind because he had been up all night reading and was desperate for more.
Happily we had a few and he trundled off satisfied.

Redoing the Antiques section I came across an issue of OLD BOTTLE MAGAZINE with the following cover blurb:

Mouth Blown Glass ROLLING PINS: Within the Realm of Antique Bottle Collecting!


Color me convinced!

4 comments:

  1. I wish I'd had your help yesterday. On the first day of class, a kid came up afterwards and asked if I could recommend some books for him to read. Ack. And he's a sci-fi guy. Really, you're asking me? I sent him off with three titles: Stranger in a Strange Land (which I have read), Good News from Outer Space (which I thought I'd read but might not have), and Childhood's End (which I have not read). He's already ready Ender's Game, of course (which I have also read). But when he comes back for more, I have nothing! Any tips? He's a young, pleasant, awkward, nervous guy who wants more sci-fi pleasure reading.

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  2. good contemporary sf authors:

    Alastair Reynolds (everything, start with Revelation Space)

    Sean McMullen's Greatwinter Trilogy:
    Eyes of the Calculor, Souls in the Great Machine, The Miocene Arro

    Ken McLeod, haven't read a bad one yet.

    some classics:

    Vernor Vinge, all his novels.
    William Gibson:
    all short stories + Neuromancer
    David Brin:
    Startide Rising
    George Alec Effinger:
    When Gravity Fails, A Fire in the Sun, Exile Kiss


    and one more who is love/hate,
    China Mieville, a Mervyn Peake-esque fabulist with a SF candy coating:
    Perdido Street Station, The Scar, Iron Council

    those should keep him busy for a while, then you can come back for more.

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  3. And here I was thinking she wanted a list of books that would be interesting to younger readers of sci-fi..... :P

    Gibson: yes
    Neuromancer

    Brin: yes

    Neal Stephenson(in more or less the following order):
    Snow Crash
    Diamond Age
    Zodiac
    Cryptonomicon

    Heinlein:
    Anything written before 1960

    Dan Simmons:
    Hyperion
    Fall of Hyperion

    Issac Asimov:
    Yes

    Douglas Adams,Larry Niven, Niven & Pournelle, Arthur C. Clarke...

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  4. Fabulous! Now I can seem hip and cool. And my student will keep READING. Win/win! And maybe I'll even read one or two . . .

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