Chip Kidd’s new book The Lerners hits stores on the 19th. This sophmore effort follows 2001’s The Cheesemonkeys.
If you’re wondering if you’d like to pick this one up you can check out the serialized version before buying.
Chip Kidd’s new book The Lerners hits stores on the 19th. This sophmore effort follows 2001’s The Cheesemonkeys.
If you’re wondering if you’d like to pick this one up you can check out the serialized version before buying.
Birmingham’s southside is home to a new used bookstore. Greencup Books is holding its official “grand opening” this Friday night. The doors open at 2pm with a reading/signing by Tony Crunk and artist Peter Wilm. They will be signing their joint publishing project Stories from Real Life.
Greencup Books sells mainly used books culled from collections and sales all over the South East. But there are a few new titles on hand too. Some from their own small-press imprint Absnth Inc. So that’s pretty cool too.
This weekend is the Vestavia Hills Library’s Super Duper Book Sale. It goes all the way till Tuesday, but they started carting out books by the box-full tonight.
Happy hunting! If you’re in town it’s well worth the trip (even on a lunch break next week)!
Rumors and stories have been circulating over the past couple of years about the “top book reviewers” at Amazon.com. I’ve read everything from Amazon secretly pays the top reviewers to theorizing the reviewers don’t actually read any of the books (their number one reviewer has reviewed 45 books a week over the past couple of years…. hmmmmm).
But Slate.com has posted the first account (that I have seen) written by a new author. Hallberg noticed that his unknown book first review was by Amazon’s #7 reviewer, 66-year-old Grady Harp. Though nothing revolutionary is reveales it’s still a pretty interesting read.