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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: The Sandbox, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. Hints from Heloise and Abelard about Bookstore Windows

Yet another customer sighs and notes that owning a used bookstore is
the ultimate dream job. She muses on how lovely it must be for me to
be surrounded by books, reading in between helping readers pick out
the perfect novel; absentmindedly petting store cat Sam and sipping
herbal tea while ringing up stacks of books.

AS IF, as the kiddies say. I only get a few smidgens of reading time
in the depths of winter, when I can count the number of walk-in
customers on one hand and it’s just too cold to stray away from the
full blast of the heater. As a brick and mortar bookseller, I usually
have a long and tedious to-do list in order to keep the shop clean,
bright and organized. Open shop owners are storekeepers, make no
mistake, and much as I would like to be dipping into great literature
with a cat on my lap and a latte in hand, I am more likely to brandish
a dust rag or toilet brush.

Which brings me to the glamorous bookshop owner topic of windows. Who
doesn’t love to wash windows? At Old Saratoga Books, we have twelve
foot high windows, so that I can pile on the acrophobia while
balancing my squeegee, washer fluid, paper towels and razor blade (for
stubborn tape and insect removal and for my wrists in case I get more
than twenty versions of “How about coming over and washing my windows”
from the sidewalk gallery). Being atop the ladder does increase
sales, however, as the phone will undoubtedly ring and the door open
as I juggle my way up to the top rung, so there’s that.

The front windows are my store’s best advertising and they must be
cleaned on the outside at least once a year to remove all the pollen,
street dust and bird poop that obstructs the view of my beautiful
books. I try to wait until our village finishes with street sweeping
before doing my Spring cleaning, but they recently bought a new
Sweepster 3000 and keep dragging this new toy out to pacify the
taxpayers, so I am defeated there. The lower portions of the windows,
inside and out, need frequent window cleaning touch ups to remove the
nose glue from store cat Sam (inside) and face and finger prints
(outside) from Sam’s admirers.

I’ve tried various ways of cleaning windows, using newspapers, vinegar
solutions, chalkboard erasers, and the like, but I have found that
blasting the windows with a lot of blue window cleaner several times
and then following up with a squeegee produces the best, streak-free
result. Window cleaning on a cloudy day will also produce better
results than doing so in full sun, as solar rays apparently rearrange
window cleaner molecules into an opaque state.

Bookstore rule #1 is that you can’t leave books too long in the
windows or they will get sunned and faded. Some colors of book cloth
and dust jackets sun very easily, like strong reds and oranges, so I
take care to rotate the window book displays every couple of weeks. I
also found that applying an ultraviolet window film measurably reduces
sunning and book damage. I discovered this after noticing a lot of
flaky, shiny book dander on the floor in front of my upstairs
anthropology section. This section faced an eastern window and the
sun had cooked up all the Mylar jacket protectors and they became
brittle and shattered.

There are many different brands of window film at your local hardware
store and they all involve taking the window down to work on it when
it’s horizontal. Make sure you measure carefully and buy enough
material to cover your window area, or you may find yourself in a
endless cycle of hardware store road trips trying to find your
original brand. Follow the manufacturer’s instructions carefully,
making sure to dry the window first, then add the film and press out
any air bubbles to ensure greater adhesion. Some brands will also
recommend spraying window cleaner over the film, so make sure to do
everything accurately to avoid having to do this repeatedly. I speak
from experience and have one unruly window that regularly floppe down
from the top until I resorted to using clear packing tape to secure
it.

Bookstore housekeeping is tedious, yes, but there is a certain zenlike
state one can enter to make it pass more easily. Just pretend you are
are the kind of bookstore owner that is regularly ensconced in a book,
taking sips of your favorite beverage, and you’ll find those windows
have a way of cleaning themselves.

-Rachel-
Old Saratoga Books
Dan and Rachel Jagareski, Owners
94 Broad Street
Schuylerville, NY 12871-1301 USA

Check out our bookstore blog: http://booktrout.blogspot.com

www.oldsaratogabooks.com
(518) 695-5607
[email protected]

Store hours: Wed. through Sat. 10 am to 5 pm, Sundays noon to 5 pm

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2. Contest Alert!

Just a quick post to say that Melodye Shore has a review up of The Sandbox: Dispatches From the Troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. (You may remember that I offered to donate a copy of this book to the first person who commented and was willing to review it as a YA read.) And, clever person that she is, she has a contest to go along with her review. Head over there now to read her thoughtful, concise review and to enter the give-away. (Deadline: Saturday night!)

0 Comments on Contest Alert! as of 12/14/2007 7:43:00 PM
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3. Veterans Day: Blogging the Wars

From the blog, The Sandbox:

BLOGGING THE WARS
Name: SANDBOX DUTY OFFICER David Stanford
Date: 11/12/07

Three Sandbox contributors will be featured on San Francisco public radio station KQED's nationally distributed live call-in program "Forum with Michael Krasny" today. Here's the description from the KQED website, which will offer streaming and download:

Blogging the Wars -- On Veteran's Day, Forum talks to soldiers who have returned from Iraq and Afghanistan about their service, and about how blogging has helped them express their battlefield experiences. Guests include Ernesto Estrada, policy associate with the Iraq Veteran Project of Swords to Plowshares, a community based veteran's rights organization; Troy Steward, first sergeant of the New York National Guard and a blogger at bouhammer.com; Alex Horton, specialist in the Third Stryker Brigade of the U.S. Army whose blog, "Army of Dude," can be found at www.armyofdude.blogspot.com; and Lee Kelley, captain in the Utah National Guard whose blog, "Wordsmith at War," can be found at www.wordsmithatwar.blog-city.com.
Host: with Michael Krasny (Hour Two)

0 Comments on Veterans Day: Blogging the Wars as of 11/12/2007 9:19:00 AM
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4. From The Sandbox (and a Book for Review)

What does a soldier stationed in Afghanistan write about? The most important thing in the world. From a post over at The Sandbox:

"This is what it's all about. You can see a lot of the emotions of Afghanistan on their faces. Determination, friendliness, happiness, uncertainty, and trepidation are all there on one face or another. The children of Afghanistan are the future of Afghanistan, and when these children are educated and grown and live in an Islamic democratic society that works, there will be no home in Afghanistan for extremism. That is what will make our country and all the countries of the world safer."

Go read the entire post (it's mostly pictures with commentary) and then, check out Gary Trudeau's book that is based on this blog. Yes, I'm talking about the creator of the comic strip, Doonesbury. He launched a blog for military personnel on the front lines, and this book was just released in October.

Would somebody like to review it as a YA read?
(I'll send you a copy. Post your name in the comments or email me.)


The book was featured on NPR's All Things Considered, and is "a fundraiser for Fisher House, a 'home away from home' for the families of patients receiving medical care at major military and VA medical centers."

5 Comments on From The Sandbox (and a Book for Review), last added: 11/9/2007
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