Category Archives: Scribblers Sharing Info

Support Your Local Independent Bookstore

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I’ll admit it. I swooned over the movie You’ve Got Mail, and heck yes, I was rooting for Meg Ryan’s character all the way.

Who doesn’t root for the underdog? Who doesn’t pull for the cozy bookstore against the big ol’ chain? Who doesn’t order the latest book they’ve been wanting to read from their local independent bookstore, maybe paying a smidge more because they don’t get volume discounts like the big chains, and having to drive a few miles to pick it up, rather than ordering it from A-word.com or downloading it to their K-word?

Cue the crickets.

Wait a minute. We’re writers, dammit! We’re the ones constantly ducking into the local independent bookstores to make sure they’ve got our latest release front and center (preferably cover out), or at least making sure they’ve got our writer pals’ favorite books on the Local Writers shelf, or failing that, that they’ve at least got a Local Writers shelf.

We’re the ones who think local bookstore owners should cry with joy when we suggest they stay open late or come in on their days off because we’ve had a brilliant idea for a workshop, or just know people will bust the doors down to hear us read our poems, etc., etc., etc.  We’re the ones who would be super insulted if they looked us square in the eye after an offer like that and asked quietly, “What’s in it for me?”

Cue more crickets.

So here’s a thought: Adopt the closest local bookstore to your home. Or adopt the local bookstore where the staff is always helpful. Heck, adopt more than one local bookstore, if you’re lucky enough to live in a town where more than one has survived. And when I say adopt them I mean this: buy all your books from them. Go to as many of their events as you can. Tell your friends about them, and drag your friends there every chance you get. Find out who the owners are and thank them for staying put. Ask how you can help them out.

I once helped move an entire local bookstore in Mt. Dora, Florida from one location to another a few blocks away by packing books in second-hand plastic grocery-store bags and loading them in the back of a pickup truck. At the end of the day we had an empty old bookstore, a “book mountain” in the middle of the new bookstore, and a brand-new group of book-loving friends.

Maybe, just maybe, we can save the bookstores we love, and help them thrive. One writer, one reader, one book at a time.

 

P.S. Jacksonville, we’ve got San Marco Books and More, Chamblin’s Uptown, and Bookmark at Neptune Beach.  Orlando/Winter Park, check out The Writers Block.

 

FSCJ Kicks Off 2018 FSCJ Author Series

Creating Strength

Kent Campus Library and Learning Commons launches the 2018 FSCJ Author Series with Creating Strength: Perspectives on the relationship between creativity and strength. Free and open to the public.

Dean of Arts and Sciences Dr. Jeff Hess and Professors Jennifer Chase, Tim Gilmore, Dustin Harewood, and Jeff Olma will discuss how the relationship between creativity and strength has ipacted their lives and work. Library and Learning Commons tutors will provide tips for drafting an excellent Author Series Essay Contest Entry.

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

5:30-7:30 p.m.

FSCJ Kent Campus, 3939 Roosevelt Blvd., Room E104, Jacksonville, FL 32205

A Poetry Workshop at Kerouac House with Writer-in-Residence Sean Patrick Mulroy

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MAD about Words invites Scribblers:

“With a diverse professional background in both spoken word and literary studies, Sean Patrick Mulroy is a nationally recognized performer and an award winning professor. He holds an MFA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is a 2013 Lambda Literary Fellow, a 2017 Kurt Brown Prize Winner, and 2017-2018 Writer-in-Residence at The Kerouac Project.

 The Jack Kerouac Writer-in-Residence Project of Orlando partners with MAD about Words to offer you this opportunity to learn from and write Sean Patrick Mulroy, the current writer-in-residence at Kerouac House.

Part of your workshop fee will go to support Kerouac House.

WHEN: February 10, 2018, 10AM – 1PM

WHERE: Kerouac House, 1418 Clouser Avenue, Orlando FL 32804  MAP

FEE: $35.
Part of your fee goes to support Kerouac House.

 Space is Limited. Advance Registration is Required.”
Click here for details and to register.

Writing in the Galleries

David Matteson

Associate Curator of Education at Orando Museum of Art, DavidMatteson and LifeArt Studio director Lezlie Laws team up for a new four session program starting January 13th and running monthly through April, titled Writing in the Galleries.  You’ll examine a work of art in great detail, and David will help you see what the artist intended. Then participants will receive a prompt by Lezlie from her book, Twelve Doors.

Get details and register here.