Showing posts with label Portland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Portland. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Arches Bookhouse -- BOOK THOUGHTS


BOOK THOUGHTS
Arches Bookhouse, Portland, Oregon

I'm curious if my fellow book bloggers prefer new books or used books?

Probably 90% of the books I buy are used. I only buy a new book if I can't find it used and either need it right away or have been looking for a used copy for a long time and give up looking for one.

I love everything about used books – the inviting shops, the vintage charm of the books, saving books from the landfill, the price, all of it. As much as I like to support authors and independent bookstores, used books almost always win out for me. Fortunately for me, Portland has several amazing used bookstores, from the huge Powell's City of Books to tiny, hole-in-the-wall shops you have to search for. 

One of my favorites is Arches Bookhouse in North Portland, near the University of Portland. They have a very good website for online orders, but I love going in to browse. I stopped in last week to sell Adam some books I recently culled from my office shelves. He carries all sorts of books, with an “emphasis on scholarly humanities books.” I figured he would be interested in a few of the Catholic Church books I gathered for my legal work and I was right.

If you've sold books to a used bookstore, you know you get way more in store credit than you do cash. A what book lover doesn't want more books? So, of course, I immediately used the store credit I got for the books I brought in, plus some. I can never leave that store empty handed. You can see from the picture why I would dawdle over the shelves. So many treasures!

Here are the Arches Bookhouse treasures I found:

  • The Enchanted April by Elizabeth Von Arnim in a beautiful Folio edition, without the slipcover. He had one with the slipcover, but it cost more, so I got this one. I've been meaning to read this for years and hope this fancy edition inspires me.
  • The Best of the Raconteurs, edited by Sheridan Morley & Tim Heald, also in a Folio edition, this one with the slipcover. This is a collection of humorous anecdotes and stories by Winston Churchill, Jessica Mitford, Joyce Grenfell, David Niven, P.G. Wodehouse and others.
  • Eugénie Grandet by Honoré de Balzac. I went on a short Balzac jag when I was in law school then stopped. I would like to get back to his books. Also, I love vintage Penguins. 
  • Loser Takes All by Graham Greene. I read this brilliant novella last year so was excited to find a vintage Penguin copy with the Paul Hogarth cover
  • The Imitation of Christ by Tomas a Kempis is one I have in a later edition and with a different translator. But I couldn't resist the vintage Penguin edition. I'm reading this one in February with a group on Instagram. 
  • Selected Stories by H. E. Bates. This author is unknown to me, but the description on the back sounds good, so I took a flyer. I particularly like vintage Penguin tribands, even if the cover on this is a vertical triband, not the better-known horizontal version. 







Monday, May 4, 2020

Mailbox Monday: Box of Books from Powell's

A box of books from Powell's Books was the highlight of my week last week! What new books came to your house?


Do any of these catch your fancy? There was a reason I picked each one:

A Crime in the Neighborhood by Suzanne Berne. Berne won the 1999 Women's Prize for Fiction (then called the Orange Prize) for this debut novel. I'm working my way through the winners of the Women's Prize.

Theory of War by Joan Brady. Brady won the Costa Book of the Year Award (then called the Whitbread BOTY Award) in 1993 for this novel about the American Civil War. I'm also reading the winners of this prize.

The Cat Who Went to Paris and The Cat Who'll Live Forever by Peter Gethers. These are for my mom and sister, who just finished Gethers's other book about Norton the Cat, A Cat Abroad.

Bamboo by William Boyd. I'm working my way through all of Boyd's books, including this collection of essays and criticism.

Powell's Books is Portland's – and the world's – largest independent bookstore. It is a book-lovers' Mecca, general tourist attraction, and the cultural heart of downtown Portland. Known as Powell's City of Books, Powell's downtown store is a labyrinth of new and used books.

Like most retail stores, Powell's has been closed for almost two months now because of coronavirus. Portlanders have rallied around our favorite shops and restaurants, including Powell's. I've been trying to buy as many books from as many local bookstores as I can, including Powell's. I ordered Easter books for my grandkids and ordered a batch of used books for myself. Powell's offers free shipping on orders over $25.

Lots of local bookstores are offering curbside pickup or even local delivery these days. If there is no local bookshop where you live, you can also order from Bookshop.org and it will find the nearest independent bookstore or your favorite book shop and that store will get a percentage of the proceeds from every order.


Mailbox Monday is  a weekly "show & tell" event to share the books you acquired the week before. Visit the Mailbox Monday website to find links to all the participants' posts and read more about Books that Caught Our Eye the prior week.

Leslie of Under My Apple Tree, Serena of Savvy Verse & Wit, and Martha of Reviews by Martha's Bookshelf host Mailbox Monday.




Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Teaser Tuesday: Secondhand Smoke by M. Louis



I'm up later that morning at the crack of ten. . . . I look out at the gray skies and mist as I sip my first cup of joe.

Secondhand Smoke by M. Louis. Jake Brand is a 21st Century Portland private eye and Louis makes the most of both the city and the best private eye traditions in his neo-noir thriller. There are hints of everyone's favorites, from Philip Marlowe, Lew Archer, maybe some of the guys from L.A. Confidential, and even a little Jason Bourne.



Teaser Tuesdays is hosted by MizB at Books and a Beat, where you can find the official rules for this weekly event.

Monday, November 21, 2016

Mailbox Monday: Secondhand Smoke

I got my first book from Audible last week. What books came into your house last week?



Secondhand Smoke by M. Louis. This is the second in a mystery series featuring Portland private eye Jake Brand. I just started it but it takes right off into an organized crime story right here in my home town.




Thanks for joining me for Mailbox Monday, a weekly "show & tell" blog event where participants share the books they acquired the week before. Visit the Mailbox Monday website to find links to all the participants' posts and read more about Books that Caught our Eye.

Mailbox Monday is graciously hosted by Leslie of Under My Apple Tree, Serena of Savvy Verse & Wit, and Vicki of I'd Rather Be at the Beach.



Sunday, June 30, 2013

Kitchen Remodel, Week Eighteen: Tile Bravo

Finally! The white tile got here. Now the final kitchen dominoes can fall.  This week is was install tile, grout tile, caulk bottom of tile, and wax the soapstone counter tops.  This coming week will be seal the tile, finish the wood floors, and build the toe kicks.


There are other patches of white tile above other counter tops, but this is the largest patch.

There are still plenty of little things to finish inside, and some big things outside like stucco, bricks, patio stones, and plantings.  But getting the white tile in was a big deal to me because we couldn't wax the soapstone and make it black until the tile was in, so we couldn't see what the counters were really going to look like until today.

To make up for the lack  of food literature in my recent book diet, I've been reading about cookbooks. I have my heart set on getting a copy of the Toro Bravo cookbook by Liz Crain.  It doesn't come out until October, but it is generating a lot of foodie buzz already. The more I read about it, the more I want it!



The Toro Bravo restaurant is already a Portland legend.  I can't wait to try some of Chef John Gorham's recipes at home -- while reading his terrific stories as told by Liz Crain, one of the best up and coming food writers around. All good.

WEEKEND COOKING



Thursday, June 13, 2013

Used Book Love

I can think of dozens of reasons I buy used books, including the availability of out-of-print titles, price, and the happy feeling I get from knowing a book is being "reused" instead of recycled.

What about you? Do you buy used books? Why do you? Or don't you?

For fanciers of used and rare books lucky enough to be in Portland this weekend, try to stop by the Rose City Used Book Fair, where 40+ dealers will offer a treasure trove of cool books and ephemera. 


If you need further encouragement, check out this spify "info-graphic" the folks at Thriftbooks came up with and asked me to post.  





Sunday, February 10, 2013

Birthday Celebration: Pie & Books






I celebrate my birthday. I prefer to stretch the celebration out for as many days as possible, take time off work, maybe go on a trip.

But at a bare minimum I celebrate on the day itself by doing anything I want to. Today, that means pie for breakfast. Not just any pie, but Random Order pie. Yum!

I am lucky enough to live within walking distance of Random Order, my favorite Portland coffee house and pie shop.  They make the best pie crust of any commercial establishment.  They make several variations of apple pie -- the salted caramel is my favorite -- and other fruit pies, but the cream pies are out of this world.  Love them!

And the greatest thing about eating pie at Random Order is that the also have a liquor license.  Pie is just that much better with an Irish coffee.

Then it's back to my couch to finish off the A.J. Liebling book I'm reading and make a dent in Angry Housewives Eating Bon Bons, which struck me as the perfect book to read on my birthday.




WEEKEND COOKING






Friday, March 16, 2012

Opening Sentences of the Day: Wild in the City and Portland in Three Centuries



Wildness is as much a perception as reality.
-- Wild in the City: Exploring the Intertwine: The Portland-Vancouver Region's Network of Parks, Trails, and Natural Areas by Michael C. Houck and M. J. Cody, from OSU Press.  This book is a good inspiration to get out there and do some hiking!



The Pacific Northwest was an international trouble spot in 1845.
-- Portland in Three Centuries: The Place and the People by Carl Abbott, also published by OSU Press. It looks like a concise, readable history of Portland, and I love the cool zine cover.



A Few More Pages hosts Book Beginnings every Friday.  The event is open for the entire week.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Day(s) of Fun!

My sister is here visiting from Germany, where she's been living and working for the past year and a half. She's a chef in Bavaria, at the fancy Steigenberger Hotel about an hour west of Munich. This is her first visit home since she moved.




We are going to spend the next couple of days exploring Portland, with emphasis on food.  Of course, we will make a bookish stop at Powell's, but mostly we will be inspired and guided by this:



Portland's 100 Best Places To Stuff Your Faces by Jen Stevenson, illustrated by Mette Hornung Rankin. I bought this from the author at some women wellness whatever thing. Stevenson has a wonderful blog-like website called Under the Table With Jen, all about food, food in Portland, and life in Portland. Great stuff.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Bookstore Review: Second Glance Books in Portland



Second Glance Books is a terrific used bookstore and a real gem in a city that prides itself on independent bookstores. Owner Rachelle couldn’t be friendlier and is always available to give recommendations, engage in some bookish chit chat, or just leave you alone to browse.

She has an excellent selection of books, all clean and neatly organized. I go in mostly looking for literary fiction and classics, and never go away empty handed. Rachelle keeps a good mix of popular literature – like the latest Orange Prize winner – and out-of-print, older novels that show up on the “must read” lists I’m working on.

She also keeps an eclectic and enticing collection of non-fiction books. I once found a pop-up book of dinosaurs and once, even better, a hand printed book of seasonal cocktail recipes with a hand painted cover.

Second Glance is not big enough to be a “city of books,” but it is a charming village. If you live in Portland or come for a visit, go there and shop like a local.

Second Glance Books
4500 NE Sandy Blvd.
Portland, OR 97213
sgbooks@qwestoffice.net
503.249.0344


Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Review of the Day: One City's Wilderness



One of Portland's many blessings is Forest Park, a swath of green on the city's western flank, covering over 5,100 acres and containing close to 80 miles of trails, including the Wildwood Trail, the longest contiguous trail in a city park in the United States.

In the updated and expanded third edition of One City's Wilderness, Marcy Cottrell Houle provides the quintessential guide to this incredible urban park. The book contains detailed descriptions of 29 hikes covering all the trails through the park. Each description includes a full-color map; useful statistics, including GPS coordinates; an elevation chart showing elevation gained and lost over the course of the hike; a precise description of the trail and what you will see; and useful sidebars providing tidbits on the history, flora, fauna, and geology relevant to that section of the park. There is also a foldout color map of the entire park inside the back cover.

The book is chock-o-block full of photographs of the park, including color pictures of the park's most beautiful features, field guide sections on plants and birds, and a few black and white photos depicting the park's history.

Houle also includes informative chapters on the history of the park, its geology, watersheds, vegetation, and wildlife. These later include checklists of the plants, mammals, and birds to be found in the park.

But the book is primarily about the trails because hiking through Forrest Park is how best to experience and enjoy it. As Houle explains:

Forest Park is not overrun with asphalt, swimming pools, picnic areas, or developed sports fields. Instead, since its inception sixty years ago, it has offered a quiet kind of enjoyment, the kind most cherished by lovers of the outdoors. The eighty miles of trails and firelanes . . . and the hundreds of acres of hills and canyons in between, make Forest Park a haven for hikers, bird watchers, nature photographers, runners, bicyclists, equestrians, teachers, and students – in short, anyone needing close-in inspiration and natural refreshment.

Every reader will be inspired to accept Houle's "All Trails Challenge" to undertake all of the 29 hikes described. Conveniently, the book contains a challenge section listing the hikes and including a place to record the date each one is accomplished.

One City's Wilderness is a must-have guide for every hiker living in or visiting Portland.


OTHER REVIEWS

(If you would like your review of this book listed here, please leave a comment with a link and I will add it.  Also, if you have hiked any of the trails described in this book and would like your review of that hike listed here, leave a comment with a link and I will list that post.)

NOTES

This is another high quality book from the Oregon State University Press.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Announcement: Portland Used Book Sale



The annual Grant High School Used Book Sale is this week. Donated books are for sale to raise money for the school library.


Here are the details:


Location:

Grant High School

2245 NE 36th Avenue, Room 130

Portland, Oregon


Dates and Times:

November 22nd from 8 am to 8 pm

November 23rd from 8 am to 6 pm


Prices:


$2/book from 8 am to noon on the 22nd

$1/book from noon to 8 pm on the 22nd and all day on the 23rd

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Review: Food Lover's Guide to Portland

 

Liz Crain tapped into Portland’s do-it-yourself ethic and agricultural abundance to write her Food Lover's Guide to Portland, an informative and inspiring handbook on the bustling food scene in this corner of the Pacific Northwest.

Because several print and on-line sources cover Portland’s restaurants and bars, Crain focused, for the most part, on the many producers and purveyors who supply the food and beverages so enjoyed by Rose City’s food lovers. She covers food, drinks, and general resources, providing the inside scoop on bakeries, cheese makers and mongers, chocolatiers, ethnic markets, brewers, coffee roasters, distillers, cooking classes, farmers markets, and much, much more.

While not concentrating on restaurants and bars, Crain does follow some of her favorite ingredients to the tables where they are served, providing lists of recommended “Go To Spots” for certain categories, such as cheese service, noodles, food carts, spicy food, vegetarian, brewpubs, and cocktails.

She also includes several “sidebar” pieces focusing on the people and products that make Portland unique. She introduces bartenders who infuse their own flavored spirits, chefs who butcher their own meat, pickle fanatics, miso makers, and others who she describes as having “a passion for food made the hard way.”

There is a lot packed into this small volume. If you live in Portland, are planning a visit, or just like foodie books, this is the one for you.


NOTES

My review of Liz Crain is here.

OTHER REVIEWS

(If you would like your review of this book listed here, please leave a comment with a link to your review and I will add it.)

Monday, June 21, 2010

Author Interview: Liz Crain



Liz Crain is the author of the brand new, must-have book: The Food Lover's Guide to Portland. I have been dreaming about this book ever since I heard rumor of it a few months back.  I was lucky enough to read tidbits from the electronic version, and have been trolling Liz's mouthwatering website for more appetizers.  But I cannot wait to get my hands on the real thing when it comes out next week.



See here for details on the book launch party and other upcoming events.  The book is available from amazon, Powell's Barnes & Nobel, and IndieBound, as well as several bookstores.  If you live in Portland, are planning a visit, or just like foodie books, this is the book for you.

Even amid the hullabaloo of promoting her book, Liz was gracious enough to answer several questions about her book, writing, Portland, and food:

How did you come to write the Food Lover’s Guide to Portland?

I'd been writing about food and drink in Portland for five years when I decided I wanted to write a book about Portland food culture. At the time I was interning at Hawthorne Books in Portland, where I'm now an editor, and part of my time at Hawthorne was spent sifting through submissions. That gave me a push in the right direction. I did my research on regional food books as well as publishers and decided to propose a book to Sasquatch Books in Seattle. They’d published The Food Lover's Guide to Seattle by Katy Calcott in 2001 with a second edition in 2004 so I thought they might want a similar title for Portland. I was right.

Do you have a culinary background? Or are you an amateur enthusiast?

I’m 33 years old and from the age of 16 on the majority of jobs that I've had have been in food service -- everything from cooking and catering to serving and vending. That said, I don't have serious kitchen chops, I don't own a toque, I don't have a culinary degree. I just love food -- cooking, eating, cultivating and writing about it.

You pack the book with information on hundreds of local producers, purveyors, distillers, bakers, food carts, and farmers markets -- how did you do all the research necessary? Did you eat and drink everything you wrote about?

I ate and drank a lot of what I wrote about but it wasn't too over the top. The fact that my book focuses on producers and purveyors as opposed to restaurants and bars slimmed consumption a bit. Some days I'd conduct three in-person, hour-plus long interviews and then head to my studio to sift through and transcribe them, other days I'd roll around town visiting specialty shops, food carts, ethnic markets and more with my trusty notebook, digital recorder and camera. When I did tours and interviews I was often sampling as we went along and a lot of times folks sent me home with food and drink but it never felt too overindulgent.

How would you describe the foodie culture in Portland? Has it changed in the past few years? Decades?

I can only speak about PDX food culture from 2002 on because that's when I moved here. Of course, I have a sense about what it was like before then but I'm no expert. I think there is a lot that sets Portland apart food-wise but I think that location and a strong DIY ethic are most important.

Portland is surrounded by fertile farmland and diverse growing regions and it’s situated in the Willamette Valley where everything from kiwis and cardoons to hazelnuts and wine grapes grow well. The culinary culture here is also defined by by-the-bootstraps folks and businesses. Portland is flooded with incredible food carts, farmers markets, food festivals, specialty markets and more. Food and drink made the hard way, no shortcuts, local ingredients.

What did you learn from writing your book that most surprised you?

That it's hard to type with a bandaged finger! I sliced off the tip of my right ring finger in the spring of 2009 slicing vegetables on my kitchen mandolin and it was a great excuse to further delay the writing of the book. And I definitely delayed.

I think the only thing that I'd try to do differently with a book in the future is not save so much of the writing until the end. But that's hard to train out. I do what I do because I'm curious and I love learning about food and drink culture, cultivation and craft. It's always hard for me to put the breaks on the research and start writing.

Are there any events coming up to promote the Food Lover’s Guide?

There is a lot slated. I'll tell you about a few but I'd also like to let your readers know that my website has a good list of book events and coverage. Events that I'm excited about include my book launch party at Fortune Tattoo from 6-9pm on July 1st, a book reading and food panel at the Downtown Powell's at 7:30pm on August 2nd, a similar event at In Good Taste at 2pm on July 10th, as well as the Mississippi Avenue Street Fair on the morning of the same day July 10th. I'll be tabling at the fair with Paul Gerald, author of Breakfast in Bridgetown from 10am-noon I think.


What’s next? Are you working on your next book?

I've got some ideas and a couple are collaborations that I'm excited about. I'm not sure which project or projects will take the cake but for now I'm happy freelancing, continuing my work as an editor at Hawthorne, and making a bit of time for my own creative writing. Another book will come, just not sure what yet.

Do you like to read food-related books? What are some of your favorites?

Oh yeah. In no particular order I love James Beards' Delights and Prejudices, MFK Fisher's The Gastronomical Me, Julia Child and Alex Prud'homme's My Life in France, Nigel Slater's Toast, Sandor Ellix Katz's Wild Fermentation, Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential, Judith Jones' The Tenth Muse, Michael Pollan's The Omnivore's Dilema to name a few. I also love to read cookbooks especially older ones.

Can you tell us your favorite Portland restaurants?

That's a difficult question for two reasons--there are so many and I don't like to endorse. The way around that is I'll tell you several restaurants and food carts that I've been loving lately on a regular basis but I won't say favorite: Tanuki, Andina, BeWon, Little Red Bike, Evoe, The Frying Scotsman, Gruner, Eat Oyster Bar, Pok Pok, Nicholas, Taste of Jakarta, and The Big Egg.

Do you predict any changes coming in Portland’s culinary scene? Any trends in the making? Anything you would like to see happen?

In terms of dining in the past few years we've seen an upsurge in sandwich shops, burger bars and food carts to name a few. Those all read to me as affordable, lowbrow and fast. I think we'll see more of the same type of businesses opening in Portland -- small, low overhead, minimal menu, but really good and affordable food and drink.

My two biggest wants in terms of restaurants and carts are more seafood options and more late night dining options. These both lack in Portland. I'm not sure why we don't have more seafood restaurants although spoilage is certainly a factor. Seafood is just so freaking perishable and short lived in the walk-in.

Portland's late night dining is helped and hindered by the OLCC. All bars have to have hot and cold food available so that's competition for late-night restaurants. I'd sort of love to open a Cincinnati chili parlor. That's where I'm from and I swear by it. I want more late night slice shops, gyro spots, diners, whatever. Just more.

In terms of ingredients, which is what my book is all about I think that we'll see a lot more monomaniacal shops in the years to come. At least I hope so. By that I mean hyper-focused food or drink shops such as an all-sake bottle shop, an all fermented food shop, a house-smoked foods shop. We already have a salt shop, cheese shops, spice shops, chocolate shops etc. Portland supports entrepreneurial passion with a strong buy local ethic and celebration of unique products so these businesses survive.

One last thing: I hope with all hope that we get Ron Paul's James Beard Public Market -- a year-round covered outdoor public food and drink market. That would make me very happy.

THANKS LIZ!

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Review of the Day: A Small Fortune



Celia Donnelly comes from a long line of strong women with bad luck in husbands. Unfortunately for Celia, she has to learn of these family traits while fleeing kidnappers through the jungles of Mexico, roping her ex-lover into protecting her teenage son, and unraveling a complicated financial mystery.

Although A Small Fortune is her first published book, Audrey Braun writes like a pro, with none of the plot glitches or clunky dialog that plagues many a debut novel. Her literary style flows gracefully without weighing down the action or distracting from the story.

The only off note is the opening scene, which seems a little benign for the darker escapade to follow – more Anne Taylor than Mary Higgins Clark. But by page 30 or so, Braun has caught her stride and the story hurtles forward, never stopping until the exciting, satisfying finale. The plot becomes more complicated and layered as it progresses until the book is absolutely unputdownable.

This may fall in the category of "beach book," but don't wait for sun and sand to read this page-turner!


NOTE
I got this book from the author, who is a friend and former neighbor of mine. I warned her that I wouldn't post a review if I didn't like the book, but I am pleased to not have to rely on this back-up plan. This book was completely enjoyable. It kept me up past my bedtime several nights in a row, because I didn't want to stop.

OTHER REVIEWS
(If you would like your review listed here, please leave a comment with a link and I will add it.)

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Review of the Day: City Limits




There is a line around the Portland metropolitan area called the Urban Growth Boundary – a controversial land use tool designed to control sprawl and protect Oregon’s farmland and scenic beauty. It’s one of those things that sounds like a terrific -- if somewhat utopian -- idea but that gets messy in practice.

Inner city yuppies, me included, tend to like the idea of the UGB because we can live in old, established neighborhoods with tree-lines sidewalks, but drive to a vineyard tasting room in 30 minutes. For families looking for an affordable house in the exurbs, or the grandchildren of farmers unable to subdivide just because they are on the other side of the line from a new strip mall, the UGB can seem like an arbitrary, unfettered exercise of government interference.

In City Limits: Walking Portland's Boundary, David Oates explores the UGB line – physically and metaphorically. He spent two years walking and kayaking around the entire boundary and writing essays inspired by his explorations. He also includes essays by some of the people he invited on his journeys, and dialogs with a few of his favorite dead environmentalists, such as John Muir.

Oates is definitely in the pro-UGB camp, sometimes waxing rhapsodic about the glories of centralized urban planning. But he shows a libertarian streak that chaffs at capricious and heavy-handed government action. While he bemoans -- with the drama of Chicken Little -- voters’ attempts to dismantle the current land use system, he acknowledges that a “system which seems immune to logic, above explanation, and insulated from individual citizens’ rights, complaints, and questions” will inspire revolt. If not evenly balanced, City Limits at least recognizes that there are two sides to the debate.

The book is best when Oates writes about what he sees and the people he meets while walking the boundary. He has a lyrical style that brings life to his subject, especially his musings on how people chose to live together. His poetic imagery occasionally overwhelms his ideas, and his imagined dialog with Italo Calvino is downright mystifying, but overall, reading his essays is like walking and talking with a thoughtful friend.


NOTES
Published by the Oregon State University Press.

OTHER REVIEWS
Oregon Historical Quarterly

(If you would like your review listed here, please leave a comment with a link and I will add it.)

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Teaser Tuesday: City Limits



"That's what I crave: meaningful places.  No one like a convert -- poor li'l L.A. boy, I'm a big fan, an aficionado, of this Portland thing because it offers me an alternative to the dilute life of the endless suburbs."

City Limits: Walking Portland's Boundary by David Oates (published by the Oregon State University Press).
Although this book is about Portland's "Urban Growth Boundary," it would be interesting for anyone who contemplates what makes a city "livable" and how they think about their own life in relation to their city.  I don't agree with everything Oates writes, but his book is thought-provoking.


Teaser Tuesdays is hosted by Should Be Reading, where you can find the official rules for this weekly event.




Saturday, February 27, 2010

Review: Portland Noir



Portland Noir is a collection of original short stories that is all over the map -- if the map is of the Rose City. The stories are set in different neighborhoods that collectively make up the seedy underbelly of Portland.

The anthology, edited by Kevin Sampsell, is part of the Akashic Books Noir series -- "a groundbreaking series of original noir anthologies. Each book is comprised of all-new stories, each one set in a distinct neighborhood or location within the city of the book."

The Portland stories take readers to many a gritty, greasy corner of Portland, where junkies break into the wrong houses, lesbians fantasize about strangling the men in their beds, and love gets strange. The stories come in many shades of dark, from creepy (“Baby, I’m Here”) to clever (“Shanghaied”); violent (“The Wrong House”) to sadly sweet (“Alzheimer’s Noir”).

If there is anything generally missing, it is high-end noir. The stories do not venture much past seedy motels, dive bars, and strip clubs, although there must be plenty of noir to be found in tonier venues. There are a few references to the trendy Pearl District, but a story or two involving the residents of Portland’s ritzier neighborhoods would have enhanced the collection.

And there are slim pickings for those who prefer their noir in the form of hard boiled detective stories. But the two included are a couple of the best pieces in the book because they capture Portland’s soul as well as her geography.

The first, "Coffee, Black" by Bill Cameron, is a great bit of caffeinated noir – a coffee-house mystery that perfectly captures Portland's espresso-fueled and anti-corporate culture. Camron has the hard-bitten prose down flat:
She's a touch thick, not quite shed of her winter fat, but she wears her flesh with oblivious self-assurance. I have no doubt a man with a flatter belly could pay her bar tab and bed her the same night, with no idea of the problems she'll cause over breakfast.
Philip Marlowe could not have said it better himself.

The second is “The Red Room” by Chris A. Bolton. This shakedown caper is set entirely inside Powell’s – the City of Books. There is something metafictional about an independently published story set in the world’s largest independent bookstore that seems very, very Portland.

Not every story in Portland Noir will appeal to every reader, but there is something in there for every noir fan.

NOTES

This book was the #3 fiction bestseller at Powell's when I was there yesterday.

OTHER REVIEWS

If you would like your review listed here, please leave a comment with a link and I will add it.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Teaser Tuesday: Portland Noir



"She's  a touch thick, not quite shed of her winter fat, but she wears her flesh with oblivious self-assurance.  I have no doubt a man with a flatter belly could pay her bar tab and bed her the same night, with no idea of the problems she'll cause over breakfast."

-- From "Coffee, Black" by Bill Cameron in Portland Noir, edited by Kevin Sampsell.
This collection of original short stories is all over the map -- if the map is Portland, Oregon. Each one is set in a different neighborhood in the Rose City, but all those neighborhoods are in the seedy underbelly of my city. 

I am half-way through the collection, and so far, Bill Cameron's story is my favorite. It is traditional, hard-boiled detective noir -- but caffeinated. This coffee-house mystery perfectly captures Portland's espresso-fueled culture.


Teaser Tuesdays is hosted by Should Be Reading, where you can find the official rules for this weekly event.



Saturday, February 20, 2010

Opening Sentence of the Day: Portland Noir



"I wonder how people think of Portland from the outside."

-- From the Introduction to Portland Noir, edited by Kevin Sampsell.

This is part of the Akashic Books Noir series, "a groundbreaking series of original noir anthologies. Each book is comprised of all-new stories, each one set in a distinct neighborhood or location within the city of the book."

This one has been languishing on my Guilt List for too long! I started it yesterday and am now entranced by these moody, sometimes creepy, stories set in my own city.

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