116 East Woodin Ave. PO Box 686 Chelan WA 98816 “Lake Chelan Valley’s Community Bookstore since 1994” Fall 2010 Phone: 509.682.8901 What We Do for Love Freedom The Widower’s Tale Jonathan Franzen, winner In a quirky farmhouse of the National Book outside Boston, seventy-year- Award for The Corrections, old Percy Darling enjoys a returns with Freedom ($28, vigorous but mostly solitary life FSG, 978-0-374-15846-0), – until, in a complex scheme to Visit us at the foot of Lake Chelan, a 55 mile long a story of contemporary help his oldest daughter through glacier-fed lake, surrounded love and marriage. Patty and a crisis, he allows a progressive by the Cascade Mountains Walter Berglund were the new preschool to move into his barn. and the Columbia River. pioneers of old St. Paul – the The abrupt transformation of Two hour parking is avant-garde of the Whole Foods Percy’s rural refuge into a lively, available on city streets or, generation, doing their small youthful community compels him park in one of the three parking lots in town. part to build a better world. But the Berglunds have now to reexamine the choices he’s made since his wife’s death, become a mystery. Why has Patty, the ideal sort of neighbor, three decades ago, in a senseless accident that haunts him Store Hours come unhinged with an implacable fury before the street’s still. No longer can he remain aloof from his neighbors, Monday-Saturday 10 to 6 attentive eyes? Freedom captures all the temptations and his two grown daughters, or, to his shock, the precarious burdens of liberty: the thrills of teenage lust, the shaken joy of falling in love. With equal parts affection and satire, CloSed SundayS compromises of middle age, the wages of suburban sprawl, best-selling author Julia Glass spins The Widower’s Tale the heavy weight of empire. Franzen charts the mistakes and ($25.95, Pantheon, 978-0-307-37792-0), a powerful story joys of his characters as they struggle to learn how to live in about the multigenerational loyalties, rivalries, and secrets an ever more confusing world. of a family, inhabitants of a complacently prosperous world where no one is immune to unexpected change. Join us in Open Book The Gendarme Espresso for a cup of the To those around him, Emmett Conn is simply a confused “Elaborately plotted and luxuriously paced, Glass’s world’s smoothest coffee. man, fading in and out of senility at 92 years of age. But inquisitive, compassionate, funny, and suspenseful saga addresses significant and thorny social issues with emotional Your Community what they don’t know is that he has been beset by memories of events he and others have denied or purposely forgotten. veracity, artistic nuance, and a profound perception of the Bookstore Ahmet Khan was a Turkish gendarme during the Armenian grand interconnectivity of life.” – Booklist • Books, Toys, genocide, who became enamored of Games & more Araxie, a young woman among them. • Wireless Internet Wounded in World War I and mistaken • Gift Cards for an English soldier, he meets and • Free Gift Wrapping marries an American nurse in London. Now, in his violent dreams, he concludes that he must set out on a final journey, to Shop Online 24/7 Northwest Notables ...... 2 Understanding Our World ...... 9 RiverwalkBooks.com find Araxie – the love of his life – and beg her forgiveness. The Gendarme ($25.95, Noteworthy New Novels ...... 3-4 Comforts of Home ...... 10 Penguin, 978-0-399-15634-2), Mark Enriching Our Live ...... 5 Fun Toys at Riverwalk ...... 11 Mustian’s remarkable debut novel that Read Globally. speaks to the human capacity for survival Kids: Let’s Read ...... 6-7 Book Group Schedule .... back page Shop locally. and redemption, is about the power Our Past & Future ...... 8 of memory – and the ability of people, individually and collectively, to forget. doing our part to keep america interesting New from Dear Booklover, Stories Fall of Giants It’s hard to imagine that we’re already nearing the end of 2010 and soon will be we value the networks of independent booksellers and publishing colleagues (who After a series of spy thrillers and the mega-hit The Pillars celebrating another holiday season. We all wonder where the time goes, why it flies also happen to be voracious readers) to share what new writers, ideas, and creative of the Earth, Ken Follett again turns to historical fi ction, by so quickly, and how we might be able to hop off the merry-go-round of life, even works are being discovered. We value getting the inside scoop, staying on top of the brilliantly researched and rendered. Fall of Giants ($36, Favorite Authors Dutton, 978-0-525-95165-0), volume one of The Century just for a little while — to catch our breath and gain some perspective. buzz, and recognizing the wonderful works among the many advance review copies we receive to decide what new books we’ll stock and recommend to you. Ape House Trilogy, follows the fates of fi ve interrelated families – At Riverwalk Books, we often look at the world of information and take a Just as she did in Water for Elephants, Sara Gruen opens American, German, Russian, English, and Welsh – as fresh look at the evolving role of books. The immediacy of information through There is an abundance of riches this season. Browse through the pages of this the animal world to us in ways few novels have done with they move through the world-shaking dramas of the First electronic media makes everything from anyone available in a flash. But what can newsletter and you’ll see just the beginning of what will be a tremendous season her latest book, Ape House ($26, Spiegel & Grau, 978- World War, the Russian Revolution, and the struggle for we believe to be true? In today’s world, information abounds and it’s easy to feel for reading and gift-giving — even for reluctant readers. Begin thinking of some 0-385-52321-9). Isabel Duncan is a scientist who works women’s suffrage. Follett at his fi nest! overwhelmed by it all. What is worthy of our time and attention? thoughtful gifts you can share in the coming months — gifts that others will enjoy with bonobo apes that are capable of reason, carrying on opening again and again. From a gift for the new baby that has arrived this year to What we’re learning (sometimes painfully) is that sources still matter. Integrity deep relationships, and communicating in American Sign a literary sensation, a new cookbook by a favorite chef to a monumental historical or lack thereof can help — or hinder — our understanding of events. Gathering Language. When an explosion rocks the lab to “liberate” work, we can’t help but believe that giving others a good book is like giving them e Elephant’s Journey facts, researching primary sources, and using critical thought in judging information the apes, reporter John Thigpen risks his career – and In 1551, King Joao III of Portugal gave Archduke the gift of time. takes more time than scanning and reacting to Twitter posts. Writing is abundant marriage – for the story of a lifetime. Maximilian an unusual wedding present: an elephant online, but how much of it is wonderfully creative and well-written? And where Enjoy the harvest, the season of gratitude. Remember to take time, gain a named Solomon. The elephant’s journey from Lisbon to would you look? Who has the time to sift through it all — and still find time to get refreshed perspective, and count our many blessings. We thank you for allowing us Vienna was witnessed and remarked upon by scholars, e False Friend historians, and ordinary people – and serves as the outside for a quiet walk or read a funny story with a child? to be your community bookstore and hope to see you soon. Celia and Djuna, two eleven-year-old girls who are best foundation for this witty tale of friendship and adventure friends and fi erce rivals, walk home along a forbidden For many of us, more is not necessarily better; more can be exhausting and by Jose Saramago. The Elephant’s Journey ($24, HMH, road. Djuna disappears, and for the next twenty years, frustrating, reminding us how much we aren’t keeping up. In the book business, 978-0-547-35258-9) has already been heralded by El Pais Celia blocks out what happened. When Celia returns as “a triumph of language, imagination, and humor.” to her hometown to confess the truth, her family and childhood friends don’t believe her. The False Friend ($25.95, Doubleday, 978-0-385-52721-7), by Myla Nemesis Goldberg, author of the beloved Bee Season, is an What kind of accidental choices shape a life? How does northwest notables-now in paperback emotionally charged drama that explores the adults that one withstand the onslaught of circumstance? These are children become. Avail. 10/5 questions that Philip Roth asks us to ponder in his latest Border Songs The Big Burn work, Nemesis ($26, HMH, 978-0-547-31835-6). Set in From Jim Lynch, the acclaimed author of The Highest In The Worst Hard Time, Timothy Egan puts the Juliet, Naked the stifl ing heat of a Newark summer in 1944, the story Tide, comes a story that is at once comic, tender, and environmental disaster of the Dust Bowl at the center of Music and messy relationships are at the heart of Nick New in centers around 23-year-old playground director Bucky momentous. An extremely tall dyslexic is pushed away a rich history. Now he performs the same alchemy with Paperback! Hornby’s new novel, Juliet, Naked ($15, Riverhead, 978- Cantor and his private war against the polio epidemic from his family’s Washington dairy farm to join the Border The Big Burn: Teddy Roosevelt and the Fire That 1-594-48477-3), that looks at how lives can be wasted Patrol, where he indulges his obsessions with birds and that has swept the community. Roth manages to exceed Saved America ($15.95, Mariner, 978-0-5473-9460-2), but how they are never beyond redemption. Hornby art while occasionally catching smugglers and illegal his previous three short novels in both emotion and NON- detailing the largest-ever forest fire in the United States. FICTION explores why it is we so often let the early promise of intellect. Avail. 10/5 immigrants on the British Columbian border. Border FICTION Songs ($15, Vintage, 978-0-307-45626-7) is an inventive relationships evaporate, and comes to some surprisingly love story and portrait of a distinctive community. The Collector optimistic conclusions about the struggle to live up to By Nightfall David Douglas was the premier botanical explorer in one’s promise. Evil At Heart Pulitzer Prize novelist Michael Cunningham follows The the Pacific Northwest and throughout other areas of Hours with his latest, By Nightfall ($25, FSG, 978-0-374- Detective Archie Sheridan and serial killer western North America in the 19th century. Douglas’ 29908-8). We’re introduced to Peter and Rebecca Harris, Gretchen Lowell return in a follow-up to Chelsea Cain’s discoveries include hundreds of western plants, most bestsellers and with Evil at Heartsick Sweetheart notably the iconic Douglas Fir. In The Collector a Manhattan couple in their mid-forties with committed Heart ($14.99, Minotaur, 978-0-312-94678-4). ($16.95, Sasquatch Books, 978-1-5706-1667-9), Jack e Weekend careers in the arts. When Rebecca’s wayward brother, Gretchen is still on the loose and Archie is still Old friends and lovers reunite for a weekend in a Mizzy (“the mistake”), shows up for a visit, Peter fi nds hospitalized after his ploy to catch her goes Nisbet tracks Douglas’ fascinating history, from his secluded country home after spending decades apart. himself questioning the entire world he has so carefully spectacularly wrong. humble birth in Scotland in 1799 to his botanical training under the famed William Jackson Hooker, and details They excavate old memories and pass clandestine constructed. Cunningham leaves us thinking about the judgments on the wildly divergent paths they’ve taken The Financial Lives of Poets his adventures in North America discovering “exotic” uses and meaning of beauty and the place of love in our From National Book Award-finalist Jess Walter comes a new plants for the English and European market. In since their youth. Author Bernhard Schlink, best known lives. hysterically funny — and painfully timely — novel of one telling Douglas’ story, Nisbet evokes a lost world of early for The Reader, now brings us The Weekend ($24.95, man’s attempt to save his family from economic disaster exploration, pristine nature, ambition, and cultural and Pantheon, 978-0-307-37815-6), where passions are pitted by putting his entrepreneurial leanings toward a life of class conflict with surprisingly modern resonances. against pragmatism, ideas against actions, and hopes petty crime. The Financial Lives of Poets ($14.99, against heartbreaking realities. Avail. 10/12 HarperPerennial, 978-0-0619-1605) shows how we can reach the edge of ruin — and make our way back. 3 & Timeless e Mullah’s Storm Enriching Sweet Dreams A transport plane carrying an important Taliban Our We love the “go-to” gift books in the store and Sweet detainee for interrogation is shot down in a blizzard Dreams: Expressions of Hope for Our Children ($18.95, over Afghanistan. Navigator Michael Parson and a Sellers, 978-1-416-20594-4) is a perfect gift for anyone Timely Tales woman Army interpreter, Sergeant Gold, only have each Lives welcoming a new baby into their life. You’ll fi nd page Juliet other to stay alive against the hazards of nature and the Is It Just Me? after page of incredibly lovely portraits by the famous Julie Jacobs inherits a key to a safety-deposit box in treacheries of man. The Mullah’s Storm ($25.95, Putnam, Whoopi Goldberg has always been her own woman. newborn photographers Tracy Raver and Kelley Siena, Italy, the contents of which recall her ancestor, 978-0-399-15692-2), by Thomas Young, has a relentless Total honesty, administered civilly and with a healthy Ryden along with delightful quotes that express the Giulietta, and her ill-fated love for Romeo. When the pace and constant surprises. dose of audacity, is her hallmark and her way of life. In tender hopes and dreams that each birth inspires. past catches up with the present, as Julie crosses paths Is It Just Me? Or Is It Nuts Out There? ($22.99, Hyperion, with the descendants of the families involved in the 978-1-401-32384-4), Whoopi shares her stories of getting ancient feud, she fi nds her own fate irrevocably tied to through tough situations in family, marriage, friendship, e Gi of an Ordinary Day the star-crossed lovers. Anne Fortier’s novel Juliet ($25, e Network and business – with the humor, irreverence, and joy for Poised on the threshold between family life as she’s Ballantine, 978-0-345-51610-7) is one of intrigue and Also set in Afghanistan, Jason Elliot’s The Network ($24, which she’s known. Avail. 10/5 always known it and her older son’s departure for identity, of love and legacy. Bloomsbury, 978-1-608-19035-5) is a thriller about the college, Katrina Kenison is surprised to fi nd that the stealthy effort to destroy a cache of CIA missles before times she treasures most are the ordinary, unremarkable they can fall into the hands of Al-Qaeda. Based on Dog Walks Man John Zeaman indulged his children’s wish for a dog moments of everyday life. All about transitions – A Gate at the Stairs real characters and drawing on the author’s extensive when they moved to the New Jersey Meadowlands and careers, family, and fi nding a sense of place – The Gift In Lorrie Moore’s fi rst novel in more than a decade, fi rsthand knowledge of Afghanistan, Elliot provides surprisingly discovered that something as simple as of an Ordinary Day ($13.99, Grand Central, 978-0-446- A Gate at the Stairs ($15, Vintage, 978-0-375-70846- insight into infl uences surrounding 9/11 and raises walking the dog can open up unexpected worlds. With 40949-0) is a beautiful story of mid-life longings and 6), Tassie Keltjin becomes a part-time nanny between questions about the role of intelligence agencies in semesters at college. As she is drawn deeper into the thoughtfulness and humor, Zeaman muses about familiar discoveries, about holding on and letting go. New in historical events deliberately hidden from the public eye. Paperback! family, her life back home becomes more alien. Moore dog-walking issues (like spelling “w-a-l-k” if your dog is wisely speaks to the anxiety and disconnection of post- within earshot) in Dog Walks Man ($22.95, Lyons Press, 9/11 America, the insidiousness of racism, the blind- 978-1-599-21963-9) in this wonderful narrative that is Memories Before and A er e Violin of Auschwitz really about our search for wholeness in an increasingly sidedness of war, and the recklessness thrust on others in In the winter of 1991, at a concert in Krakow, an older the Sound of Music artifi cial world. Avail. 10/5 the name of love. woman with a marvelously pitched violin meets a fellow What really happened to the talented von Trapp family musician who is instantly captivated by her instrument. and how might the unfolding of their lives differ from Walking Wisdom the infamous movie? From Agathe von Trapp, the eldest When he asks her how she obtained it, she reveals Ask Gotham Chopra the same question he’s asked every daughter in The Trapp Family Singers, we learn her Some Sing, Some Cry the remarkable story behind its origin. The Violin of day: “Considering that Deepak is your father, have you father indeed married the 22-year-old governess from Award-winning writer Ntozake Shange and real-life Auschwitz ($20, Bantam, 978-0-553-80778-3), by Maria mastered the Seven Spiritual Laws of Success?” Given the abbey, and more family stories about their escape sister, award-winning playwright Ifa Bayeza, give us a Angels Anglada, is a testament to the strength of the his lineage, Gotham’s childhood was part spiritual, part from the Nazis in Austria and subsequent life in America monumental story of the Mayfi eld family as we follow human spirit and the power of beauty, art, and hope to scientifi c, and totally unique. With honesty, elegance, in Memories Before and After the Sound of Music ($13.99, them from emancipation from slavery, through both triumph over the darkest adversity. and authenticity, they both guide us through some of Harper, 978-0-061-99881-2). World Wars, to the Harlem Renaissance and the modern the most powerful spiritual qualities embedded not day. Some Sing, Some Cry ($26.99, St. Martin’s Press, only in the planet’s oldest wisdom but also in the souls 978-0-312-19899-2) is a moving and arresting account How to Read the Air of man’s best friends, dogs – in Walking Wisdom: Three Growing Up Laughing of America, of songs and why we have to sing them, of Yosef and Mariam, young Ethiopian immigrants who Generations, Two Dogs, and the Search for a Happy Life home and of heartbreak. Marlo Thomas, star of “That Girl” and member of have spent all but their fi rst year of marriage apart, set ($24.99, Hyperion, 978-1-401-31034-9). Avail. 10/5 the Broadcasting Hall of Fame, shares her funny and off on a road trip from their new American home in heartwarming stories in Growing Up Laughing: My Story Peoria to Nashville in search of a new American identity. Hard Times Require Furious Dancing and the Story of Funny ($26.99, Hyperion, 978-1-401- Exley Soon, their son, Jonas, will be born. Thirty years later, 32391-2). Woven throughout her book are interviews Life has become a struggle for nine-year-old Miller Alice Walker is beloved for her ability to speak her own Yosef has died, and Jonas leaves behind his marriage and with America’s most beloved comedians about the role after his father’s disappearance. He searches for the one truth in ways that speak for and about countless others. job in New York to retrace his parents’ trip and weave Here she confronts personal and collective challenges of humor in their lives. A wonderful, welcome gift that person he believes can help him, the famously reclusive How to Read the Air together a family history in ($25.95, in words that dance, sing, and heal. In Hard Times offers hours of escape into the lighter side of life. – and, unfortunately, dead – Frederick Exley, author of Riverhead, 978-1-594-48770-5), a haunting depiction of his father’s favorite book. Author Brock Clarke’s Exley Require Furious Dancing: New Poems ($18, New World the immigrant experience and a powerful story of love Library, 978-1-577-31930-6) she writes, “Though we ($24.95, Algonquin, 9781565126084) is an exploration and family by Dinaw Mengestu. of the difference between what we believe to be real have encountered our share of grief and troubles on and what is in fact real, and how challenging it can be to this earth, we can still hold the line of beauty, form, and reconcile the two. beat.”

4 5 Let’s Read Together! Books, the Great Escape Ollie’s Halloween Bink and Gollie The Search for WondLa Reckless This Halloween, goslings are on the prowl! Gossie Newbery Medalist Kate DiCamillo and award- When a marauder destroys the underground sanctuary For years, Jacob Reckless has been escaping to is a wizard and Gertie is a chicken. Peedie is a winning author Alison McGhee, along with that Eva Nine was raised in by the robot Muthr, the another world – a world behind the mirror, where dragon and BooBoo is a bunny. And Ollie is a acclaimed illustrator Tony Fucile, introduce an twelve-year-year-old girl is forced to fl ee above-ground. witches haunt the forests and fairies and dwarfs roam mummy who thinks sharing is more fun than outrageously funny pair of friends in Bink and Gollie Eva Nine is searching for anyone else like her, for she about, a world for treasure hunts and magnifi cent scaring. Join the goslings as they hoot, howl and ($15.99, Candlewick, 978-0-763-63266-3). Two knows that other humans exist, because of a scrap of quests, but also a world locked in a deadly war. haunt the night away in Ollie’s Halloween ($12.99, precocious little girls – one tiny, one tall, and both cardboard on which is depicted a young girl, an adult, Jacob’s secret seems safe, until one day his younger Houghton Miffl in Harcourt, 978-0-618-53241-4), utterly irrepressible – set out from their super- and a robot, with the strange word, “WondLa.” Tony brother Will follows him, to disastrous consequence. a fun story to celebrate a fun holiday by author, deluxe tree house and share in a series of comical DiTerlizzi’s space age adventure The Search for WondLa Master storyteller Cornelia Funke returns with painter, and sculptor Olivier Dunrea. Ages 3-7 pursuits. We think that you, too, will just love this ($17.99, S&S, 978-1-416-98310-1) is as complex as an Reckless ($19.99, Little Brown, 978-0-316-05609-0), a ode to exuberance and camaraderie, imagination alien planet, but as simple as a child’s wish for a place thrilling adventure and a tale of heroism, fi lled with It’s a Book and adventure. Ages 6-8 to belong. Ages 6-10 danger, mystery, and above all, magic. Ages 10-13 In his signature, irreverent style, Caldecott Award- winning Lane Smith (The Stinky Cheese Man and Captain Sky Blue This Isn’t What It Looks Like Personal Demons Other Fairly Stupid Tales) weighs in on the ongoing Jack’s best toy pal is Captain Sky Blue, a pilot The Secret Series continues in this dangerous Frannie Cavanaugh is a good girl with a bit of a debate over digital media versus print in It’s a who speaks in Pilot Talk (“Roger! Wilco!”). and daring fourth adventure. Cass is alone and wicked streak. When Luc Cain enrolls in her class, Book ($12.99, Roaring Brook, 978-1-596-43606- After a thunderstorm separates Sky and his disoriented, a stranger in a dream-like, medieval no one knows where he came from, but Frannie can’t 0). A donkey with a laptop proclaims the book buddy, Sky is abducted by a whale, then left alone world. Where is she? Who is she? With the help of stay away from him. What she doesn’t know is that has “too many words” and wants to know how to to wander the ocean fl oor until he chances upon a long-lost relative, she begins to uncover clues and Luc has been sent from Hell to claim Frannie’s soul scroll down. A monkey with a printed book offers a very special place, a place where he’s been secrets – piecing together her family’s history as she – all he needs to do is get her to sin, and Luc is as answers and builds his case. Readers of all ages will before. Before fi nding an easy way home, he must fi ghts her way back to the present world. Meanwhile, tempting as they come. The angel Gabriel shows up love the fun drawings and humor. Ages 5+ face a desperate situation – a challenge that puts back home, Cass is at the hospital in a deep coma. to add yet another force in Personal Demons ($9.99, his pilot skills to the test in Richard Egielski’s Max-Ernest knows she ate Time Travel Chocolate – Tor, 978-0-765-32808-3), an engrossing work of A Bedtime for Bear Captain Sky Blue ($17.95, Michael Di Capua and he’s determined to fi nd a cure in This Isn’t What It fantasy by Lisa DesRochers. Ages 14+ When the impish Mouse comes to spend the Books, 978-0-545-21342-4). Ages 3-7 Looks Like ($16.99, Little Brown, 978-0-316-07625-8) night, Bear is in for a rude – and very funny by Pseudonymous Bosch. Ages 8-12 I Am Number Four – awakening. Bear must have absolute quiet The Case of the Lost Boy John Smith appears to be a typical American high when he goes to bed and likes to have things In another adventure in the Buddy Files, King is a dog Touch Blue school student, but he’s really an alien from the just right before drifting off to a peaceful sleep. and also a detective. And he has a very big mystery to Tess Brooks will lose her island schoolhouse because planet Lorien, one of the last survivors of a race Bu the effervescent Mouse fi nds it terribly solve. His family is missing and he’s been put in the there aren’t enough children to fi ll the school. The that was almost wiped out by its enemies. The evil hard to be quiet. With slapstick humor and P-O-U-N-D. When King is adopted by Connor and islanders have another plan: increase the number of Mogadorians have now arrived on earth to look comic visual details, the curmudgeonly Bear his mom, they call him Buddy! Connor disappears students by several families taking in foster children. for survivors – and to wipe out the planet as well. and his irrepressible friend Mouse return in A Bedtime for Bear ($16.99, and the detective work begins for Buddy (aka King) So now Tess and her family are taking a chance on Pittacus Lore’s fast-paced adventure I Am Number Candlewick, 978-0-763-64101-6) by Bonny Becker. You’ll laugh together in The Buddy Files: The Case of the Lost Boy ($4.99, Aaron, a thirteen-year-old trumpet player who has Four ($17.99, HarperCollins, 978-0-06196955-3) is the when you recognize some of the behaviors in one another! Ages 5+ Albert Whitman, 978-0-807-50932-6), an adorable been bounced from home to home. Newbery Honor fi rst in the Lorien Legacies series and is planned for a series by Dori Hillestad Butler, illustrated by author Cynthia Lord offers a thoughtful look at what 2011 movie release. Brontorina Jeremy Tugeau. Ages 6-8 it means to belong in Touch Blue ($16.99, Scholastic, From the sure-footed duo of James Howe and 978-0-545-03531-6), a story sure to touch your heart. Zombies vs. Unicorns Randy Cecil comes a hugely endearing new The Carnival of the Animals Age 9-12 A host of favorite teen authors answer the question character Brontorina who has a dream to dance, America’s fi rst Children’s Poet Laureate that is as old as time itself: which is better, the zombie but is too large to fi t in Madame Lucille’s Jack Prelutsky has written all-new verses to Revolution or the unicorn? Zombies vs. Unicorns ($16.99, Margaret dance studio. She doesn’t have the right shoes accompany the composer Camille Saint-Saens’s Two girls, two centuries apart, one never knowing the K. McElderry, 978-1-416-98953-0) edited by Holly either. Meet the lovable dinosaur whose size “The Carnival of the Animals.” Together with other. But when Andi fi nds Alexandrine’s diary, she Black and Justine Larbalestier (unicorn and zombie, is outmatched only by her determination, and Mary GrandPre, illustrator of the Harry Potter recognizes something in her words and is moved to respectively), presents strong arguments for both sides whose talent is outmatched only by her charm books, the duo has turned rollicking rhymes the point of obsession. Award-winning author Jennifer in this collection of short stories. Half of the stories in Brontorina ($15.99, Candlewick, 978-0-763- into a picture-book fun fest. Complete with a CD of the Donnelly artfully weaves the two girls’ stories into one portray the strengths – for good and evil – of unicorns 64437-6), a humorous and heartwarming tale music and Prelutsky reading the verses, The Carnival of the Animals ($19.99, unforgettable account of life, loss, and enduring love and half show the good (and really, really bad) side of about holding on to your dreams. Knopf, 978-0-375-86458-2) is a wonderful way to introduce children to in Revolution ($18.99, Delacorte, 978-0-385-73763-0), zombies. Read, decide, and then debate the question classical music. Consider donating a copy to your child’s school. Ages 6-12 spanning centuries and vividly depicting the eternal with others. Ages 14+ struggles of the human heart. Ages 14+. Avail. 10/12 6 7 Conversations with Myself Understanding Nelson Mandela is widely considered to be one of Our Past Boiling Mad and Kate Zernike offers an eye-opening look at the Tea the most inspiring and iconic fi gures of our age. Party, introducing us to a cast of unlikely activists and Our Now, after a lifetime of taking pen to paper to record a look into the future of American politics in Boiling thoughts and events, hardships and victories, he has Mad: Inside Tea Party America World Future ($25, Times, 978-0-805- bestowed his entire extant personal papers, which offer First Family 09348-3). Whether you agree or not with its philosophy, Eyewitness to History an unprecedented insight into his remarkable life in Joseph Ellis, the Pulitzer Prize-winning, best-selling the Tea Party movement has energized a lot of voters, Simply browse through the pages and history comes Conversations with Myself ($28, FSG, 978-0-374-12895- author, brings one of America’s preeminent fi rst couples but has polarized the electorate as well. Their reading alive in Eyewitness to History: From Ancient Times to 1). Mandela tells us about his fi rst stirrings of political to life in a moving and illuminating narrative that sweeps of the Constitution, government bail-outs, the election the Modern Era ($35, National Geographic, 978-1-426- consciousness, his thoughts while on the run during through the American Revolution and the republic’s of the fi rst black president, and their deeply pessimistic 20652-8). The voices of the great and humble speak to the anti-apartheid struggle and later when he spent tenuous early years. John and Abigail Adams left an thoughts about the future of our country is playing a us through songs, documents, edicts, poetry, letters, twenty-seven years incarcerated, plus private conversations, speeches and indelible and remarkably preserved portrait of their greater and greater role in our public debate. menus, and even graffi ti, revealing each era’s confl icts, correspondence as a world leader – now in his own words, with a lifetime of lives together in their personal correspondence of more daily life, arts, science, religion, and enduring infl uence perspective. Foreward by Barack Obama. Avail. 10/11 than twelve hundred letters. In First Family ($27.95, e Backlash in this absorbing new work by Patricia Daniels. Knopf, 978-0-307-26962-1) Ellis gives us an account both Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Will Bunch goes behind Avail. 10/19 e Long Walk intimate and panoramic; part biography, part political the scenes of America’s new extreme right-wing minority In 1941, Slavomir Rawicz and six fellow prisoners of war history, and part love story. Avail. 10/26 to explore the use of collective fear of the future to fuel Churchill De ant escaped a Soviet labor camp in Yakutsk – a camp where a campaign of misinformation in The Backlash: Right- New York Times bestselling author Barbara Leaming enduring hunger, cold, untended wounds and untreated Madison and Je erson Wing Radicals, High-Def Hucksters, and Paranoid Politics examines Winston Churchill’s masterful postwar illnesses, and avoiding daily executions were everyday Andrew Burstein and Nancy Isenberg offer us a in the Age of Obama ($25.99, Harper, 978-0-061-99171-4). comeback in Churchill Defi ant: Fighting On: 1945-1955 feats. Their march – over thousands of miles by foot – dual biography profi ling the most important political Bunch cites the radical ideologies and paranoid politics ($26.99, Harper, 978-0-061-33758-1). As World War II out of Siberia, through China, the Gobi Desert, Tibet, friendship in American History with Madison and that pose a real threat to our democratic system. ended, Churchill was voted from power just as he was and over the Himalayas to British India is a remarkable Jefferson ($35, Random House, 978-1-400-06728-2). implementing the Allied peace terms and warning of the statement about man’s desire to be free. Written in a We have a new understanding of two very different e Empire of Illusion Soviet expansion into Eastern Europe. Leaming details hauntingly detailed, no-holds-barred way, The Long Walk New York Times bestselling author and Pulitzer Prize- presidencies: Jefferson’s driven by force of personality, New in the politician’s human side – providing new information ($14.95, Lyons Press, 978-1-599-21975-2) inspired the Madison’s sustained by a militancy that history has winning journalist Chris Hedges confronts American Paperback! about his visit to Berlin, including Hitler’s bunker – when Peter Weir fi lm “The Way Back,” due for release later been reluctant to ascribe to him. Rich with colorful obsession with celebrity and the epidemic of illiteracy Churchill was in his 70s, having suffered several strokes, this year. New movie edition avail. 11/9 personalities, nasty truths, and high-stakes competition, that threatens our cultural integrity in The Empire of forging ahead believing there was still work to be done. Madison and Jefferson exposes the beating heart of a Illusion ($14.95, Nation, 978-1-568-58613-7). From Travels in Siberia rowdy republic in its fi rst fi fty years. the spectacle of professional wrestling to porn and Finders Keepers Bestselling author Ian Frazier takes us to the vast casino capitalism, Hedges exposes the mechanisms that Beyond what most people think about archaeology – expanse of Asiatic Russia, a storied, often grim region in e Monuments Men have impoverished our working class, allowed for the with its cleanly numbered dates and discoveries – lies a Travels in Siberia ($28, FSG, 978-0-374-27872-4) where At the same time Adolf Hitler was attempting to take over continuance of destructive public policy, and ushered in vibrant and controversial realm of scientists, thieves, and we meet half-crazed Orthodox archpriests, ambassadors the western world, his armies were methodically seeking cultural bankruptcy in this startling look at the infl uence contested land claims. Craig Childs explores the fi eld’s of the czar bound for Peking, tea caravans, German and hoarding the fi nest art treasures in Europe. In a race of our distractions. Avail. 10/26 transgressions against the cultures it tries to preserve scientists, intrepid English nurses, American prospectors, against time, behind enemy lines, often unarmed, a special and pauses to ask: “To whom does the past belong?” in and prisoners and exiles of every kind. Unforgettable force of American and British museum directors, curators, Finders Keepers ($24.99, Little Brown, 978-0-316-06642- in detail, Frazier delivers a historical travelogue with art historians, and others, called the Monuments Men, Woodward on Obama 6), a book about man and nature, remnants and memory, personal refl ection on the amazing scope of Russia. risked their lives scouring Europe to save the world’s great Bob Woodward, bestselling author a dashing tale of crime and detection. Avail. 10/12 art from the Nazis. Robert Edsel shares this fascinating bit and distinguished reporter and of history in The Monuments Men ($16.99, Center Street, editor at since Earth: e Book 978-1-599-95150-8). 1971, turns his attention to the Jon Stewart and his writers on The Daily Show take Obama administration in his new readers on a voyage through time – a quest back to the -Frien book, scheduled to be released on very moment of creation – that will maybe, just maybe, th dl help us fi gure out exactly how and why everything got ar y 9/27 ($30, S&S, 978-1-439-17249- E This newsletter 0). Fouad Ajami of The Wall Street READ GLOBALLY so irretrievably messed up. As a result of their quest is printed on Journal claimed “Bob Woodward to sum up the human race before the world ends is the latest to remind us that it is – what we looked like; what we accomplished; our recycled paper presidents, not their understudies, SHOP LOCALLY achievements in society, government, religion, science with soy ink. who shape the destiny of nations.” and culture – they bring us Earth: The Book ($27.95, Grand Central, 978-0-446-57922-3), completely unburdened by objectivity, Reading journalistic integrity, or even accuracy.

8 9 Comforts At Home creatiVe play at riVerwalk books Bill Bryson has one of the liveliest, most inquisitive of minds on the planet, and he is a master at turning the seemingly isolated or mundane fact into an occasion for come meet Zoobies pets! Home the most diverting exposition imaginable. In At Home: need a birthday present? A Short History of Private Life ($28.95, Doubleday, 978- Like the Very Hungry Caterpillar! Tyler Florence Family Meals 0-767-91938-8) Bryson shows us that whatever happens Tyler Florence is famous for championing simplicity, in the world ends up in our house – in the paint and freshness, and culinary honesty in cooking. In Tyler the pipes and the pillows and every item of furniture. Florence Family Meals ($35, Rodale, 978-1-605-29338-7), With wit and sheer prose, he takes us on a fascinating Tyler recounts the journey that brought him from the excursion into the history behind the place we call home. home cooking he grew up loving to the “haute-homey” Avail. 10/5 restaurant cuisine that fi rst won him culinary acclaim and now back to his roots as he prepares to open a restaurant while raising a family of young children. Real Simple 869 New Uses for Old ings This all-new collection shows that when it comes to fi ne Real Simple magazine is loved by millions for making dining, there is no place like home. Avail. 10/12 life easier by showcasing good-to-know information You’ll find quality puzzles, arts and crafts, with inspiring ideas. Now, you can turn to Real Jamie’s America Simple 869 New Uses for Old Things ($27.95, Real and classic toys from Jamie Oliver grew up in his parents’ country pub Simple, 978-1-603-20140-7) to fi nd fun, creative Melissa & Doug in our special selection. in England, where he started cooking at the age of ideas for repurposing items long banished to eight. He now is known as the Naked Chef and has a closets, basements, and garages. A great resource foundation that provides training and mentoring for to consult before holding the next garage sale … or disadvantaged young people. Turning to food he’s for inspiration on things to look for when you’re out enjoyed in the U.S., Oliver has created Jamie’s America: browsing! Avail. 10/12 Easy Twists on Great American Classics, and More ($37.50, Hyperion, 978-1-401-32360-8), fi lled with a new perspective on down-home, rustic food. Avail. 10/5 Cra Hope If you love creating things, how about using your 5 Ingredient Fix skills to help others in need? It all started with If your goal is to simplify, streamline, and live within a pillowcase dress and grew into a worldwide a food budget, look to the Food Network’s Claire movement. The blog at www.CraftHope.com Robinson and her new book, 5 Ingredient Fix: Easy, organizes crafters to make homemade items for Elegant, Irresistible Recipes ($29.99, Grand Central, charities. Now, in this book, Jade Sims presents Downtown Trick or Treat 978-0-446-57209-5). Infl uenced by her grandmother, step-by-step instructions with beautiful photographs “a classic entertainer,” and her mother, “a natural and gives tips on how to give locally and globally, bohemian,” Robinson describes her style as the best how to give thoughtfully and appropriately, and how Sunday, October 31, 5-7 pm of both worlds. Her philosophy of using just a handful to empower those you are helping in Craft Hope: of fresh, seasonal ingredients and letting them shine Handmade Crafts for a Cause ($17.95, Lark Books, provides at-home meals with a short grocery list and little fuss. Avail. 10/6 978-1-600-59624-7). Barefoot Contessa How Easy Is at? Be sure to come by Ina Garten proves once again that it doesn’t take complicated techniques, special equipment, or stops at more than one grocery store to make wonderful dishes RIVERWALK BOOKS! for your family and friends. Her newest must-have “Food is not about impressing people. cookbook is all about saving time and avoiding stress while having fun in the kitchen. Browse through the It’s about making them feel comfortable. ” 225 gorgeous photographs in Barefoot Contessa How Easy Is That? ($35, Clarkson Potter, 978-0-307-23876- – Ina Garten, e Barefoot Contessa 4) and we guarantee you’ll fi nd more than just a few you’ll want to try – and the food you’ll enjoy at the end of your busy day will burst with fabulous fl avor. Avail. 10/26

10 11 116 East Woodin Ave. Store Hours Chelan WA 98816 Monday-Saturday 10 to 6 Phone: 509.682.8901 CloSed SundayS Events of Interest • Fall First Tuesday Reading Group Schedule Tuesday, October 5, 10 am Cutting for Stone by Riverwalk Books Marion and Shiva Stone are twin brothers born of a secret union between a 2nd & 4th Tuesdays at 10:15 am beautiful Indian nun and a brash British surgeon. Orphaned by their mother’s Tune in and listen to insights about death and their father’s disappearance, bound together by a preternatural the latest releases, news, and stories connection and a shared fascination with medicine, the twins come of age from the book industry. as Ethiopia hovers on the brink of revolution. Moving from Addis Ababa to New York City and back again, Cutting for Stone ($15.95, Vintage Books, 978- 0-375-71436-8) is an unforgettable story of love and betrayal, medicine and ordinary miracles — and two brothers whose fates are forever intertwined. KOZI 93.5 FM

Tuesday, November 2, 10 am River of Doubt Look for the After his humiliating election defeat in 1912, Theodore Roosevelt set his sights on the most punishing physical challenge he could find, the first descent of RIVERWALK BOOKS an unmapped, rapids-choked tributary of the Amazon. Together with his son Kermit and Brazil’s most famous explorer, Candido Mariano da Silva Rondon, Holiday Catalog Roosevelt accomplished a feat so great that many at the time refused to believe it. In the process, he changed the map of the western hemisphere forever. in late November! Along the way, Roosevelt and his men faced an unbelievable series of hardships, losing their canoes and supplies to punishing whitewater rapids, and enduring starvation, Indian attack, You’ll find lots of wonderful ideas disease, drowning, and a murder within their own ranks. Three men died, and Roosevelt was for gift giving this holiday. brought to the brink of suicide. The River of Doubt ($15, Broadway, 978-0-7679-1373-7) by Here’s a sneak peak … Candice Millard brings alive these extraordinary events in a powerful nonfiction narrative thriller that happens to feature one of the most famous Americans who ever lived. The Most Beautiful Villages & Towns of Tuesday, December 7, 10 am the Pacific Northwest South of Broad by Joan Tapper with Leopold Bloom King has been raised in a family shattered — and shadowed photographs by — by tragedy. Lonely and adrift, he searches for something to sustain him Nik Wheeler, $40 and finds it among a tightly knit group of high school outsiders. Surviving marriages happy and troubled, unrequited loves and unspoken longings, hard-won successes and devastating breakdowns, as well as Charleston, South Immi’s Gift Carolina’s dark legacy of racism and class divisions, these friends will endure written & until a final test forces them to face something none of them are prepared for. illustrated by Spanning two turbulent decades, Pat Conroy shows his passion for life and language in South of Karin Littlewood, Broad ($16, Dial Press, 978-0-3853-4407-4). $15.95

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