If you have a brain, you already know that zombie apocalypse is a popular theme right now. And if you don't…
Carrie Rollwagen
Free Book Friday
It's been chilly and snowy here, and Anna Karenina seems just about right for a mid-winter's read. We've heard mixed reviews…
Rain, Rain, Go Away … And Take This Book with You
The past few days have been filled with the most gray, unfriendly weather I've ever seen — just days and days…
Movie Trailer Monday
The trailers are out for Beautiful Creatures, and, we have to admit, we're intrigued. No one at our shop has read…
It’s hard to be miserable when you’re reading a free copy of Les Mis
There aren't many movies that everyone agrees are fantastic. We're thinking here ... the Princess Bride, maybe? Anyway, usually, when…
Buy a Kobo, Save the World? Hey, Maybe!
So, here's the thing: In the fight to keep people reading, and to make sure there continue to be good books…
Big Boi Reads The Grinch
A little bonus holiday cheer for you today: watch Big Boi reading How the Grinch Stole Christmas. But, to quote the…
Paper Doll Jules Verne Gives You a Free Book!
Paper Doll Jules Verne looks pretty pissed to be posing in his NASA P.J.'s! We're a little short on time…
Writing on Film: Ruby Sparks and the Manic Pixie Dream Girl
Last week, a customer asked me what the difference is between Fiction and Non-fiction. (Surprised? This happens more often than you’d think.) The easy, mnemonic device to remember this is “Fiction is fake,” and that’s what I told her. But that’s not really what I believe. I think Fiction is often more real than Non-Fiction, because Fiction allows us to explore the mind, motivations and reality of another person. Maybe the character isn’t real, but, in a well-written story, the experience is. In fact, that experience can feel so realistic that we sometimes have trouble separating it from actual reality.
Enter Ruby Sparks, a movie about the blurry line between fact and fiction. The basic plot is this: A writer has trouble writing (I can relate). He has trouble finding love (um, again … I can relate). One night, he has a dream about a girl, and when he wakes up and writes it down, he can’t stop thinking and writing about her. He’s obsessed with creating, and he’s excited about writing again. And then he’s super freaked out, because this girl he’s been writing about — this Ruby — shows up in his kitchen one day, cooking him eggs.
Paper Doll H.G. Wells Wants to Give You Free Books!
Paper Doll H.G. Wells goes extraterrestrial in his alien costume. Think getting books from a paper doll is weird? Well,…
