McNally Jackson Bookmongers

Month

January 2012

32 posts

Jan 31, 201224 notes
#events
“When Jezebel launched in spring 2007, I myself was keenly interested in being a woman. I was 20 years old: being a woman was a relatively recent development, and I was curious about the ways it could be done. And I had always enjoyed reading about being a girl.” —While we’re closed, we recommend this piece by Molly Fischer on the ladyblogosphere over at n+1: So Many Feelings. 
Jan 31, 201220 notes
#the piece is great and not just because she lets me date her
Today is Inventory Day

And we are closed. Read the books you already own, browse some ebooks, and, today only, you have our blessing to go to Housing Works.

Jan 31, 201210 notes
Jan 30, 201263 notes
Jan 30, 20129 notes
#events #spoiler alert my sister wrote the dubus piece
Porridge

thedizzies:

General Liddament pondered this assertion for some seconds in resentful silence. He seemed to be considering porridge in all its aspects, bad as well as good. At last he came out with an unequivocal moral judgment.

“There ought to be porridge,” he said.

—Anthony Powell, A Dance to the Music of Time


Jan 28, 201240 notes
Jan 27, 201235 notes
#books #we recommend
Weekend New Book Round-Up

Books: We have them. You want them. Sometimes. Now is one of those times, because I am about to tell you what’s new and good.

In paperback:

  • Blood, Bones & Butter: This is a memoir by the woman who runs Prune. Astaff pick of Douglas, hated by the serial commatariat.
  • Open City: Teju Cole’s meandering novel about a man meandering through New York City.
  • Leaving the Atocha Station: This isn’t new, but it remains great.
  • Invalid Format: An Anthology of Triple Canopy: Also not the newest, still one of the most interesting destinations on the internet.
  • Conversations with Kafka: Franz!
  • Ten Thousand Saints: The Lower East Side! Punks! Straight edge! The ’80s!
  • Dukla: Dukla! Dustin says it’s “one of the most gently but singularly pointless novels I’ve read recently, is also one of the most satisfying.”

In hardcover:

  • Life Sentences: Cranky old Gass’ baroque sentences are still the funnest to read, even when they don’t make all the sense.
  • The Flame Alphabet: We’ve got signed copies of this, about language plague.
  • Vicky Swanky Is a Beauty: Deb Olin Unferth, whom I trust, says that “Each page is like throwing open the window in an electrical storm—strange sky, air full of voltage, and inside, a square of brave.”

Jan 27, 20126 notes
#a square of brave #new books
Robert Walser's Berlin Stories

nyrbclassics:

image

Today is the publication date for Robert Walser’s Berlin Stories, a collection of his early stories set in Berlin where he followed his elder brother in 1905, all in original translations by Susan Bernofsky. We thought we’d share the first story in the book, titled “Good Morning, Giantess!”:

It’s as if a giantess were shaking her curls and sticking one leg out of bed when—early in the morning, before even the electric trams are running, and driven by some duty or other—you venture out into the metropolis. Cold and white the streets lie there, like outstretched human arms; you trot along, rubbing your hands, and watch people coming out of the gates and doorways of their buildings, as though some impatient monster were spewing out warm, flaming saliva. You encounter eyes as you walk along like this: girls’ eyes and the eyes of men, mirthless and gay; legs are trotting behind and before you, and you too are legging along as best you can, gazing with your own eyes, glancing the same glances as everyone else. And each breast bears some somnolent secret, each head is haunted by some melancholy or inspiring thought. Splendid, splendid.

Read More

Jan 24, 201296 notes
Jan 23, 20128 notes
Jan 23, 2012467 notes
“I know few towns which inspire me with so great disgust and contempt.” —Edgar Allen Poe on Brooklyn. Quoted in Dwight Garner’s review of New York Diaries: 1609 to 2009.
Jan 20, 201280 notes
#brooklyn #ed poe
I want to read Anais Nin but I don't know if I should start off with her fiction, her diaries, or her biographies. What do you think I should try first?

First things first, I’ve never read Nin, but heavens! Don’t start with the biography. You’ll only read her fiction as symptoms of her life—diminishing it, somehow, if you ask me (which, ha ha, literally you are). If you end up loving her, go to the bio later. That said, having consulted a few who have Ninned a time or two, everyone says start with Henry & June.

Jan 20, 20128 notes
For the person looking for Atwoody, epistolary romances-- they may like AS Byatt! Possession is epistolary, in part, and although there is romance it is very unromantic. The Biographer's Tale is excellent, too. Maybe even better.

Anonymous!

Jan 17, 20123 notes
What would you recommend for a reader who enjoys Margaret Atwood, "House of Leaves", epistolary novels, and modern fantasies that don't center around romance?

There’s a big flood in Chris Adrian’s The Children’s Hospital—and angels, some sinister, some not, and a pervading sense of doom. It’s a favorite. Kelly Link’s short stories are definitely modern and definitely fantastic—surprisingly sweet, but certainly not romance. Tatyana Tolstaya’s The Slynx is one of the weirdest and least romantic novels I know. 

(And of course the epistolarily horrifying Dracula. And Borges! Borges, of course.)  

My colleague Dustin recommends Lethem’s Chronic City and Whitehead’s Zone One, both in future New Yorks. Also Brian Evenson’s Fugue State and Sarah Schulman’s The Mere Future. And Brian Francis Slattery’s Spaceman Blues. It’s very romantic, he says, but what’s the matter with romance?

Jan 17, 201224 notes
“I prefer women like books — very good and not too long.” —Things I didn’t expect to find in Henry James’ The Portrait of a Lady: An “I like my women like I like my ______” joke. (It couldn’t be the first ever? There must be one in Chaucer: I liken mine wimman lyk I liken mine ______.)
Jan 16, 2012102 notes
#hank jim
Play
Jan 15, 20127 notes
#not letting our youth go to waste
Jan 15, 20129 notes
#events #triple canopy #nerds
“It was impossible, while living there, to avoid all of the people who knew how I’d messed up on my way to personhood, or teach them that the versions of me they knew were not accurate versions. Once a particle is inside the horizon, moving into the hole is as inevitable as moving forward in time and can actually be thought of as equivalent to doing so. Yu specializes in saving people who try to travel back in time to correct their mistakes. It’s impossible, he says.” —Our own Sarah Gerard, on the BOMBLOG, writing about Florida, Charles Yu, and black holes.
Jan 14, 201274 notes
The Situation in American Writing → full-stop.net

Our friends at Full Stop are polling authors on the situation in American writing, an update of a 1939 questionnaire sent out by the ye olde Partisan Review. We recommend (Maud Newton, Marilynne Robinson, Gary Shteyngart, George Saunders, etc. etc. etc.)!

Jan 10, 201216 notes
Do you currently have part-time positions open for the McNally Jackson cafe?

We might? Most of what I know about what happens over there is me shoving the raspberry scones (made by the great Pickle Petunia) into my face. But you should give us your resume, in case anything opens up. You can come through and drop it off, or email it to info [at] mcnallyjackson.com—just make it clear you’re aiming for the cafe. 

Jan 10, 20121 note
Jan 10, 201267 notes
Jan 7, 201249 notes
Play
Jan 6, 201222 notes
McNJ bookmonger Sandeep lists her 10 all-time favorite books of all-time forever. → artbook.com
Jan 6, 20128 notes
#she says she thinks about them every week
pity about the internship. sooooo, any tips for other possible places (apart from NYT and the obvious) for internships in the city then? should one of them be happening, i make sure i spend half the money of my student loan in your store. ALL the books.

n+1 offers internships, and they let you bartend parties and maybe you’d get to become very famous on their twitter. Our friends over at Lapham’s Quarterly offer internships too, and you’d get to think about all the books by theme—a fun activity.  

But well—I was about to list a bunch of magazines and publishers (Norton, FSG, the Observer, etc. etc.) that I’ve heard positive things about, but Anonymous! I know so little about you. It’s impossible to know what you’re interested in. Figure out what you like, or might like, and then try figure out a way to be there, doing that thing. 

Also, read this. 

Jan 6, 20129 notes
What about your top-sellers list was McNally-specific in a way we might not know about? Anything on there because of staff picks, special events, a certain staffer being nuts about it, an author living next door, etc?

In the top 20? No, not really. It’s a definite reflection of our neighborhood, which I think we know well—the pretty edition of F. Scott Fitzgerald on booze at number 3 feels exactly right. Simon Van Booy has a long history with the store. Blood, Bones and Butter was a staff pick, and the book has a local hook. I recommended The Art of Fielding hard, but I don’t think I was a lone voice there. I am proud of pushing Leaving the Atocha Station: we sold a lot of copies of that weird little book, which I loved, before it really took off, largely thanks to the James Wood review in the New Yorker.

We have really smart customers, and we can trust that when we put, say, Leve’s Suicide on the table, that it will sell itself—which it did. We also have very many customers, which means that not everything is right for everyone and that those books that do find their audience (with our help!) might not be able to beat Goon Squad, which all types of readers are reading. So the stuff we do well—the stuff that really matters, putting the right book into the right hands—might not be so visible in the numbers.

Jan 5, 20125 notes
Jan 5, 2012146 notes
McNally J's Bestsellers of 2011

Here are McNally J’s bestselling books of 2011. It’s a list! 31 books long. Arbitrarily. I had to go get my laundry.

  1. Just Kids, Patti Smith (Now also the bestselling book in McNJ’s history.) 
  2. A Visit from the Goon Squad, Jennifer Egan
  3. On Booze, F. Scott Fitzgerald
  4. Bossypants, Tina Fey
  5. The Imperfectionists, Tom Rachman
  6. The ReadyMade 100 Project Manual (printed on our book machine!)
  7. Steve Jobs, Walter Isaacson
  8. 1Q84, Haruki Murakami
  9. Go the Fuck to Sleep, Adam Mansbach
  10. Blood, Bones and Butter, Gabrielle Hamilton
  11. The Marriage Plot, Jeffrey “Salivagate” Eugenides
  12. The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins
  13. Tote! 
  14. The Help, Kathryn Stockett
  15. The Art of Fielding, Chad Harbach (This would be been higher if it hadn’t gone out of stock the week before Christmas.)
  16. Super Sad True Love Story, Gary Shteyngart
  17. Sense of an Ending, Julian Barnes
  18. All the public domain books from the Espresso Book Machine!
  19. Everything Beautiful Began After, Simon Van Booy
  20. Suicide, Edouard Leve
  21. Windup Girl, Paolo Bacigalupi
  22. The Tao of Wu, The Rza
  23. Catching Fire, Suzanne Collins
  24. One Day, David Nicholls
  25. Freedom, Jonathan Franzen
  26. Woolgathering, Patti Smith
  27. Blue Nights, Joan Didion
  28. Life, Keith Richards
  29. By Nightfall, Michael Cunningham
  30. You Deserve Nothing, Alexander Maksik
  31. We the Animals, Justin “Former McNJ Staffer” Torres

Other notables (i.e. books I like that were not far down the list): Rich People Things, The Ask, Emma Straub’s Other People We Married, which we had in stock way too infrequently. Leaving the Atocha Station is in the Top 100 (another title that would’ve been higher if it hadn’t fallen out of stock everywhere just before Christmas). Lydia Davis’ The Cows—a chapbook about literal cows—is just outside the 100. Actually, though, our bestselling item-type thing by far was the set-up fee to publish on our Book Machine.

Jan 5, 2012751 notes
#here to please rachel
Jan 5, 201210 notes
#it's a ghost with provenance #defying conventional ghostdom #they need advice on how to live a ghost lifestyle #so many media companies forget the power of the ghost
Jan 4, 201228 notes
Jan 2, 201230 notes

December 2011

32 posts

Dec 30, 201142 notes
#passive aggressive
Dec 30, 201139 notes
#books
do you offer internships of some kind?

We don’t. That said, we do occasionally offer jobs—part-time ones, too, if you’re a student. We’re not hiring right now, but who knows when something might open up. You can either come through and drop off a resume or email it to info [at] mcnallyjackson.com with a little note explaining why you’d want to work at this independent bookstore. Perks include touching the books, alphabetizing, and explaining that the Paris Review is not, in fact, reviews of Paris. 

Dec 27, 201111 notes
Dec 27, 201118 notes
#think about it
My aunt loves... you know... "those" books. The Help. The Pirate's Daughter. White Oleander. Water for Elephants. Am I making sense? Maybe not. Maybe I shouldn't even be asking someone with such good taste. Anyway, she's 63, she used to be a discoqueenfaghag and was the first person to ever say the word "fuck" to me. Help?

First things first, there’s still time! Sort of. We’re open from 10-6 today (closed tomorrow). Anyway, onward!

The fuck-saying discoqueen throws me for a bit of a loop, but, ignoring that, she might go for Cutting for Stone or The Invisible Bridge—both have that “those” just-want-a-good-story vibe book that I’m getting from her choices. Also they’ve both been read—and loved—by McNJ staffers.

Dec 24, 20117 notes
“So it was decided that Emma would be prevented from reading novels. The project did not seem an easy one. The good lady took it upon herself: on her way through Rouen, she would go in person to the proprietor of the lending library and inform him that Emma was terminating her subscription. Wouldn’t one have the right to alert the police if, despite this, the bookseller persisted in his business as purveyor of poison?” —From the Lydia Davis translation of Madame Bovary. McNally Jackson: Poisonmongers.
Dec 23, 201116 notes
any gift ideas for shakespeare lovers?

A little while ago, Ugly Duckling put out Jen Bervin’s Nets. She makes these small, evocative poems by erasing (incompletely) most of Shakespeare’s sonnets.

I’ve said it once and I’ll said it again, but The Great Night by Chris Adrian—a retelling of A Midsummer’s Night Dream—would be good if this Shakespearean also reads contemporary stuff.

Dec 22, 20118 notes
Hoping you can help. Looking for a book for a father-in-law type figure. He's from Spain, very liberal, very brainy. I scored big last year giving him Nicholson Baker's Human Smoke, which he loved, and he followed up reading House of Holes, which delighted him. I showed him a Javier Marias short story once, and he was not as smitten as I was. Sometimes he talks about wanting to know more about classic American literature. Seeking your wisdom!

I’m not sure how well you know me—probably not at all—but if he’d like to know about American literature, you could—surprise!—get him this edition of Moby-Dick, i.e. the best and most classic of American lit. It’s a paperback, but it’s big and beautiful enough that it’s as substantial and gifty-seeming as a hardcover. Also, as a companion volume, D.H. Lawrence’s hilarious Studies in Classic American Literature, which is apparently literally what he wants to know about. (It’s one of those nice Penguin classics with the green spine.)

Dec 22, 20114 notes
I'm having a pre-Christmas panic attack over what to get my dad. Usually I get him non-fiction, generic coffee-table books on "war" or "history." This year, I want to give him something he'll really love and actually READ. He likes non-fiction + history, is a veteran, and has little patience for pop culture or pretentious writing. Also, he's Southern and used to be a cop. Heeeelp.

Unbroken!

Dec 20, 20113 notes
Late gift giving Q. My husband is a weekend fisherman, doesn't read a ton, but likes a good non-fiction book with a story line (loved "Cod", for example, enjoyed "Perfect Storm", likes Everest adventure type books). Any suggestions?

We’ve got a handsome volume of Hemingway’s fishing stories. 

It’s been out for a little while, but Nathaniel Philbrick’s In the Heart of the Sea is another one of those great adventure histories—this one involves cannibalism and whales. 

And because you mentioned Everest, I thought of Wade Davis—you may remember his zombie-hunting in Haiti, The Serpent and the Rainbow—and his new one, Into the Silence. Everest! War! Death! Mallory! Davis is “National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence” which is a funny oxymoronic dream job to have.

Dec 19, 20114 notes
So, I have a gift-giving issue, if you're still taking those. I have a friend who is really into obscure literature from countries whose literature may not be well known here in the States. I could go on, but I do know she likes Scandinavian and Hungarian (she's currently reading the latest Nadas), but I also know that the recent passing of Vaclav Havel has gotten her to want reading some Czech books as well. Oh, and she's from Canada, and she loves books from her native land. Suggestions?

She might like the very strange Michal Ajvaz. Plus you get to feel a little uncomfortable everytime you try to say his last name. Ajvaz. The Other City is a strange and wonderful—by which I mean it’s full of wonders—book. Dustin, I think, prefers The Golden Age.

I’ve never read Hrabal, but I’d like to. His Dancing Lessons for the Advanced in Age was just put out by NYRB (pronounced “nerb”) and is a single sentence (!).  

I’m looking forward to reading Dukla, more strange European lit, and Canada-wise, there’s David Bezmozgis’ The Free World. 

Dec 19, 20116 notes
Hi Sam! Any gift ideas for someone whose 2011 favorites included Stone Arabia, Major Pettigrew's Last Stand, The Family Fang, and A Good Hard Look? Bonus points for books set somewhere other than New York City. Also, this someone may or may not be my mother, so I'm going to preemptively veto House of Holes. Many many thanks. xA

Hmmmmm. If your mom is the type of mom who watches Friday Night Lights, then she’d like The Art of Fielding, I’m sure. But you probably knew that.

I haven’t read but I’m intrigued by Salvage the Bones, which takes place in Mississippi. Also I’ve heard nothing but good things about Helen Oyeyemi’s Mr. Fox. 

Dec 19, 20113 notes
I'm looking for a good read over winter break before I head to Paris for the semester. Any suggestions?

Yes! Enrique Vila-Matas’ Never Any End to Paris is narrated by a Hemingway-loving young man wandering around Paris wondering why his experience isn’t more like Hemingway’s. Very good. (Also A Moveable Feast, of course.)

Edmund White’s The Flaneur should be next on your list.

Dec 19, 20117 notes
I do have a question, if it's not too late! What recent novels might be good for someone who loves every word F. Scott Fitzgerald ever spewed?

First question! Have you read every word of F. Scott F.? I recommend The Crack-Up, since it contains “My Lost City”—a near perfect piece of writing, if you ask me. Also Hesperus Press just put out The Cruise of the Rolling Junk—a collection of pieces written for Motor (!) magazine about driving from Connecticut to Alabama. 

You might also like Amor Towles’ Rules of Civility. It’s perhaps not quite as high literary as Fitzgerald, but you’ll get your jazzy social-climby New York fix. 

Dec 19, 20119 notes
Dec 16, 201120 notes
Dec 16, 201114 notes
Dec 16, 201111 notes
Dec 16, 201132 notes
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