If you haven’t visited the Harvard Book Store,
take a minute and pop over there.
Watch the shutters open and the store come to life.
See what books fill their front windows. Click for a close-up; double click to look inside a book. With your mouse, you can zoom in or out. Amble to the side street, just right of the two vintage-looking mail boxes. The site is almost almost as much fun as being there in person.
The Harvard Book Store is independent and has been family-owned since 1932. And green, green, green–offering same-day delivery by bike.
And they have a book-making robot–the Espresso Book Machine–nicknamed Paige. It can print a book in about 4 minutes, and you can watch. It can switch between different covers if you have more than one. It costs an author about $5.00 a book.
Steve Almond‘s book, This Won’t Take But a Minute, Honey, which is only available from Steve or from the Harvard Book Store, is created by Paige. In May of last year (I’m a touch behind writing this post), I called the bookstore, and for $9.41 + $5.00 postage, I was soon holding a copy. It’s a nice quality paperback, 6 1/2 inches by 4 1/2 inches. Turn it one way; it’s 30 stories. Turn it the other; it’s 30 essays.
I highly recommend the book. Most of the stories and essays are no longer than a page. My favorite story was
“I Want to Buy the Guy a Drink Who”
In the dead of a scowling New York January spots my great aunt Meta on 64th and Central Park West staring doubtfully at the icy crosswalk…
Overall, I preferred the essays to the stories. In “Bullshit Detector,” he writes, “Writing is decision making.” In “POV:NBD,” he writes:
POV is nothing more than a tool, a way of getting close to the turmoil of your people.
And in “Fuck Style, Tell the Truth,” he writes:
…your artistic unconscious is about ten times more powerful as an imaginative tool than your conscious mind. But it only comes out to play when you forget yourself and focus on your people.
In the July/August 2010 Poets & Writers, Almond calls himself “Self-Publishing Steve” and explains why he chose Paige for this book of his: “smaller, more personal books should move into the world in smaller, more personal ways.”
In the Spring 2011 Third Coast, Steve gives a Craft Talk, where he is again asked about his decision to self-publish this book:
The book isn’t a commodity; it’s an artifact. And when I do a reading, if people want it, then I hand it to them, and they hand me ten bucks. It’s a really nice feeling. I’m not going to get rich off of it. That’s not the point. The point is to get the work out there, the ideas and emotions.
And about publishing literary fiction and non-fiction in general:
…the whole model of publishing is changing. There aren’t enough readers of books–certainly not enough readers of literary fiction and non-fiction–for it to be a going concern at this point. And so it feels to me like getting a corporation involved is incredibly inefficient…this is one way of doing it that makes more sense.
Oh, and the telephone number for the Harvard Book Store is 1.800.542.READ.
Cross-posted at Contrary Blog
Wonderful post! I’m off to visit Harvard Book Store right now.
Hope you enjoyed your visit!
This is all great stuff, Cyn. I want to go to the store, virtually; I’ve been there in person. I want to read Steve’s book. I want to write ten minutes more powerfully. Thank you for morning coffee entertainment.
I think you would love the small book-little doses of craft.
I lived in Cambridge for 12 years and still miss it. I always stop by the Harvard Book Store when we’re back visiting. The book robot is very cool. I saw it last time but wasn’t quite sure how it worked.
I’ve only visited Cambridge, and I miss it. Wish I lived close enough for my books to be delivered by bike.
I love his concept of bypassing the corporation, also that a book is not a commodity but an artifact. There’s an exciting future in all this turmoil. What I’ve determined about the new music business (which crumbled before the literary establishment) is that it ensures the only people making music (or writing books) are people who absolutely love doing it, for the right reasons only. And that ain’t nothing but a good thing. Thanks for posting this, Cynthia!
You’re right, Robin, that’s a good thing. Thanks for reading!