We keep a detailed record of all the books our customers put on a "want to buy" list. After taking your name and phone number a note is posted on the wall where it can be easily found upon the book's arrival. You will be notified immediately, whereupon you will drop everything and rush to the store with cash, no credit cards accepted. If we can't find your note the book will be shelved in hopes that another buyer will appear. If it's really a great book, someone will snatch it up. If not, that tells you that your original idea wasn't so hot after all, and you just saved yourself a few bucks. We are here to serve you.
Saturday, March 31, 2012
The Secret Wall of Wants
We keep a detailed record of all the books our customers put on a "want to buy" list. After taking your name and phone number a note is posted on the wall where it can be easily found upon the book's arrival. You will be notified immediately, whereupon you will drop everything and rush to the store with cash, no credit cards accepted. If we can't find your note the book will be shelved in hopes that another buyer will appear. If it's really a great book, someone will snatch it up. If not, that tells you that your original idea wasn't so hot after all, and you just saved yourself a few bucks. We are here to serve you.
Friday, March 30, 2012

When applying for a job at the store, and here at the outset we must state categorically that there are no vacancies nor do we anticipate that eventuality, please do not send a letter reflecting an absence of knowledge of how we operate as you recite technical abilities of no use to us, however much other commercial enterprises may find them of great service and see in you a potential for exploitation which we don't now nor will we ever, but thanks for asking. Furthermore, phone calls which open with "Hey, you guys hiring?" will be ridiculed and satirized here on the blog in sentences similar to that which you now read. Every treasured and beloved employee began life here as a customer or bf of a bf. So it goes here as it does in much of the cold, cruel world beyond our friendly confines. Somewhere in Shakespeare you can find a diagram for a successful courtship. Dickens, on the other hand, is rife with examples of bad ideas and dumb plans. Thus does literature inform our lives and prepare us for the world. Our best wishes to you as you pursue success or even just a modest form of comfortable survival, which latter, should you prevail, would put you somewhere in the top five percent, historically, so don't knock it.
Manager of Style

Store manager Jessica took a sabbatical last spring and spent time doing research in China. Here she is on the left, just days before losing her favorite Chinese bazaar-bought sunglasses, pirated knockoffs of an Italian design. Sunglasses are of no use in the store. Please don't wear them in and put them down on a shelf, only to forget them while distracted by the store's phenomenal depth and awesomely rich inventory, all chosen by hand and selected to enhance your shopping experience and add dimension to your experience of the world. This is our mission statement, the sunglasses stuff to the contrary notwithstanding. We do have a lost-and-found department, but Jessica didn't put it on her extraordinary map as seen in the preceding post. You have to ask at the desk.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Saturday, March 24, 2012
IN THE NEWS!! CHICAGO BOOKSTORE EXPOSED AS COLOR-CONSCIOUS. March, 2012.
Ravenswood Used Books, a cramped and crowded shop in this racially divided city, has been discovered shelving books according to color. The most casual inspection of this store's shelves reveals a clear and deliberate effort to organize inventory by each book's color. When interviewed for this report, store manager Jessica admitted that such a formula made it easier for her to remember where titles could be found, although, she said, browsers constantly undid her carefully considered order, leaving behind a mess of clashing hues and titles in no order whatsoever, the store having long ago determined that alphabetizing books is for highly paid librarians and law clerks.

IN THE NEWS!! Bookstore owner discovered to have used company funds for automobile purchase. Chicago, March 2012. Jim Mall, owner of Ravenswood Used Books in Chicago's charming Lincoln Square, has admitted to using sales receipts to buy a Mercedes Benz. Mall, who usually bikes to work from his lakefront condo, was photographed in front of the store as he displayed the Craigslist find to admiring passersby. Questioned as to how the car was financed, Mall responded that he used cash as demanded by all Craigslist posters and that the money had been handed to him in exchange for hundreds or perhaps thousands of books sold to unsuspecting customers in the bookstore over a period of many years. ¶ As of press time no legal action has been taken to retrieve the funds or prosecute the shopkeeper.
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Scribbling Scribes
Illuminating Your Margins
"Illumination": What a a poetic word for scribbling in the margins! Here at the bookstore, we sell only non-illuminated (not to be mistaken for non-luminous) books. The debate rages as to whether reading a book among a community of previous note-takers is charming or rather odious. Maybe it would be more fun if marginalia worked something like Tom Riddle's diary inThe Chamber of Secrets. Wouldn't you like to have a tete-a-tete with some codgy monk? Something like "Oh stop your bellyaching! It's not like you're dying of the Plague! Oh wait..."
Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Five hundred new fairytales discovered in Germany
Collection of fairytales gathered by historian Franz Xaver von Schönwerth had been locked away in an archive in Regensburg for over 150 years
"A whole new world of magic animals, brave young princes and evil witches has come to light with the discovery of 500 new fairytales, which were locked away in an archive in Regensburg, Germany for over 150 years. The tales are part of a collection of myths, legends and fairytales, gathered by the local historian Franz Xaver von Schönwerth (1810–1886) in the Bavarian region of Oberpfalz at about the same time as the Grimm brothers were collecting the fairytales that have since charmed adults and children around the world."Read more:
New Yorker article:
Monday, March 19, 2012
Brain on Books
"The brain, it seems, does not make much of a distinction between reading about an experience and encountering it in real life; in each case, the same neurological regions are stimulated. Keith Oatley, an emeritus professor of cognitive psychology at the University of Toronto (and a published novelist), has proposed that reading produces a vivid simulation of reality, one that “runs on minds of readers just as computer simulations run on computers.” Fiction — with its redolent details, imaginative metaphors and attentive descriptions of people and their actions — offers an especially rich replica. Indeed, in one respect novels go beyond simulating reality to give readers an experience unavailable off the page: the opportunity to enter fully into other people’s thoughts and feelings.
The novel, of course, is an unequaled medium for the exploration of human social and emotional life. And there is evidence that just as the brain responds to depictions of smells and textures and movements as if they were the real thing, so it treats the interactions among fictional characters as something like real-life social encounters."
By ANNIE MURPHY PAUL
Read More:
Read Even More:
http://news.stanford.edu/news/2012/september/austen-reading-fmri-090712.html
Saturday, March 17, 2012
Thursday, March 15, 2012
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