Amazon's 'Most Well-Read Cities' in U.S.
For the second straight year, Alexandria, Va. topped Amazon's list of
the "Most Well-Read Cities in America," which is compiled from sales
data of all book, magazine and newspaper sales in both print and Kindle
format since June 1, 2012, on a per capita basis in cities with more
than 100,000 residents. This year's top 20 are:
1. Alexandria, Va.
11. St. Louis, Mo.
2. Knoxville, Tenn.
12. Salt Lake City, Utah
3. Miami, Fla.
13. Seattle, Wash.
4. Cambridge, Mass.
14. Vancouver, Wash.
5. Orlando, Fla.
15. Gainesville, Fla.
6. Ann Arbor, Mich.
16. Atlanta, Ga.
7. Berkeley, Calif.
17. Dayton, Ohio
8. Cincinnati, Ohio
18. Richmond, Va.
9. Columbia, S.C.
19. Clearwater, Fla.
10. Pittsburgh, Pa.
20. Tallahassee, Fla.
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This week we lost a wonderful author, ELK, who wrote "From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs Basil E Frankweiler" a favorite book of mine when I was 12 years old. Here's a fitting tribute to her genius.
To E.L. Konigsburg
Elaine Lobl Konigsburg, two-time
Newbery Medalist--in 1968 for From the
Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E.
Frankweiler; and again in 1997 for The
View from Saturday--died on Friday,
April 19, at the age of 83.
Is the Metropolitan Museum of Art the
place
to which you wanted to run when you
were a child?
How well you embodied the yearnings
of young Claudia
as she stole away to a place of
comfort.
You captured a New York in which
children
could walk 40 blocks from the Met
to the main branch of the New York
Public Library
in search of answers,
and then to the Donnell--
then devoted to children, and now
closed.
How did it feel
to be one of the elite handful
who has won two Newbery Medals,
for From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs.
Basil E. Frankweiler in 1968,
and in 1997 for The View from
Saturday?
And the only author to win a Newbery
Medal and Honor
in the same year--1968 (the Newbery
Honor went to
Jennifer, Hecate, Macbeth, William
McKinley, and Me, Elizabeth)
for your first two novels?
At a luncheon for Silent to the Bone
you spoke of the connection between
Branwell's muteness
and "ma," the Japanese term
for what we call "negative space."
Ma suggests a simultaneous awareness
of form and non-form
resulting in an intensification of
vision.
"Negative space" omits the
idea of holding both
form and non-form at once.
Even though you are no longer with
us,
your words, your awareness, your
insights
into human nature remain.
You've made art, language, and life
richer.
--Jennifer M. Brown
Also, though I don't generally read his work, I think that Mr Patterson is spot on with this query...who WILL save our books, a most precious resource?
James Patterson: 'Who Will Save Our
Books, Bookstores, Libraries?'
On the back cover of yesterday's New
York Times Book Review, author
James Patterson took out a striking
full-page ad that reads in part,
"The Federal Government has
stepped in to save banks, and the automobile
industry, but where are they on the
important subject of books? Or, if
the answer is state and local
government, where are they? Is any state
doing anything? Why are there no
impassioned editorials in influential
newspapers or magazines? Who will
save our books? Our libraries? Our
bookstores?"
He also listed 38 titles ranging from
All the President's Men and To
Kill a Mockingbird to A Fan's Notes
and Maus, saying, "If there are no
bookstores, no libraries, no serious
publishers with passionate,
dedicated, idealistic editors, what
will happen to our literature? Who
will discover and mentor new writers?
Who will publish our important
books? What will happen if there are
no more books like these?"