This is quite disturbing, as WAPO used to be a newspaper of record. I never, in my wildest dreams as a reporter, thought that all the community and city newspapers would disappear within a decade and that we'd only eventually be left with the Gray Lady, the NY Times, as our only newspaper in the US able to sustain real reporters/journalists doing their job everyday to enlighten, entertain and inform. The problem with internet news is that it is not fact checked or reliable, and usually has someone with an agenda behind it who is trying to sell you snake oil or propaganda, neither of which has a passing acquaintance with the truth or reality. So Bezos, who amasses a huge fortune everyday, could easily have sustained and supported the WAPO for decades to come, if he were at all community minded. Instead, he withdrew his support and has left them to the wolves. This breaks my heart. I sincerely hope that someday actual paper newspapers will make a comeback, and that someone will revive the art and science and craft of journalism and journalistic ethics. Please God....don't let the NYT fall prey to the oligarchs and evil politicians.
On Wednesday, the Washington Post, "at the behest of owner Jeff Bezos," cut a third of its workforce with layoffs affecting "every corner of the newsroom," including the Books section. NPR reported that "with the job cuts, the storied newspaper narrows the scope of its ambitions for the foreseeable future. It is a remarkable reversal for a vital pillar of American journalism that had looked to Bezos--one of the wealthiest people on Earth--as a champion and a financial savior."
Calling the move "a strategic reset," executive editor Matt Murray said the Post will shutter its sports desk, while keeping some sports reporters to write feature stories. It will also close its Books section and suspend the podcast Post Reports. The international desk will shrink dramatically.
The Associated Press noted that the Book World, "a destination for book reviews, literary news and author interviews, has been a dedicated section in its Sunday paper."
The Post Guild, which represents staffers, is planning a rally today outside the paper's headquarters. "These layoffs are not inevitable. A newsroom cannot be hollowed out without consequences for its credibility, its reach and its future," the union said. "If Jeff Bezos is no longer willing to invest in the mission that has defined this paper for generations and serve the millions who depend on Post journalism, the the Post deserves a steward that will."
The layoffs included Ron Charles, the highly respected longtime book critic for the Post. On his Substack, in a piece headlined "I've Been Laid Off. I'm Not Done," he wrote: "After 20 years at the Washington Post, I’m suddenly on my own--and still writing about books.... Wednesday morning, I learned that my services as a book critic at the Washington Post were no longer needed. My job, along with many others, was eliminated in the paper's latest effort to reinvent itself. How a major national newspaper will carry on without someone on staff to summarize the plots of midlist literary novels is beyond me. But I'll leave that challenge to the august managers who must now carry the Post forward."
Noting that in recent years, "there were plenty of warning signs at the Post that trouble was brewing--departing colleagues, shrinking sections, four horsemen in the heavens--but I vainly imagined I might hang on a few more years.... For book critics, getting laid off is practically a rite of passage--usually the last rite of the final passage. "Ironically, I received my layoff notice from Human Resources while I was eating one of the two remaining Harry & David pears that the Post sent to celebrate my 20th anniversary at the paper.... In any case, I'm not rich enough or tired enough to retire quite yet. So long as I can flip pages--and publishers send me galleys--I intend to keep nattering on about books, authors and our imperiled literary culture.
I LOVE this! I wish I'd been in a bookstore when my water broke, but considering my son was 2 months early, I think it was a good thing that it broke at home in Ballard in the middle of the night, and I was whisked away to downtown Seattle and the NICU at Swedish Hospital on Pill Hill, which was just far enough from the WTO riots to be unaffected by the protests, and my son could be born via C-section on November 27. He is now a tall and handsome 6ft2" adult who is employed at a tech company and has a partner, Sylvie, in Canada whom he plans to marry. These folks are so fortunate that the bookstore tracked them down and gave them presents for themselves and baby Leo.
Bookstore Baby: Monkey and Dog Books
Earlier this month, a mother went into labor while browsing at Monkey and Dog Books in Fort Worth, Tex., "setting off a chain of events that quickly captured the attention and hearts of the community," WFAA reported.
"It's just so exciting for the shop," said owner Seth Burt. "We've had people propose in the shop, people celebrate birthdays here. This was a first.... This lady comes out of the bathroom and tells our bookseller, 'I am so sorry--my water broke.' "
The parents rushed from the store to a nearby birthing center, leaving behind no names or contact information. Burt said he felt determined to find out how the story ended: "The mission was to figure out who the mysterious book baby was."
After Hurt posted a video on the bookstore's Instagram page explaining what had happened, people across the community became invested in learning the outcome and helping the owners find the couple. "That's what the post tried to do--bring people together," he noted.
Within 24 hours, the family was identified, and two weeks later the mother returned to Monkey and Dog Books with her newborn son, Leo. "I didn't expect to go into labor in a bookstore," she said. "I was just excited.... It was the way it was supposed to be."
The bookstore's owners "presented Leo and his mom with a gift basket and discounted books for life: a fitting perk for the so-called 'bookstore baby,' " WFAA reported, adding: "A story that began between the shelves now serves as a reminder that sometimes, the best stories are the ones no one sees coming."
I love this, too, and I remember visiting Decorah, Iowa, when I was a kid growing up in the suburbs of Des Moines. The passing of the torch to the next generation is a brilliant move, and I wish this lovely bookstore many more years of success in their community.
Happy 15th Birthday, Dragonfly Books and Its New Owners!
Congratulations to Dragonfly Books, Decorah, Iowa, which celebrated its 15th anniversary last week with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Tuesday, 15% discounts through Saturday--and a toast to founder Kate Rattenborg Scott's 50th birthday, her retirement, and the passing of ownership to daughters Sarah Krammen and Rachel Rattenborg.
The store noted that "Sarah has been a familiar face at Dragonfly Books for most of the past 15 years and currently manages inventory, marketing, and events. Rachel has lived all over the country, always looking for a place to call home before realizing that northeastern Iowa was it. She has a strong history of customer service and retail experience in almost every kind of business, and manages accounting, staffing, and customer experience at Dragonfly Books."
Kate Rattenborg Scott said "It has been an honor to carry on my family's legacy in Decorah through Dragonfly Books. I have felt grounded and anchored through the small business community throughout the past 15 years. I am excited and proud to be passing the torch to the next generation. A big thank you to our customers and community for making my dream a reality!" She plans to remain an active board president of the Oneota Valley Literary Foundation, and will retain ownership of the Silver Birch, a Christian book and gift shop located four doors down from Dragonfly Books, which she purchased in 2019. She said she is most excited to spend more time with her husband, Paul, and travel, attend community events, build LEGO, work on jigsaw puzzles, and finally read a book for fun.
Dragonfly Books carries 15,000 individual books as well as gifts and educational items for customers of all ages and backgrounds, specializing in Scandinavian fiction in translation and regional nonfiction. The store also highlights authors from Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, many of whom have visited Decorah for book readings and signings.
In 2022, the store helped created the Oneota Valley Literary Foundation which supports Dragonfly Books' event series which included more than 80 author and community events last year. By partnering with regional schools, museums, public libraries, and other nonprofits, the foundation has given more than 9,500 books to the community since its inception.
The Cliff's Edge by Charles Todd is a historical mystery that takes place after the Great War (WW1) and features protagonist Bess Crawford, amateur sleuth and former nursing sister during the war. I've read the previous dozen Bess Crawford mysteries, and this one is a real corker that starts out slow, but begins to gather steam and comes to a roaring ending that will leave readers breathless. Here's the blurb: The problem with that blurb is that Simon Brandon is on the outs with Bess at the opening of the novel, and by the end, he's not aware (Bess hasn't had the time to tell him) of the devastating news that Bess has uncovered about his heritage and parentage that he's been long seeking. Meanwhile, though, there's a lot of blood, bruises, death and mayhem in this installation of the series, which, since half of the Todd writing team (the mother) has passed on, makes me wonder if the co-writer son would prefer to write manly gore-infested thrillers and is now infusing Bess's stories with violence because there's no one left to say him nay. At any rate, I felt that the more compassionate notes were missing from this installation of the Bess stories, so I'd give it a B-, and recommend it only to completists who feel the need to read all the books in any given series, the good, bad and ugly.
The Demon King. As Fjerda’s massive army prepares to invade, Nikolai Lantsov will summon every bit of his ingenuity and charm―and even the monster within―to win this fight. But a dark threat looms that cannot be defeated by a young king’s gift for the impossible.
The Stormwitch. Zoya Nazyalensky has lost too much to war. She saw her mentor die and her worst enemy resurrected, and she refuses to bury another friend. Now duty demands she embrace her powers to become the weapon her country needs. No matter the cost.
The Queen of Mourning. Deep undercover, Nina Zenik risks discovery and death as she wages war on Fjerda from inside its capital. But her desire for revenge may cost her country its chance at freedom and Nina the chance to heal her grieving heart.
King. General. Spy. Together they must find a way to forge a future in the darkness. Or watch a nation fall.