Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Jerusalem Gems

I made several books during our days in Jerusalem that I am just now getting around to blogging about.

rounded spine with hand sewn end bands
three signatures with boards attached directly to the spine cloth

rounded spine with Chines rice paper and "Jerusalem" in Hebrew hot foil pressed into cover

Monday, January 17, 2011

Derby Square Bookstore: Salem, Massachusettes

On our itty trip to boston this weekend Max and I took even an ittier trip to Salem.  We stumbled upon a delightful little bookstore at the corner of Essex and Derby with a most enigmatic owner.  When I asked if I could take a picture of the floor to ceiling stacks of books, a voice coming from a small space between two mighty stacks answered

"If you buy a book, you can take all the pictures you like."
Max ponied up and purchased World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War  by Max Brooks.  Zombies and Witches and Bookstores - oh my!

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Book Review: The Woman Who Fell From The Sky



The Woman Who Fell From the Sky: An American Journalist in Yemen: Jennifer Steil: Broadway: 2010: Non-Fiction/Biography: 336 pages

Yemen.  Not really a place an American woman imagines visiting, much less taking up a permanent residence.  But perhaps American journalist turned author Jennifer Steil is no ordinary woman.  Accepting a short term work assignment in Yemen to train the staff of the Yemen Observer Steil braves the female free streets of Yemen alone and doesn't let an institutionally sexist work environment or the time wasting Qat addictions of her staff slow her down.   (Qat is a very popular amphetamine like stimulant that plagues Yemeni society - it turns teeth brown, is highly addictive, and basically incapacitates its users form doing anything productive)  

This book depicted a Yemen I couldn't have imagined.  Steil gets the inside scoop, if you will, on women's roles in Yemeni society, the Qat addiction that cripples the country, family life and sex, the government loyalty that dominates the field of "journalism", and blatant unfairness in the workplace.  But her book is also several parts travelogue of the best kind - detailed, sensory, and fantastic while still being relatable and realistic.  The prehistoric island of Socotra sounds enchanting and other worldly, but we all know someone like her cantankerous co-editor and just needing a well deserved night off is something we can all relate to.  Although the ending sat a little askew with me (Steil and the British Ambassador to Yemen start a relationship that causes him to leave his wife and daughter) the book as a whole was very enjoyable.