Archive for the 'books' Category

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Chicago author Josh Wilker reads from Cardboard Gods

Apr ’10
29
7:00 pm

Cardboard Heroes Cvr

Cardboard Gods is the memoir of Josh Wilker, a brilliant writer who has marked the stages of his life through the baseball cards he collected as a child.  While it is rooted in a life obsessed with baseball, Cardboard Gods is much more than just a baseball book; it’s a touching family saga that perfectly captures an era, the late 1970s. Like Nick Hornby or Chuck Klosterman, Wilker finds something very large in the seemingly small.

Josh expertly shares his classic observations about his central artifacts, the baseball cards, while setting up the poignant tales of his youth.  He uses the magical bubble-blowing powers of journeyman Kurt Bevacqua to shed light on the weakening of the powerful childhood bond with his older brother; he considers the doomed utopian back-to-the-land dreams of his hippie parents against the backdrop of inimitable 1970s baseball figures such as “Designated Pinch Runner” Herb Washington and Mark “The Bird” Fidrych; he writes about an imagined correspondence with his favorite player, Carl Yastrzemski.  Cardboard Gods is both the perfect book for baseball fans and a great read for anyone compelled by the question, “What if what’s gone can return?”

“Josh Wilker’s Cardboard Gods is a poignant and vivid account of how and why he accessed baseball cards as a survival tool while negotiating a 1970s childhood marked by changing mores and confusing mixed messages.  This is a story of brotherly love, survival of the also-ran, and the hope that quickens a kid’s heartbeat each time he rips open a fresh pack of baseball cards, gets a whiff of bubble gum, and, holding his breath, sees who he’s got as opposed to who and what he needs.  If you love the writing of Dave Eggers or Augusten Burroughs, you just may love Josh Wilker’s Cardboard Gods, too.  I did.”
–Wally Lamb, New York Times bestselling author of She’s Come Undone and The Hour I First Believed

“Josh Wilker writes as beautifully about baseball and life as anyone ever has.”
–Rob Neyer, ESPN

For more info: http://cardboardgods.net/cardboard-gods-the-book/

New Stuff Week of January 31, 2010

Check out these new things before anyone else does. Then take their eyeballs, so they can’t check them out ever!

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ZINES

Fluke Magazine #8 $2

COMICS/COMIX/MINIS

Buffy the Vampire Slayer #32 By Joss Whedon $2.99

Crass Sophisticate #23 by Josh Reinwald & Justin Rosenberg $2

Crass Sophisticate #24 by Josh Reinwald & Justin Rosenberg $2

Crestfallen #2 by Sandra Sierra $3

Franz Kafka’s Poseidon by Jarod Rosello $4

Stories vol 2 Copy Matthew and Buster Swimming Free Hugs by Martin Cendreda $3

Tales From The Crypt #13 $3.95

Tank Girl Skidmarks #3 by Alan Martin and Rufus Dayglo $3.99

GRAPHIC NOVELS & TRADE PAPERBACKS

Crogan’s March by Chris Schweizer $14.95

Fables vol 13 the Great Fables Crossover by Bill Willingham, Matthew Sturges, and Mark Buckingham $17.99

Teenage Timberwolves Lust for Lightning by James Havoc & Daniele Serra $14.95

MAGS

Against the Current #144 Jan Feb 10 $5

Altercation #24 $3.95

Car Busters #40 $5

Dwell Mar 10 $5.99

Earth First vol 30 #2 Jan Feb 10 $4.5

Extra Feb 10 vol 23 #2 $3.95

Grafik #181 Jan 10 $19.99

Hails and Horns #16 WIn 09 $4.95

Haunted Times vol 4 #3 Win 10 $6.5

Hip Mama #45 $5.95

In These Times Feb 10 $3.5

Monocle vol 3 #30 Feb 10 $10

Namaste Vol 11 #2 $9.99

Nexus vol 17 #1 Jan Feb 10 $5.95

Progressive Feb 10 $3.95

Tattoo Life #62 $6.99

Tattoo Society #20 $7.99

Time Out Chicago Feb 4 10 $2.99

Trace #86 $5.99

Transworld Skateboarding Mar 10 $3.99

Vman #17 Spr 10 $5.5

Winq Win 10 $7.95

Z Magazine Feb 10 $4.95

LIT JOURNALS

826 Quarterly #10 Sum 09 $15

McSweeneys #33 $16

Pleiades vol 30 #1 $8

FICTION ‘N’ POETRY

Failure By James Greer $15.95

Orange Crush By Simone Muench $14.95

MUCKRAKING, MEMOIRS, AND MISCELLANY

Complaint, From Minor Moans to Principled Protests By Julian Baggini $15.95

Madame Curie Complex, the Hidden History of Women in Science By Julie Des Jardins $16.95

DIY/HOW TO BOOKS

Artist in the Office, How to Creativel Survive and Thrive Seven Days a Week By Summer Pierre $13.95

Little Green Book of Absinthe, an Essential Companion with Lore Trivia and Classic Recipes By Paul Owens $18.95

FINE, LOW BROW, AND GRAFITTI fART BOOKS

Cholo Writing, Latino Gang Graffiti in Los Angeles By Francois Chastanet $24.95

Autumns Come Undone By Shag $40

Open Book Drink and Draw Collaborations $24.95

Shadowplay by Mark Wilkinson $39.95

MAYHEM & OUTER LIMITS

Strange Case of Dr HH Holmes, World’s Fair Serial Killer by John Borowski $20

Hollow Earth, the Bizarre 60s Classic Back in Print By Raymond Bernard $16.95

Homage to Pan, the Life Art and Sex Magic of Rosaleen Norton By Nevill Drury $24.95

MUSIC

Band Crime Punk77 Revisited, a Photographic Look at the Band Crime and Punk By James Stark $14.95

Radiohead Hysterical and Useless By Martin Clarke $19.95

POLITICS

World Report 2010 By Human Rights Watch $25

PORN BOOKS

Season of Infidelity, BDSM tales From the Classic Master By Oniroku Dan $14.95

Exhibitionism for the Shy, Show Off Dress Up and Talk Hot By Carol Queen $15.95

Are you into this?

A few of our customers have asked us if there’s any chance we might start a book club. So this is an inquiry to see if that’s something that you’d be interested in, Dear Readers. So! If you are interested, please answer the following questions in an e-mail (cut’n’paste it, yo!) to us at info at quimbys dot com :

Is this a good idea? Lame idea? Only do it if it’s not so feel-good-cheesy-support-groupish or classroomy?

What types of books would you want to read? Fiction? Zine-related books, zines themselves, essays, political, graphic novels? Etc.?

How often would you want to meet? Here? Or somewhere else? What day or night of the week would you want it on? And for how long should it meet? How many people do you feel like should there be as a minimum for it to be fun, effective, etc. so that you don’t feel like you’re the only person at the party?

How do you want it structured? Free form? Someone mediating it? Or like, no format, just see how it plays out?

What things would be necessary for it to be worth doing or for you to participate?

What else do you want to tell us about this? Comments? Anyone? Anyone? Is anybody out there? Hello? Is this thing on? (tap tap) Testing testing, can I get some more vocals on the monitor?

Featured Book of the Day: The Human Pony by Rebecca Wilcox

Mistress Rebecca Wilcox “ponies” up her instructions to get your bio-horse on. Huh? Wha? Why that’s sexy equine role-playing to you and me. This guide for owners, trainers and admirers of bio-horses, as in like, a person dressing all sexy in horse gear like bridles, reins — the whole “bit” (har!!). Readers are also encouraged to take on the role of handler/trainer with whips, spurs or various other delightfully pervy options. There’s lots of ideas to run with here, depending on what your fetish is: on two legs, on four legs, in latex, in leather, with peacock feathers, bareback, you name it. Check out tons of pictures with AWESOME captions, like “Most ponies like to be groomed.” There’s also lots of nurturing in the instruction for this type of play, as in this indicative quote

“Think like a pony. When your friend, lover, play partner, submissive, masochist, or slave enters pony head space, he or she has literally become the pony, along with everything ponyhead means to them.”

Hear that? “Become the pony.” Yes! Did I mention that there’s lots of instruction for both the novice and experienced pony players? Oh yes, different options for gait, how to train, handling, scene development, inspiration techniques — no fucking around here. Illustrations too! There’s even a glossary if you want to make flashcards. Maybe you could make some? Practice quizzing with your parents under the holiday tree? Perhaps this would make a good gift for animal fans? To sex fans? To people who like to dress up as animals? To sex fans who like sex with other people dressed up like animals? So many options here. Get it before it gallops away!

Off-site Event: Peter H. Fogtdal Reads The Tsar’s Dwarf At Chinaski’s

Nov ’08
1
7:30 pm

Peter H. Fogtdal‘s book The Tsar’s Dwarf (Hawthorne Books) is about a Danish dwarf given to Peter the Great as a gift who ends up as a court jester at the Russian court. It’s this author’s first book in English, though he’s had twelve published in Danish.

Here’s more about the book:

Soerine, a deformed female dwarf from Denmark, is given as a gift to Tsar Peter the Great, who is smitten by her freakishness and intellect. Against her will, the Tsar takes Soerine to St. Petersburg, where she becomes a jester in his court. There, she lives a life that both compels and repels her. Soerine eventually gives in to the attentions of Lukas, the Tsar’s favorite dwarf, and carves out an existence for herself amidst the squalor and lice-ridden world of dwarfs in the early 18th century. In this inhospitable milieu, Soerine’s intelligence and detached wit provide her some small measure of protection — until disaster strikes in the shape of a priest who wants to “save” her.

This event will not be at Quimby’s but down the street at Chinaski’s, and Quimby’s will be there selling the book. Chinaski’s is at 1935 N. Damen, just south of Armitage. Starts at 7:30pm.